tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2019724693487670016.post6231320374994798431..comments2024-03-13T04:06:16.415-07:00Comments on The Big Study: ZEUS?: A Short NoteThe Professorhttp://www.blogger.com/profile/07811807639219365621noreply@blogger.comBlogger7125tag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2019724693487670016.post-21049300341779641122013-08-05T17:59:25.362-07:002013-08-05T17:59:25.362-07:00Well, I disagree with most of this. The "ment...Well, I disagree with most of this. The "mental I" is certainly well-established in the Bible and my copies of Diodoros and Pliny, so your comment about "the second millennium" must refer to the second millennium b.c. --- if so, I wonder how much "literature" anyone thinks exists from the second millennium b.c. and earlier?? How much writing of any kind with the exceptions of religious texts or deposit tickets for granary taxes or declarations of something political? How many "novels"? How many dramas? How much poetry about anything than a religious mantra or prayer? Jaynes is attempting to create a theory out of essentially no literary data. In Mesopotamia we have cuneiform tablets containing basically no human-oriented topics whatever --- only things like receipts, legends, math, law, etc, and almost all intact examples of even the myths are dated within the Assyrian period of the first millennium B.C. In Egypt almost no "late" literature exists either, papyri being mostly first millennium survivals and painted stuff earlier. So what literature would we be talking about? Chinese? Jaynes did not go into that, I believe, and even there most stuff is later than second millennium and of "pragmatic" not soulful topics. <br /><br />In Greece, the only literature which could be called complete enough and MAYBE early enough would be things like Homer and Hesiod. Hesiod's topic has nothing to do with a human approach to anything, being sort-of a god-listing which in my memory does not get into human life in a real world way. Homer is rich, but one could just as easily see human mental space in the egomania of Agamemnon as any Shakespearian lead role. <br /><br />Also, the theory does not "neatly explain" all this stuff listed, unless these hallucinations are also deemed to create visual hallucinations as well --- almost always a very bad survival trait to be carrying around. What is almost offensive is the light-hand in almost casually waving away large areas of human experience based upon speculations with very little concrete data. Almost every bit of modern brain research that I am familiar with points to the palaeontological intactness of the Corpus Callosum which connects the hemispheres of the physical brain. Animals all have this intact too. To make the assumption that this intact Corpus Callosum was coordinating everything on the physical left and right sides of the human structure EXCEPT for "thinking" requires a heck of a lot of strong evidence I feel. And, that for no known reason [and there has to be something PHYSICAL about the reason], the Corpus Callosum suddenly got its entire act together AFTER we were fully into the age of technology, "natural magic", agrarian revolution et al, and none of our historians of technology noticed any difference or spectacular breakpoints, well..... <br /><br />Lastly, the comment about this being "distressing to most religious people" is a thinly veiled insult, as if I cannot structure a well-reasoned position on this without failing due to my irrational prejudices. The Professorhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07811807639219365621noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2019724693487670016.post-26756210805067310692013-08-05T14:49:56.406-07:002013-08-05T14:49:56.406-07:00Hello again,
As I understand Jaynes' theor...Hello again,<br /><br /> As I understand Jaynes' theory, the right brain admonitions only 'kick in' under extreme situations of stress. Until then, no need and no authoritative voices would be heard. It is during stressful events that advice was received from the right hemisphere to guide the person in novel circumstances. His theory neatly explains oracles, divination, talking statues, Yahweh talking to Moses and the innumerable references to gods talking to individuals. As this bicameral ability receded in the wake of slaughter, language and its attendant culture, so did the voice of the non-existent gods. Human history since then has been an attempt by individuals and religious institutions to recover their half-remembered conversations with god(s). Historically, it also explains why prior to the second millennium, there were no references by authors to their interior mental-space. The mental "I" that we use for internal speculation about our motives and fears did not exist. <br /><br /> Jaynes' beliefs are distressing to most religious people. Thanks for your reply.<br /><br /> Regards,<br /><br /> richardrichardnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2019724693487670016.post-20415926007262680862013-08-05T14:11:28.820-07:002013-08-05T14:11:28.820-07:00I read Jaynes' views a long time ago. Assuming...I read Jaynes' views a long time ago. Assuming that hallucinatory talking in our heads was a common experience sounds to me like one of the most dangerous anti-survival "talents" that Mother Nature could have bubbled up. The only way that one could attempt to defend the theory would be to describe very seriously how such divided consciousness would be more useful for human real world natural survival between the ages of zero and say 35, so as to give a survival advantage to those with split-operating minds vs holistic brains. I can think of no such advantage, and because the split nature of the brain talk/feeling/visual hallucination, such a lack of immediacy in holistic awareness and "understanding" would force delays in decision-making. That would be disastrous for survival in my opinion. <br /><br />I view Jaynes' idea as clever. Whether it has any reality to it seems highly debatable. Also, using it to sweep away what Jerry Clark calls "the experience anomalies", is very close to suggesting that the anomalies generally are better explained by "the Carnival of the Mind" than any external realities. So, no thanks until I hear better reasons for buying in. The Professorhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/07811807639219365621noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2019724693487670016.post-66685557348070569832013-08-05T09:43:53.675-07:002013-08-05T09:43:53.675-07:00Hello,
