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Originally Posted by electromagneticpulse
Okay, the human brain has many safe guards for information to be "safe guarded" (locked away) from the active brain. One of these (which im concentraiting on) is memory and it is an actual fact that we never forget anything we are ever told, hear, see, smell, eat... but infact our brains "forces" us to forget so it can function properly.
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Hold on there. Much of the information that reaches our brains is discarded, pieced together, stitched across from blank spot to blank spot, and inferred from a system prone to illusion. If anything, the brain sifts and weights elements based on body state: one tends to remember emotional events more than everyday to the point of highway hypnosis or the traveling to or from work without remembering the trip. Happened to me a number of times. Kind of the brain saying "Seen it! What's on the other channels?"
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When one of these "safe guards" breaks down it leads to mental health problems (the field im going into) and one prime example is schizophrenia where a break down in the nervous system which isn't neurone miss fire but actualy a mental disorder in which the psyche of a person breaks up.
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There are many kinds of schizophrenia, and many symptoms: but the error is in the way we think, and it might be correctable i.e. also neurochemical, not the psyche of a person breaking up.
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The actual explination of DeJa Vu Is not known yet but many pass it off as neurone missfire but the amount of times i have had it (even at an extreamly young age) is exceptionaly high and in some cases i have had several in the same day but then not had them for a few days.
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Actually, the more we learn about experience, encoding, and the like, especially from the schizophrenic, the more we can say about memory encoding. We have extremely short term memory, which is the continuity of objects, and normally it is encoded in a particular fashion. If it encoded slightly differently, it can "look" like a long-term memory instead, and fool us into thinking we've experienced the event a long time ago, rather than in the current extremely short-term memory episode we call "now."
There are a number of memory-encoding errors and experience-distorting problems that are prevalent and might be traceable to the same mechanism: psychotic breaks, where a person experiences the extremely short-term memory as a story or episode not really including the self; the opposite problem in some schizophrenics where a related event or event told to the person has the person's self-image imposed on it making it from a memory of a story to an episodic or self-experienced memory. I'm following a similar route in trying to explain abduction phenomena as poorly coded early memories of nighttime diaper changes with the modern "self" and ad-hoc interpretations superimposed on the memory.
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My question is that if brains are aware of all the possible futures (which comes with all the quantem states) would this prove the posibility of Precog dreams?
It just seems that all Precog dreams are a possible future and many are in face actual futures. Would this be a more refined form of DeJa Vu where the brain filters out Quantum states that are unlikely to happen so the more likely futures happen all of which would lead onto the domino effect.
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Humans have some capacity for extending the current-memory events into the future as far as expectations go, and this might also extend into deja-vu, but precognition is not an endemic function. If one had the math smarts and psychology, one could reasonably predict some events and personality, but not to any precognition extent.