We generally assume that there is a ” self” existing within us that defines who we are. It is usually more correct, however, to think about the self as modular-very similar to a group of apps on a smartphone.
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Robert Kurzban, writing for Psychology Today , posits that the concept of a ” me” who is truly answerable for everything we do is solely an illusion. Instead, now we have multitudes of alternative ” apps” in our brains that account for our behavior, that’s often contradictory.
[T]he idea that there are ” multitudes” for your mind helps to provide an explanation for several types of inconsistencies. If there’s quite a lot of applications to your head, then they could be doing different things mutually; oddly, which means different applications may have different and contradictory beliefs in them. Further, suppose that, the image of a sensible phone, different applications are within the foreground or background at different times. If behavior depends upon which applications are currently active, then individuals can look like very different people at different times, looking on the complete details of which modules are currently active.
This accounts for why you frequently have contradicting thoughts for your head, similar to seeking to resist a cookie on a diet or not being drawn to somebody who you know is a ” good catch.” While there isn’t necessarily a option to the difficulty-your brain isn’t so very like a smartphone which you can just quit an app you don’t want running-awareness of your contradictions should help stay sooner than them and not emerge as helpless the moment they present themselves.
Is Your Brain Like an iPhone? | Psychology Today
You can contact Adam Dachis, the author of this post, at adachis@lifehacker.com. You may also follow him on Twitter and Facebook .
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