Am Dienstag000015, 15.07.2025 um 20:57 schrieb Mild Shock:
Henri Poincaré believed that mathematical
and scientific creativity came from a deep,
unconscious intuition that could not be
captured by mechanical reasoning or formal
systems. He famously wrote about how insights
came not from plodding logic but from sudden
illuminations — leaps of creative synthesis.
Consciousness is not what actually 'thinks'.
You should think about consciousness as an additional subsystem of our
brain, which has the purpose to make the results of thinking usable.
Thinking in the form of decision making or finding solutions to problems
is per se unconscious.
This is like in a computer:
the computer itself 'thinks'
but you cannot use the results, unless you have a monitor, which
presents the results.
The mental subsystem 'consciousness' is the equivalent to the monitor
and not to the CPU.
Consciousness on the other hand does not think, but pretends to think.
We only think, that we think with our conscious mind, because that's
what the conscious mind always does.
Actually we mainly 'think' with other parts of the brain and also with
our body, especially the guts.
...
TH
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