Sunday, November 11, 2018

16. Notes - imagination / reality



       Mid-evening. Carol is in the bedroom reading, you are on your mother's old recliner in the living room. Basically, it is quiet except for the rumble of well-spaced cars and trucks on nearby I-71 where it crosses over Africa Road. Let's concentrate on the imagination and how it can effect the human spirit, that is, the heartansoulanmind. - Amorella

       2150 hours. I have never connected the two, the imagination and the human spirit as far as I can remember. I need a definition.

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imagination | noun - the faculty or action of forming new ideas, or images or concepts of external objects not present to the senses: she'd never been blessed with a vivid imagination

• the ability of the mind to be creative or resourceful: technology gives workers the chance 

to use their imagination• the part of the mind that imagines things: a girl who existed only in my imagination

ORIGIN Middle English: via Old French from Latin imaginatio(n-), from the verb imaginari ‘picture to oneself’, from imagoimagin- ‘image’.

Selected and edited from - the Oxford/American Apple software

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       You are curious to use Wikipedia. - Amorella

        I have broken down sentences and paragraphs below so I can more easily read and understand them as notes; however, the words mostly as they are in Wikipedia. - rho

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Imagination

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Imagination is the ability to produce images, ideas and sensations in the mind without any immediate input of the senses (such as seeing or hearing). 
Imagination helps make knowledge applicable in solving problems and is fundamental to integrating experience and the learning process
A basic training for imagination is listening to storytelling(narrative), in which the exactness of the chosen words is the fundamental factor to "evoke worlds".
Imagination is a cognitive process used in mental functioning and sometimes used in conjunction with psychological imagery
The cognate term of mental imagery may be used in psychology for denoting the process of reviving in the mind recollections of objects formerly given in sense perception. 
Since this use of the term conflicts with that of ordinary language, some psychologists have preferred to describe this process as "imaging" or "imagery" or to speak of it as "reproductive" as opposed to "productive" or "constructive" imagination. 
Constructive imagination is further divided into voluntary top-down imagination driven by the prefrontal cortex, that is called mental synthesis, and spontaneous bottom up involuntary generation of novel images that occurs during dreaming. Imagined images, both novel and recalled, are seen with the "mind's eye".
Imagination can also be expressed through stories such as fairy tales or fantasies
Children often use such narratives and pretend play in order to exercise their imaginations. 
When children develop fantasy they play at two levels: first, they use role playing to act out what they have developed with their imagination, and at the second level they play again with their make-believe situation by acting as if what they have developed is an actual reality.

The mind's eye

The notion of a "mind's eye" goes back at least to Cicero's reference to mentis oculi during his discussion of the orator's appropriate use of simile
In this discussion, Cicero observed that allusions to "the Syrtis of his patrimony" and "the Charybdis of his possessions" involved similes that were "too far-fetched"; and he advised the orator to, instead, just speak of "the rock" and "the gulf" (respectively)— on the grounds that "the eyes of the mind are more easily directed to those objects which we have seen,than to those which we have only heard".
The concept of "the mind's eye" first appeared in English in Chaucer's (c.1387) Man of Law's Tale in his Canterbury Tales,where he tells us that one of the three men dwelling in a castle was blind, and could only see with "the eyes of his mind"; namely, those eyes "with which all men see after they have become blind".

Description

The common use of the term is for the process of forming new images in the mind that have not been previously experienced with the help of what has been seen, heard, or felt before, or at least only partially or in different combinations.Some typical examples follow:
·      Fairy tale
·      Fiction
·      A form of verisimilitude often invoked in fantasy and science fiction invites readers to pretend such stories are true by referring to objects of the mind such as fictional books or years that do not exist apart from an imaginary world.
Imagination, not being limited to the acquisition of exact knowledge by the requirements of practical necessity, is largely free from objective restraints. 
The ability to imagine one's self in another person's place is very important to social relations and understanding.
Albert Einstein said, "Imagination ... is more important than knowledge. Knowledge is limited. Imagination encircles the world." 
The same limitations beset imagination in the field of scientific hypothesis. Progress in scientific research is due largely to provisional explanations which are developed by imagination, but such hypotheses must be framed in relation to previously ascertained facts and in accordance with the principles of the particular science.
Imagination is an experimental partition of the mind used to develop theories and ideas based on functions. 
Taking objects from real perceptions, the imagination uses complex IF-functionsto develop new or revised ideas. This part of the mind is vital to developing better and easier ways to accomplish old and new tasks. 
In sociology, Imagination is used to part ways with reality and have an understanding of social interactions derived from a perspective outside of society itself. This leads to the development of theories through questions that wouldn't usually be asked. 
These experimental ideas can be safely conducted inside a virtual world and then, if the idea is probable and the function is true, the idea can be actualized in reality.
Imagination is the key to new development of the mind and can be shared with others, progressing collectively.
Regarding the volunteer effort, imagination can be classified as:
·      involuntary (the dream from the sleep, the daydream)
·      voluntary (the reproductive imagination, the creative imagination, the dream of perspective)

