Bonus 01

40.9K 1.4K 381
                                    

Oops! This image does not follow our content guidelines. To continue publishing, please remove it or upload a different image.

Oops! This image does not follow our content guidelines. To continue publishing, please remove it or upload a different image.

Oops! This image does not follow our content guidelines. To continue publishing, please remove it or upload a different image.

Ethan

Before consciousness, chaos didn't exist. At least not to us, neither inside of us.

Evidently, disasters have invariably been part of our world. Nature is a whole independent organism, one which we come from, one from which we deeply depend and one which we'd be nothing without.

But chaos, the property of a compound system which possesses a behavior immensely unpredictable, earning an intense sense of confusion, wasn't a part of us until consciousness woke, for chaos itself consisted as a formless matter that existed previous to the construction of the universe.

The overall composition of conscious experience at each moment is shaped by a variety of underlying psychological processes such as memory, perception, and emotion. This idea shares that states of consciousness, including dream and non-dream sleep, various drug-induced and ecstatic states, as well as ordinary waking consciousness, are formed of unique patterns of psychological processes that fit thoroughly together to conform something similar to a puzzle.

Such psychological processes, as well as the neurological events that provide them, are partially chaotic or, at least, are chaos-like. In other words, there appears to be patterns of behavior that never exactly repeat themselves and are not predictable in detail. These psychological processes can be modeled as chaotic attractors. From this it seems reasonable that consciousness itself, to be understood as a complex system that can be described by a single exquisitely complex chaotic equation.

Unassailable: The professor.Where stories live. Discover now