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No Self, No Problem: How Neuropsychology is Catching Up to Buddhism (The No Self Wisdom)

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What’s more, I contend that it blocks access to the eternal, expansive thread of universal consciousness that is always available to us. What makes intuition an especially interesting facet of your consciousness is that, although neuroscience can’t explain it, studies have not only proved that it exists, but that it’s also better at making certain types of decisions than your left brain is!

It's highly addictive to get core insights on personally relevant topics without repetition or triviality. Also, experience with the inert gas xenon used as an anesthetic agent suggests that conscious awareness disappears (the brain goes to sleep) when quantum entanglement at the sub-cellular level is disrupted. Without the ability to identify patterns, we can’t assert that “cat” is a real word which means something but that “adjks” is gibberish. At times, the references to East philosophies fall short and too shallow however this is the trade off to have a short book.

Mistaking the voice in our head for a thing and labeling it ‘me’ brings us into conflict with the neuropsychological evidence that shows there is no such thing.

The experimenter thenshowed the patient’s right brain (their left eye) a picture of a snowy landscape. For those of you not familiar with the previous version, a very short summary is that we love to use the thinking mind for everything, and it is the thinking mind that manifests much of our suffering. If you are a fan of the books written by Ruiz and his sons (as I am), I am pretty sure that you will love the No Self, No Problem Workbook.

These blinks detail the ways that neuroscience is substantiating these millennia-old Eastern ideas, showing why Zen Buddhists might have been right when they said, “No self, no problem. Likewise, the patient’s left brain identified an image of a snow shovel and matched it to the snowscape. But when you look for that little “self” control chamber we all imagine is up there, it simply can’t be found; there is no “self” component of our brain. This study proves what we’ve been saying about the split brains all along; our right brains process information on a faster, nonverbal plane.

We can, however, open the door to a different kind of knowing, one that is far more experiential and grounded in the present moment.

That’s why Niebauer suggests flexing your gratitude muscles, even when you feel like complaining about the traffic on your way to work or a seemingly needless inconvenience. The patient’s right hand — remember, the one controlled by their left brain — correctly selected a picture of a chicken to match the chicken foot.

But, I’m not a professor, philosopher, psychologist, sociologist, anthropologist, scientist, mystic, or guru. If you’re familiar with one sentence from the annals of Western philosophy, it’s probably this one: Cogito, ergo sum – I think, therefore I am. But what’s especially interesting is the fact that its interpretations are often straight out of left field! So, if we could only get our left brain to listen to our intuition, we might all be a little safer and a little more successful!Furthermore, I believe that this misidentification causes virtually all the unhappiness, depression, and anxiety we ever experience. Interestingly, it took playersbetween 50 and 80 draws for their left brains to understand that their chances of winning were much greater if they drew primarily from the second deck.

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