Louis Claude de Saint-Martin
Louis Claude de Saint-Martin and Plato: Where do our ideas come from?
22/07/2007 Filed in: Martinism
| Platonism
& Neoplatonism
Do ideas
originate in the brain, or from the input of the
senses, or are they independent of any individual
brain? Do we depend on external stimuli to form ideas,
or are we born with a set of ideas that just kick in
independently of our environment? Is consciousness the
product of nurture or nature? How interdependent are
our ideas and our consciousness?
These questions may seem very outdated today, as the debate appears to have been settled by the neurological argument, according to which the brain is the origin of our consciousness. The question has now shifted to how consciousness arises, which is a similar problem to how ideas are produced.
However, the hypothesis that the brain is not the origin of all our ideas, but merely a “transducer”, can still be made: can one discriminate between a brain that only analyses and translates a raw input into a given output and a brain that is the actual source of the same output? Read More...
These questions may seem very outdated today, as the debate appears to have been settled by the neurological argument, according to which the brain is the origin of our consciousness. The question has now shifted to how consciousness arises, which is a similar problem to how ideas are produced.
However, the hypothesis that the brain is not the origin of all our ideas, but merely a “transducer”, can still be made: can one discriminate between a brain that only analyses and translates a raw input into a given output and a brain that is the actual source of the same output? Read More...