Does Lying and Believing Lies Damage the Brain?

VS Ramachandran made a good TED talk where he explains about this problem where the emotional brain is disconnected from the visual center. It's quite odd and sort of creates a dissonance where logic can't override the lack of emotions. Lies probably damage that, like not having an emotional center? EEK!

https://www.ted.com/talks/vilayanur_ramachandran_on_your_mind/transcript?language=en


So my idea was, when this chap looks at an object, when he looks at his -- any object for that matter, it goes to the visual areas and, however, and it's processed in the fusiform gyrus, and you recognize it as a pea plant, or a table, or your mother, for that matter, OK? So my idea was, when this chap looks at an object, when he looks at his -- any object for that matter, it goes to the visual areas and, however, and it's processed in the fusiform gyrus, and you recognize it as a pea plant, or a table, or your mother, for that matter, OK? And then the message cascades into the amygdala, and then goes down the autonomic nervous system. But maybe, in this chap, that wire that goes from the amygdala to the limbic system, the emotional core of the brain, is cut by the accident. So because the fusiform is intact, the chap can still recognize his mother, and says, "Oh yeah, this looks like my mother." But because the wire is cut to the emotional centers, he says, "But how come, if it's my mother, I don't experience a warmth?" Or terror, as the case may be? Right? (Laughter) And therefore, he says, "How do I account for this inexplicable lack of emotions? This can't be my mother. It's some strange woman pretending to be my mother."

7:18
How do you test this? Well, what you do is, if you take any one of you here, and put you in front of a screen, and measure your galvanic skin response, and show pictures on the screen, I can measure how you sweat when you see an object, like a table or an umbrella. Of course, you don't sweat. If I show you a picture of a lion, or a tiger, or a pinup, you start sweating, right? And, believe it or not, if I show you a picture of your mother -- I'm talking about normal people -- you start sweating. You don't even have to be Jewish. (Laughter)

7:47
Now, what happens if you show this patient? You take the patient and show him pictures on the screen and measure his galvanic skin response. Tables and chairs and lint, nothing happens, as in normal people, but when you show him a picture of his mother, the galvanic skin response is flat. There's no emotional reaction to his mother, because that wire going from the visual areas to the emotional centers is cut. So his vision is normal because the visual areas are normal, his emotions are normal -- he'll laugh, he'll cry, so on and so forth -- but the wire from vision to emotions is cut and therefore he has this delusion that his mother is an impostor. It's a lovely example of the sort of thing we do: take a bizarre, seemingly incomprehensible, neural psychiatric syndrome and say that the standard Freudian view is wrong, that, in fact, you can come up with a precise explanation in terms of the known neural anatomy of the brain.

8:40
By the way, if this patient then goes, and mother phones from an adjacent room -- phones him -- and he picks up the phone, and he says, "Wow, mom, how are you? Where are you?" There's no delusion through the phone. Then, she approaches him after an hour, he says, "Who are you? You look just like my mother." OK? The reason is there's a separate pathway going from the hearing centers in the brain to the emotional centers, and that's not been cut by the accident. So this explains why through the phone he recognizes his mother, no problem. When he sees her in person, he says it's an impostor.
 
Considering the sea of lies we are all swimming in, I want to just bump this thread back into view.
Well the resistance seems to be futile.
Not that we are just swimming in the sea of lies but the mechanisms are now well in place to squash any dissenting voices.
I posted excellent documentary full of facts called Climate on my social media the other day - didn’t take long to have “fact checkers” all over it. The lengths they go to in order to defend lies are simply surreal.
Honestly I am tired 😪.
 
I have just read this thread and learned a lot from it. Going by my own experience in people "drowning in lies" I look to my family connections, specifically my eldest brother and sister-in-law. Both very smart and intelligent individuals. Both caught up in the lie trap that we here, hopefully, are managing to avoid. They have the ability to close their minds off to anything they do not want to believe in, particularly the lies around covid and the so called pandemic. Interestingly they both have oodles of common sense in other areas of their lives, and I would say that in other aspects they are also critical thinkers. They can both recognise BS***ers when they come across them. When the covid situation first emerged and the vaccinations were mooted I was questioned about my refusal to take them. I tried to explain to them that the whole covid scenario was deeply suspect. If the situation were reversed, and I was in their place, I hope I would wish to research all around the subject and "think" about it. It is possible, with the aid of ethical search engines to discover the "alternative" media sites and thence discover much more about the discrepancies and fraud of the whole covid narrative. They did none of this. Basically they dived head first into the lies. My brother told me one day when we were chatting about the Government stand on the situation - "Prof. Chris Whitty cannot be wrong". He is the Chief Medical Office in the UK and he was very wrong. Perhaps believing the lies was governed by their deep need to trust people in power in the UK. If that trust was found to be misplaced they had nowhere else to go. I think if they were exposed to, and were forced to believe the things that we, on this forum, have knowledge about - their brains would be incapable of coping. I do ponder on scenarios around that. I wonder what their reactions (and those of everyone else who is believing the lies) will be when the lies can no longer be covered up and they eventually learn the truth of our world.

Interestingly I have another brother who has been an accomplished liar since childhood. He is somewhere on the autistic spectrum one suspects but it has never been investigated or diagnosed. It is a family suspicion. I noted in childhood that lies simply tripped off his tongue in multiple situations. He was also extremely convincing to the parents, to my detriment, as I often got the blame for his misdemeanours. He would then, and still to this day, invent incredible scenarios to give truth to the lies. Alas, he forgot the old saying that you have to have a very good memory to be a successful liar. He had the imagination but not the memory.
 

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