Adymus
Banned
Not that consciousness is not a magnificent thing; it is, and it should be appreciated. However, many of us are still looking at our consciousness from a very over-glorified perspective.
I have noticed there is a lot of resistance to the possibility of the personality being a product of biological wiring. It seems most of this reluctance is not so much founded on lack of evidence, but the refusal to approach human beings in the way you would an animal. Personality traits can be observed even in animals; and interestingly enough, certain personality traits comes with certain breeds. This means it is possible to capture and develop personalities of certain mammals through breeding.
Considering humans have followed the same evolutionary path to developing consciousness as these animals, and they are using cognitive hardware that is almost exactly the same as ours. Shouldn't that mean that the personalities that human beings express are also a part of their genetic code?
So why do we look at animal consciousness as a product of biology, but we look at our own as if it was some magical amorphous power that bends at our every will?
Because when you suggest that our consciousness is just biological wiring and neurotransmitters, you take away the magic. Human beings stop being the chosen species with the divine spark, and start being what we actually are, animals.
Another problem people see with accepting this possibility is it means you cannot change your personality. Most of this skepticism is a misunderstanding, people look at themselves and think "I'm different than I used to be several years ago, so obviously I can change my personality." While their personality did technically "change", it did not shift into a different personality with a set of new cognitive functions. It just developed a stronger use of the cognitive functions that it already had. It is essentially the same thing as your body growing, you becoming taller, or grow stronger, but this is not turning you into a different person, you are developing what you already had.
So not being able to shift into a totally different personality is really no more of a limitation than not being able to shapeshift into another person.
Lastly, the belief that people are beings of biologically controlled personality, stifles the perception of individuality. This one scares the shit out of people. However, all that having a genetic personality really means is that people are all using the same cognitive tools. What you do with and how you develop these tools are entirely up to you, that part is infinite and variable. Again, it's essentially like resisting the belief that all people have hands because that will make you less of an individual.
This is why when I meet someone who says "I don't have a personality type, I'm unique" I say the same thing to them as I say to every other person with this attitude:
"Get over yourself. You're a human being just like the rest of us."
I have noticed there is a lot of resistance to the possibility of the personality being a product of biological wiring. It seems most of this reluctance is not so much founded on lack of evidence, but the refusal to approach human beings in the way you would an animal. Personality traits can be observed even in animals; and interestingly enough, certain personality traits comes with certain breeds. This means it is possible to capture and develop personalities of certain mammals through breeding.
Considering humans have followed the same evolutionary path to developing consciousness as these animals, and they are using cognitive hardware that is almost exactly the same as ours. Shouldn't that mean that the personalities that human beings express are also a part of their genetic code?
So why do we look at animal consciousness as a product of biology, but we look at our own as if it was some magical amorphous power that bends at our every will?
Because when you suggest that our consciousness is just biological wiring and neurotransmitters, you take away the magic. Human beings stop being the chosen species with the divine spark, and start being what we actually are, animals.
Another problem people see with accepting this possibility is it means you cannot change your personality. Most of this skepticism is a misunderstanding, people look at themselves and think "I'm different than I used to be several years ago, so obviously I can change my personality." While their personality did technically "change", it did not shift into a different personality with a set of new cognitive functions. It just developed a stronger use of the cognitive functions that it already had. It is essentially the same thing as your body growing, you becoming taller, or grow stronger, but this is not turning you into a different person, you are developing what you already had.
So not being able to shift into a totally different personality is really no more of a limitation than not being able to shapeshift into another person.
Lastly, the belief that people are beings of biologically controlled personality, stifles the perception of individuality. This one scares the shit out of people. However, all that having a genetic personality really means is that people are all using the same cognitive tools. What you do with and how you develop these tools are entirely up to you, that part is infinite and variable. Again, it's essentially like resisting the belief that all people have hands because that will make you less of an individual.
This is why when I meet someone who says "I don't have a personality type, I'm unique" I say the same thing to them as I say to every other person with this attitude:
"Get over yourself. You're a human being just like the rest of us."