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The individual is the sum of our individual parts. If this is
more than 100% then it is either a miscalculation or a bonus.
Hello everyone
Something came up. It usually does when it comes to this time of
the month as to what I should write for this month's editorial.
Prepare for some real heavy thinking this month as I'm going to
explore just how you think.
You'd probably think there were only two ways to think. You either
do it or don't. That is, as you read this, the words are speaking
to you on a non-verbal level inside your head.
If you can't read then you wouldn't be here reading this editorial.
It's a clever trick that we all do, especially as you're hearing
the words without using your ears. Your brain is neatly convincing
you of some internal reality that mirrors what your senses receive
on a day-to-day basis.
However such a technique doesn't mean that you're reading what
I wrote in my 'thinking voice'. Unless you're given some clue and
can stretch yourself accordingly, would you be hearing this voice
in a different accent? Would I come over in my native Somerset accent
- which I can't hear verbally or non-verbally unless I move out
of the county and hear myself as others hear me - or any other accent
that I choose to adopt?
I'm competent enough a writer to put verbal clues into my writing
to trigger different accents when it's needed but don't do that
outside of writing stories but don't use any Somerset words or prounciation
in real life either. Normally, I don't regard my accent as an issue
and on paper and probably as you read this, I come over as somewhere
in the mid-Atlantic - ie being neither one thing or the other.
Most of us take our own accents for granted and think we all sound
alike anyway. With our 'thinking voices', it doesn't exist outside
of local dialect words unless you know something different. The
important thing to remember from the above is you're using a verbal
response in a non-verbal way that only you can hear inside your
head.
It's the way most people think telepathy works. People hear this
non-verbal 'speech' as it is, well, as if it is speech. If nature
could be so kind. It's a good tool for telepathic speeches in Science
Fiction but may not hold in reality. Y'see the majority of the day,
very few of us actually think verbally for very long.
Do you think your thoughts before you speak? There would be enormous
pregnant pauses when talking if that happened. Instead, the brain
does the necessary jump and switches to the speech centre when we
have anything to say and for others to hear. Such actions have their
own consequences.
We say something we might regret later because we speak before
thinking. We ramble on about a subject or giving an answer when
it could have been easier to say it in a few words.. Some of us
can even answer something before the other speaker has finished
speaking simply because of how our brains are wired.
The latter should give something of a clue to how we think. It
isn't that we do much conscious thinking before talking, it's just
our brains not considering fast enough the consequences before saying
something. Most of the time though, none of us really consciously
think. The higher brain functions that allows us non-vocal but verbal
thinking is restricted to where we're alone, working through the
permutation answers to a tricky problem or cursing someone instead
of saying it aloud.
Unless you've learnt some mental tricks for recalling names or
obscure facts, you rely far more on your memory to jump to the right
information that having to search consciously for it yourself. Often
as not, when there is a mental block for such information, it comes
back a lot easier when you think of something else than the thing
you were after in the first place.
Such machinations are used by writers a lot when they want their
internal random ideas generator to come up with a new permutation
on an old idea. We stare out a window, play a computer game, watch
TV or whatever and the brain does most of the dirty work and our
conscious minds take the credit for an autonomic brain function.
All we do consciously is select the best choice. You might not
all be a writers but the same mechanism applies. A lot of it is
dependent on how your mindset works and if it's exercised sufficiently
to refine the process. Thinking isn't something we do much of the
time yet we are still distinguished from other animals because we
can do it at all. Well, at least on an abstract level that has nothing
to do with procuring daily food or mating.
This level of abstraction allows us to imagine any activity before
actually going ahead and doing it for real. A really heightened
imagination can be conveyed in words to others as if it's for real
but that's a different story.
For much of the time, we do very well by not really thinking for
the majority of our active conscious periods. Much of the time is
spent going about our lives in a non-verbal way relying on our reflexes
and habits to take us through the day. The main difference is when
we're learning something sufficiently new and adding it to our reflexes
as in the case of learning a school lesson, swimming or driving
a car. If the activity is used continually, it becomes reflexive
and we cease to think about it.
If it isn't used much then it can easily be forgotten and something
else fills its place. The brain has a habit of prioritising so we
don't get clogged down with incidental things that are clearly not
being used at the time. So much of this process is automatic and
not under conscious control. Where does such reflexes end and the
real you starts is something only the individual can really decide.
We're individual enough to realise it must vary from person to person.
This brings us back to the beginning of this editorial. Whatever
part of us that causes us to really think isn't used much during
our lives. It's there to take responsibility for our important decisions
- and even then, can spend time debating with itself before choosing
- but most of the time it isn't doing much at all. It's no wonder
scientists say we only ever use 10% of our brains. The majority
of it is done for us.
