Brain Gives Birth to Reality

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Everything that is real is a lie except your thoughts. If someone approached you with this statement you would assume they are insane and you would try to convince them that you are real and the world is real. As you begin to try to prove reality you begin to question yourself, under what circumstances do we understand reality? As we acknowledge what we believe to be realities, we form conclusions and assurances about our own existence and the existence of everything around us. Because our existence is assured through our perception of reality, we believe to be part of an existing real world. The existence of the real world is based upon belief and cannot be proven. The existence of the real world originates from our brains. Reality is dependent of our perception, experiences, senses, and reasoning.

Descartes assured his existence through the conviction of "Cogito, ergo sum" which translates into “I think therefore I am” (Popkin & Stroll 198). In order to question ones existence one must exist, non-existence cannot question itself. I know that my mind exists because I am here to question its existence. To concretize this idea, imagine a house and you are building a house on ground which you see. The house is built out of wood, metal, and earth on the ground. Does the house exist because of the materials used to build it or because your mind tells you that it exists? Well based on Descartes, there are no such things as wood or metal in reality because the only thing that is real is the mind itself and the built house is a figment of your mind to what you perceive as real better known as an illusion. Therefore all that we sense is an illusion and everything outside the mind is uncertain of existence. Furthermore this leads to the ...

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...e the situation that triggers the emotion of hate, anger, sadness. When a person begins to link negative experiences to positive emotions, they begin to love themselves more and not fear their reality. By loving themselves they create a loving reality. In the movie, after Amanda reroutes her neuronetwork she begins healing. She is able to face her cheating husband that has incurred much pain and hatred in her being. As she is healing, she gains control of her reality.

Works Cited

J. Perry & M. Bratman, Introduction to Philosophy, Third Edition, Oxford University Press,

1999 (referred to below as P&B).

R. Popkin & A. Stroll, Philosophy Made Simple, Second Edition Revised, Broadway Books,

New York, (referred to below as P&S).

What the Bleep Do We Know!? Dir. William Arntz, Betsy Chasse, and Mark Vicente. Perf.

Marlee Matlin. 2004. Film.

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