ABSTRACT

This chapter explains how the subjective and objective are the same reality. It argues that perceiving consists of material representations of perceptual and emotional and shows that memory involves material representations of the perceptual and emotional. The chapter suggests that emotion is a type of perception consisting of material representations of the reinforcing properties of reality. Motor activities involve the utilization of muscles and, as such, might be said to 'motor' bodies through reality, thereby creating action. Receptors transduce energy bearing; dendrites; and axons. Synapses are the regions of contact between neurons and other cells. Sensation and feeling are perceptions that represent past and present reality. Mountcastle in the 1950s found that different vertically oriented clusters of connected neurons a few millimeters square performed remarkably specific brain functions. Reason calculates using present perceptions, analyzed in terms of perceptual and procedural memories, to arrive at what to do about future reality.