Does it make us a poorer person for not thinking very much? That
I'm not sure about. I am therefore I can think. When I'm typing,
as I'm doing with this editorial, I'm probably doing the same as
if I was talking except instead of using my brain's speech centre,
the words are coming out through my fingers instead. I'm very adaptable
that way.
I can use any communication medium that is appropriate for the
occasion without little consideration for preference. Other people
are more comfortable seeing who they're talking to although the
current use of mobile phones has developed, it appears to be more
a case of contact for a lot of people.
From my writer's perspective, I might make a few mental or paper
notes and getting my ideas into order but once in front of the computer
screen, I just get on with expressing myself in a meaningful way.
That's as much self-training as anything. The key being the information
comes out in whatever mode I choose to communicate.
It isn't likely to vary much beyond being more considered and polished
on paper or screen than verbally. It is the recognition of the level
of communication that differentiates the very bright to the not
so intelligent individuals. Just as a totally autistic person can't
see out of his or her own world, the majority of us have the ability
to see the world through other people's perceptions.
We can share a grief or happiness, maybe agree or disagree with
an opinion. Often as not, such experiences are either shared in
person or through reading or watching something at our own convenience.
Something else that we're not always in total control over. Such
sharing increases our perception of the world as our perspective
widens. In just over a century, our perception has widened from
local community to a world-wide interest in that is going on elsewhere.
By sharing our experiences with others, there is also a degree
of feedback so other people can see how you interpret what has been
learnt as well. Most of us can't go through life without being shaped
by something or other. In a similar fashion, if our personalities
are strong enough, we can also adapt or change when we have been
misled or discover some falsehood about the information we've been
given.
We might not all consciously think all the time but there is an
awareness that we need to compare experience and sensations to re-enforce
our picture of the world. It's almost as though we need reassurances
about the information we're receiving. Such a process also ensures
we translate what we think about such things at a comparable level
to others.
In the old days, we'd call it 'gossip' - even if there is still
a mixture of fiction included with the facts. One of the oddest
lessons we learn from all of this is that we don't all share the
same tastes although it does help to group us together with people
who think the same way or like the same things. An unfortunate side-effect
is that strong personalities can fundamentally control weaker or
vulnerable personalities by taking advantage of any limitation presenting
itself.
That's very much part of the reality that we have of this world.
Having achieved said niche, we mostly stay that way until our tastes
change or those to whom we associate with change theirs sufficiently
to ensure a parting. It's very fortunate for some, if they change
the way the others do, but far sadder when individuals are ostracised
for not doing so. Group pressure or 'following the herd' is a level
of conformity that even hits our Science Fiction community than
regard it as 'viva la difference'. It probably shows more about
mankind's roots than any level of intellectual development.
Where does that leave the thinking process? Is it the cumulative
tip of what is us rather than the whole aspect of our personalities?
Do we really need to think more? Are we all capable of heavy thinking
or is such process limited to a minority? We can all be persuaded
by the pros and cons of an argument as to its validity. A lot of
the time, we can be incensed by our emotions far more than relying
on commonsense or investigating further before making a decision
as to which side we stand. A lot of people prefer things in a black
and white world.
It either is or it isn't rather than think there might even be
a middle ground that can draw valid points from either side. Like
a lot of British people, I tend to be naturally cynical and rarely
take anything at face value. I evaluate the evidence and test it
for flaws before giving a considered reply.
It's a lot easier than being persuaded by other people's prejudices
on the subject. If I'm seen to have a strong personality then I
hope also it is linked to the idea that I won't persuade people
without a balanced judgement. As indicated above, we don't spend
that much time each day thinking so a little more can't hurt.
Like exercising our bodies, the mind needs to be exercised and
bringing non-verbal thoughts to verbal recognition - to hear our
own thoughts as it were - to make sense of the world our way rather
than other people's interpretations. The ability to do this takes
us one step up from the rest of the animal kingdom. A good gesture
to recognising our own sentience and what it is to be intelligent.
Somewhere in all of this is your own personality asserting itself
on the world.
Any advances on being more than 10% on using more of your brain
though? Now that would be wishful thinking.
Thank you and good night.
Geoff Willmetts
editor: SFCrowsnest.com
PS. My re-organising is working out and I've sorted some samples.
It's taking time but I think I'm in the process of catching up.
If you have moved your book elsewhere, then tell me and let me take
it out of my pile for those with more patience.
Hologram Tales e-mail: gfwillmetts@REMOVE.FOR.SPAMhotmail.com
terrestrial address:
74 Gloucester Road,
BRIDGWATER, Somerset TA6 6EA, UK.
SAEs (International Rates: include at least 2 IRCs or enough to
cover return of manuscripts if sending in material) will always
get replies.
Geoff Willmetts
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