Julian Jaynes' bicameral brain theor...Hello,<br /><br /> Julian Jaynes' bicameral brain theory is the best explanation,imo, of gods and the problems you raise. Certainly, Zeus, Heracles, Aphrodite, et al, existed, but ONLY in the right hemisphere of your brain when it 'talked' to the left hemisphere via the corpus collosum. The biological purpose here was to give admonitory/survival warnings for the good of the individual concerned. This 'talking' started to end approx. 1,500 B.C. with the advent of complex written language. No more need for hemispheric cross-talking as a survival tool. Documents could now be consulted, not gods or oracles. The bicameral mind still exists today, but according to Jaynes, only in schizophrenics with their auditory hallucinations. What was considered 'normal' brain functioning prior to 1,500 B.C, would be considered insane today. Jaynes' explanation has the feel and the ring of truth and is the simplest way to view this topic. Not everyone accepts his theory, but his masterpiece, "The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind" should be read if this topic interests you. I have read many books in my life of 6+ decades, but this book/author is absolutely astonishing in its implications. Highly, highly recommended. It is also right on point with your personal interests as I understand them from your essays.<br /><br />Regards,<br /><br /> richardrichardnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2019724693487670016.post-1580820379074681532013-08-03T20:19:54.921-07:002013-08-03T20:19:54.921-07:00"Anti-anomalists and wary atheists...are no d..."Anti-anomalists and wary atheists...are no dummies, despite being morons of a different sort."<br /><br />Ooer!<br /><br />You're really kickin' arse today Prof.<br /><br />Whatever you're gettin' upto at Kalama Zoo it really seems to be givin' y'u Kalamazoom!<br /><br />There is of course the possibility Zeus was something akin to an angel ie a divine manifestation of God's will much like if not actually identical with the likes of Michael or Gabriel.<br /><br />Nor does that rule out the human angle because if I remember correctly Snorri actually has Heimdall for instance describing himself as having once only possessed human levels of hearing and sight but over time working to develop these skills until they eventually become godlike.<br /><br />My very strong suspicion's Snorri was actually alluding to the development of the spiritual superpowers Hindus call siddhis and implying certain humans can not only thus become god or angel like but become eligible to participate in and even rise up in a hierarchical chain of successive caretakers with responsibility for specific domains of activity in particular geographical regions a bit like a sort of cosmic United Nations.<br /><br />You don't actually have to believe the idea yourself to see if the ancients did this'd explain a great deal of why the history of all mythologies seem concerned with formerly lesser gods rising to much more exalted ranks as members of the chief pantheon while the gods they succeed or replace seem to drift into seemingly lesser and lesser significance until seemingly being reduced to the level of the much misunderstood so-called deus otiosus.<br /><br />If though you could conceive the possibility of such a thing you might then also credit the possibility this might have something to do with why superheroes with secret identities particularly ones belonging to super groups such as the X-men or the Avengers've gradually migrated from their former pulpy anonymousness except in the eyes of a few nerdy schoolboys to full spectrum total media domination where even girls like my daughter and somewhat amazingly my sister're raving about them.alanborkyhttps://www.blogger.com/profile/15333017272673090593noreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2019724693487670016.post-45361461174651701282013-08-03T06:47:08.325-07:002013-08-03T06:47:08.325-07:00Mixed up what I said about the blue part... not bl...Mixed up what I said about the blue part... not blue from the visible part of the light spectrum but rather a magnetic field can appear as a faint blue shape if you have enough of the molecule in your eye that birds have more of and use for navigation (I think I read dogs, cats and some other animals have some, too).Kevinnoreply@blogger.comtag:blogger.com,1999:blog-2019724693487670016.post-55521566284417550942013-08-03T06:39:36.663-07:002013-08-03T06:39:36.663-07:00Rosemary Ellen Guiley lumps much of what you menti...Rosemary Ellen Guiley lumps much of what you mention into things related to Djinn and includes Faerie. I think it's possible that early humans were more into drugs - plant and mushroom variety - and communing with spirits, especially their ancestors. Who knows what they saw, but memories of great kings and shamans may have been turned into gods. Recently I read somewhere that someone recently determined Jesus was a shape shifter... so possibly all that is related or perhaps it's the ancients' version of comic book/movie super heroes - a literary device. The magnetic field was stronger thousands of years ago and since the human eye has a molecule (much like animals) that can detect the blue part of the magnetic spectrum maybe the ancients saw things. Quite possibly things seen by some today (ghosts, UFOs) are magnetic field related. All very interesting to think about. Keep the posts coming!Kevinnoreply@blogger.com