S
Soulewolf
Guest
Question on the matrix argument.
Recent neurological studies have shown that there is a time lapse between sensation from direct brain stimulation (say on a fingertip) and nerve stimulation. It takes a person longer to feel sensation from direct brain stimulation than it does from nerve stimulation. Nerve stimulation is (im not a professional on the subject, but ive read this) instantaneous as far as ive heard, while it takes longer for direct brain stimulation (because of this many people have linked brain activity to quantum activity and compare it to such experiments where it seems info is traveling back in time, like the quantum eraser. fascinating subject, but not really relevant to the conversation).
This would mean that if there was a computer hooked up to our brains in an objectively “real” world and this was an illusion, then after the computer sent info to our brains, nerve stimulation would take as long as direct brain stimulation, and brain stimulation would take double the amount of time. This means that there would have to be a “storage area” in the brain where impulses from direct brain stimulation were stored before being processed. So far as we know, the brain does not work like this.
I dont see any holes in the argument, so i want a second opinion. Does this argument hold water?
Recent neurological studies have shown that there is a time lapse between sensation from direct brain stimulation (say on a fingertip) and nerve stimulation. It takes a person longer to feel sensation from direct brain stimulation than it does from nerve stimulation. Nerve stimulation is (im not a professional on the subject, but ive read this) instantaneous as far as ive heard, while it takes longer for direct brain stimulation (because of this many people have linked brain activity to quantum activity and compare it to such experiments where it seems info is traveling back in time, like the quantum eraser. fascinating subject, but not really relevant to the conversation).
This would mean that if there was a computer hooked up to our brains in an objectively “real” world and this was an illusion, then after the computer sent info to our brains, nerve stimulation would take as long as direct brain stimulation, and brain stimulation would take double the amount of time. This means that there would have to be a “storage area” in the brain where impulses from direct brain stimulation were stored before being processed. So far as we know, the brain does not work like this.
I dont see any holes in the argument, so i want a second opinion. Does this argument hold water?