Quote:
Originally posted by O-Nieronaut
I think you're close, but I notice a common misconception about the brain that everyone seems to make. At least, I think it's a misconception. Thanks to the technological revolution, we tend to associate information storage with the idea of computers. I don't see any reason to think of the brain as a unique internal organ. Every other organ is a bladder of sorts; so is the brain. Perceptions cause nueroelectrical signals that collect in the brain, where they are extracted and used at need. It's information digestion. When you sleep, that information is purged in a series of squirts, each squirt being a dream (non-lucid) - all the unused perceptions being excreted from the system to make room for new perceptions. There are no scripts, programs, databases, hard drives, abstraction layers or integrated circuits. That's just silly. The brain is a bladder. That's my story and I'm stickin' to it!
So you're saying your mind doesn't create anything that let's you associate what you're seeing with something else? If that were true, you wouldn't remember anything. Every time you got to this forum you not know what it was or what it would be for. Your brain definitly does have to store data (schemas are presumably embodied in the brain by networks of neurons) in order for you to do pretty much anything.