Topic: | Re:Re:Re:Re:Re:Re:Re:Re:Re:Re:Neuro-logical levels |
Posted by: | GSM |
Date/Time: | 19/12/2003 15:17:25 |
Yes, associations, complex-equivalences, anchoring, pain and pleasure, cause-effect connections are all ways of slicing up our experience. If your first experience with a rock was falling on it, perhaps you'd associate with not a 'rock classification' at all, but a location on the ground, an area of colours in the area - so that ground with those colours become signals for that pain you experienced. That area of the floor equals an experience of pain. You might also associated a part of your anatomy with pain, i.e. a part of my body sometimes equals pain... this bit of here causes me pain, perhaps resulting in a hightened level attention to that part. A model in formation, that continues to develop along with experience. You might then decide to give that pain felt a name, a gurgling sound that is linked to that part of the body and feeling of pain, and that location on the ground. |