Secluded in Hallucination

Secluded in Hallucination
Author: Nickolas Andrew Verykios
Publisher: Lulu.com
Total Pages: 110
Release: 2010-02-09
Genre: Poetry
ISBN: 1445200724

This short selection of poetry was chosen by several people close to Nick Verykios, to represent an interesting tapestry of ideas relating to the unification or marriage of mind, body, spirit, soul/shadow, ethics, work and emotion (relationships), as an experience of Me, US and ALL OF US; or what Nick refers to as the Mala process. These works were composed between 1979 (age 15) and 1997 (age 33). This volume has been privately published in order to preserve the entirety of the text - as it was written. Unfortunately, at this stage, much would have been altered and lost had the work been commercially published as was originally intended

Hallucinations

Hallucinations
Author: Alexandre-Jacques-François Brierre de Boismont
Publisher:
Total Pages: 584
Release: 1853
Genre: Hallucinations and illusions
ISBN:

On Hallucinations

On Hallucinations
Author: Alexandre-Jacques-François Brierre de Boismont
Publisher:
Total Pages: 476
Release: 1859
Genre: Hallucinations and illusions
ISBN:

A Junky's Hallucinations

A Junky's Hallucinations
Author: Don Yudo
Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform
Total Pages: 137
Release: 2013-04-02
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 1481858149

Patrick Khumandaty has a great reputation in the narcotic world as the best drug trafficker. When he used the Vatican without its knowledge, he discovered a genealogy that has been furtively hidden. Now he is on a revenge mission and a major scandal is about to be blown open.

The Spontaneous Brain

The Spontaneous Brain
Author: Georg Northoff
Publisher: MIT Press
Total Pages: 533
Release: 2024-08-06
Genre: Psychology
ISBN: 0262552825

An argument for a Copernican revolution in our consideration of mental features—a shift in which the world-brain problem supersedes the mind-body problem. Philosophers have long debated the mind-body problem—whether to attribute such mental features as consciousness to mind or to body. Meanwhile, neuroscientists search for empirical answers, seeking neural correlates for consciousness, self, and free will. In this book, Georg Northoff does not propose new solutions to the mind-body problem; instead, he questions the problem itself, arguing that it is an empirically, ontologically, and conceptually implausible way to address the existence and reality of mental features. We are better off, he contends, by addressing consciousness and other mental features in terms of the relationship between world and brain; philosophers should consider the world-brain problem rather than the mind-body problem. This calls for a Copernican shift in vantage point—from within the mind or brain to beyond the brain—in our consideration of mental features. Northoff, a neuroscientist, psychiatrist, and philosopher, explains that empirical evidence suggests that the brain's spontaneous activity and its spatiotemporal structure are central to aligning and integrating the brain within the world. This spatiotemporal structure allows the brain to extend beyond itself into body and world, creating the “world-brain relation” that is central to mental features. Northoff makes his argument in empirical, ontological, and epistemic-methodological terms. He discusses current models of the brain and applies these models to recent data on neuronal features underlying consciousness and proposes the world-brain relation as the ontological predisposition for consciousness.