| ▲ | emp17344 4 hours ago | |
That is absolutely not what the split brain experiment reveals. Why would you take results received from observing the behavior of a highly damaged brain, and use them to predict the behavior of a healthy brain? Stop spreading misinformation. | ||
| ▲ | nuancebydefault 3 hours ago | parent | next [-] | |
Such 'highly damaged' brain is still 90 percent or more structured the same as a normal human brain. See it as a brain that runs in debug mode. It is known that the narrative part of the brain is separate from the decision taking brain. If someone asks you, in a very convincing, persuasive way, why you did something a year ago and you can't clearly remember you did, it can happen that you become positive that you did so anyway. And then the mind just hallucinates a reason. That's a trait of brains. | ||
| ▲ | vidarh 2 hours ago | parent | prev [-] | |
Because said "highly damaged brain" in most respects still functions pretty much like a healthy one. There is no misinformation in what I wrote. | ||