From what I've skimmed through, this is a bit of a clickbait title and doesn't really support materialism, but it's interesting nonetheless I suppose: https://newatlas.com/science/psychedelic...cybin-ego/
I am pretty sure that's not what the research suggests but ok then. Also, what other 'compelling recent articles' are they referring to, because they don't link any here...
So apparently they then conducted an experiment to analyse the effect of psilocybin on the claustrum:
Guess what? The term 'consciousness' (to my knowledge) is not mentioned, and nothing relating to the 'self/soul' either. It doesn't mention the hypothesis of the claustrum, and simply says that the drug effects cognition, not consciousness.
Now what does the paper of the Japanese study on the claustrum have to say? https://www.riken.jp/en/news_pubs/resear...index.html
(This post was last modified: 2020-07-06, 07:54 PM by OmniVersalNexus.)
Quote:A new Johns Hopkins study, looking at how psilocybin influences a mysterious brain region called the claustrum, is just one of several compelling recent articles shining a light on how our brains generate our experience of consciousness.
I am pretty sure that's not what the research suggests but ok then. Also, what other 'compelling recent articles' are they referring to, because they don't link any here...
Quote:The last paper Crick ever penned homed in on a small and still relatively mysterious brain region called the claustrum. Co-authored with Christof Koch, Crick was reportedly still editing the manuscript in hospital the day he died. [color=var(--primaryColor1)]Subsequently published in 2005[/color], the paper presented a novel hypothesis - [color=var(--primaryColor1)]the claustrum may be key to our experience[/color] of consciousness, unifying and co-ordinating disparate brain areas to help generate our singular experience...I'm still not seeing how this 'shines a light' on materialism when a 'conductor' can be interpreted in many ways, and other analogies can also be applied.
...While some researchers had previously suggested the claustrum could potentially be the brain’s epicenter of consciousness, Crick and Koch presented a different analogy to describe the role of this mysterious brain region. “We think that a more appropriate analogy for the claustrum is that of a conductor coordinating a group of players in the orchestra, the various cortical regions,” the pair wrote. “Without the conductor, the players can still play but they fall increasingly out of synchrony with each other. The result is a cacophony of sounds.”
Quote:The research discovered slow-wave activity across a number of brain regions increased in tandem with neural firing in the claustrum. Slow-wave brain activity is most often linked to a key period of sleep associated with memory consolidation and synaptic homeostasis.So...this isn't exactly explaining 'self' consciousness then? This study supports the idea that this feature of the brain helps coordinate activity, so I don't know why they're suddenly saying:
Quote:“The claustrum is a coordinator of global slow-wave activity, and it is so exciting that we are getting closer to linking specific brain connections and actions with the ultimate puzzle of consciousness.”
So apparently they then conducted an experiment to analyse the effect of psilocybin on the claustrum:
Quote:The study found psilocybin reduced claustrum neural activity between 15 and 30 percent. The overall reductions in claustrum activity also directly correlated with the subjective psychedelic effects of the drug...I do not understand how at all that research strengthens materialism. The statement in bold appears to be yet another shoddy jump to a conclusion that isn't really supported by these studies. Fortunately, they link to the original paper, which can be found here: https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/ar...1920304663
For example, under the influence of psilocybin, functional connectivity between the right claustrum and the auditory and default mode networks significantly decreased, while right claustrum connectivity with the fronto-parietal task control network increased...
“Our findings move us one step closer to understanding mechanisms underlying how psilocybin works in the brain,” says Frederick Barrett, one of the authors on the new study. “This will hopefully enable us to better understand why it’s an effective therapy for certain psychiatric disorders, which might help us tailor therapies to help people more.”...
Further research is certainly necessary to verify this hypothesis, and the next step for the Johns Hopkins team will be to use this new claustrum imaging technique to investigate the brain region in subjects with a variety of psychiatric disorders. Fifteen years on from Francis Crick’s passing his final work is still inspiring new research. The new wave of psychedelic science, in tandem with novel neuroimaging techniques, brings us closer and closer to understanding how our brains create consciousness.
Guess what? The term 'consciousness' (to my knowledge) is not mentioned, and nothing relating to the 'self/soul' either. It doesn't mention the hypothesis of the claustrum, and simply says that the drug effects cognition, not consciousness.
Now what does the paper of the Japanese study on the claustrum have to say? https://www.riken.jp/en/news_pubs/resear...index.html
Quote:New research from the RIKEN Center for Brain Science (CBS) shows that slow-wave brain activity, a characteristic of sleep and resting states, is controlled by the claustrum. The synchronization of silent and active states across large parts of the brain by these slow waves could contribute to consciousness.I am failing to see how this research supports materialism if the consciousness is referring to 'sleep and resting states'.
Quote:Neural firing in the claustrum closely correlated with the slow-wave activity in many brain regions that receive input from the claustrum. When they artificially activated the claustrum by optogenetic light stimulation, it silenced brain activity across the cortex—a phenomenon known as a “Down state”, which can be seen when mice are asleep or at rest. Up and Down states are known to be synchronized across the cortex by slow waves of activity that travel from the front of the brain to the back. “The slow wave is especially important during sleep because it promotes homeostasis of synapses across the brain and consolidates memories from the preceding awake period,” comments Yoshihara...It seems the author is trying to connect to studies together in a rather misleading and biased manner. I personally haven't seen any reactions to this that haven't accused the article of being clickbait and misleading either. What do you guys think? Does at least the first study suggest materialism is somehow closer to being 'proven'?
“We think the claustrum plays a pivotal role in triggering the down states during slow-wave activity, through its widespread inputs to many cortical areas,” says Yoshihara. When these areas subsequently enter an up state and fire synchronously, this serves to ‘replay’ memories, transfer information between areas, and consolidate long-term memories, “all functions that may contribute indirectly to a conscious state,” Yoshihara observes. “The claustrum is a coordinator of global slow-wave activity, and it is so exciting that we are getting closer to linking specific brain connections and actions with the ultimate puzzle of consciousness.”
Quote:Disclaimer:
As noted here there's a good reason to reject this is proof materialism/physicalism is true, given these skeptical parties that continue to doubt the physicalist/materialist faith.
Additionally, whatever is shown by parapsychology or neuroscience, here are four good reasons to reject the religion of physicalism/materialism.