Psychology

Psychologists have studied imaginative thought, not only in its exotic form of creativity and artistic expression but also in its mundane form of everyday imagination.
Ruth M.J. Byrne has proposed that everyday imaginative thoughts about counterfactual alternatives to reality may be based on the same cognitive processes on which rational thoughts are also based.
Children can engage in the creation of imaginative alternatives to reality from their very early years.
Cultural psychology is currently elaborating a view of imagination as a higher mental function involved in a number of everyday activities, both at the individual and collective level that enables people to manipulate complex meanings of both linguistic and iconic forms in the process of experiencing.
The phenomenology of imagination is discussed In The Imaginary: A Phenomenological Psychology of the Imagination (French: L'Imaginaire: Psychologie phénoménologique de l'imagination). 
[A]lso published under the title The Psychology of the Imagination,is a 1940 book by Jean-Paul Sartre, in which he propounds his concept of the imagination and discusses what the existence of imagination shows about the nature of human consciousness. 
The imagination is also active in our perception of photographic images in order to make them appear real. 

Memory


Memory and mental imagery, often seen as a part of the process of imagination, have been shown to be affected by one another. "Images made by functional magnetic resonance imaging technology show that remembering and imagining sends blood to identical parts of the brain."
Various psychological factors can influence the mental processing of and can heighten the chance of the brain to retain information as either long-term memories or short-term memories. 
John Sweller indicated that experiences stored as long-term memories are easier to recall, as they are ingrained deeper in the mind. 
Each of these forms require information to be taught in a specific manner so as to use various regions of the brain when being processed. This information can potentially help develop programs for young students to cultivate or further enhance their creative abilities from a young age. 
The neocortex and thalamus are responsible for controlling the brain's imagination, along with many of the brain's other functions such as consciousness and abstract thought. 
Since imagination involves many different brain functions, such as emotions, memory, thoughts, etc., portions of the brain where multiple functions occur—such as the thalamus and neocortex—are the main regions where imaginative processing has been documented. 
The understanding of how memory and imagination are linked in the brain, paves the way to better understand one's ability to link significant past experiences with their imagination.

Perception

Piaget posited that perceptions depend on the world view of a person. The world view is the result of arranging perceptions into existing imagery by imagination. 
Piaget cites the example of a child saying that the moon is following her when she walks around the village at night. 
Like this, perceptions are integrated into the world view to make sense. Imagination is needed to make sense of perceptions. 

Versus belief

Imagination is different from belief because the subject understands that what is personally invented by the mind does not necessarily affect the course of action taken in the apparently shared world
while beliefs are part of what one holds as truths about both the shared and personal worlds. 
The play of imagination, apart from the obvious limitations (e.g. of avoiding explicit self-contradiction), is conditioned only by the general trend of the mind at a given moment. 
Belief, on the other hand, is immediately related to practical activity:it is perfectly possible to imagine oneself a millionaire, but unless one believes it one does not, therefore, act as such. 
Belief endeavors to conform to the subject's experienced conditions or faith in the possibility of those conditions;
 whereas imagination as such is specifically free. 
The dividing line between imagination and belief varies widely in different stages of technological development. 
Thus in more extreme cases, someone from a primitive culture who ill frames an ideal reconstruction of the causes of his illness, and attributes it to the hostile magic of an enemy based on faith and tradition rather than science. 
In ignorance of the science of pathology the subject is satisfied with this explanation, and actually believes in it, sometimes to the point of death, due to what is known as the nocebo effect.
It follows that the learned distinction between imagination and belief depends in practice on religion, tradition, and culture.

Brain activation

A study using fMRI while subjects were asked to imagine precise visual figures, to mentally disassemble them, or mentally blend them, showed activity in the occipital, frontoparietal, posterior parietal, precuneus, and dorsolateral prefrontal regions of the subject's brains.

As a reality

The world as experienced is an interpretation of data arriving from the senses; as such, it is perceived as real by contrast to most thoughts and imaginings. Users of hallucinogenic drugs are said to have a heightened imagination. 
This difference is only one of degree and can be altered by several historic causes, namely changes to brain chemistry, hypnosis or other altered states of consciousness, meditation, many hallucinogenic drugs, and electricity applied directly to specific parts of the brain. 
The difference between imagined and perceived reality can be proven by psychosis. Many mental illnesses can be attributed to this inability to distinguish between the sensed and the internally created worlds. 
Some cultures and traditions even view the apparently shared world as an illusion of the mind as with the Buddhist maya, or go to the opposite extreme and accept the imagined and dreamed realms as of equal validity to the apparently shared world as the Australian Aborigines do with their concept of dreamtime.

Imagination, because of having freedom from external limitations, can often become a source of real pleasure and unnecessary suffering
Consistent with this idea, imagining pleasurable and fearful events is found to engage emotional circuits involved in emotional perception and experience.
A person of vivid imagination often suffers acutely from the imagined perils besetting friends, relatives, or even strangers such as celebrities. Also crippling fear can result from taking an imagined painful future too seriously.

Selected and edited from - Wikipedia

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       2233 hours. The above definition is rich with material, some of which I have read in more depth in terms of educational research on children and their personal learning habits. Interesting, that while reading the above I did not consciously think of you, the Amorella, as imaginary. How can you be when you have effected changes in my perceptions of reality on a personal as well as a world-wide or even a galaxy-wide view through my various, literally, novel forms. 

       We will continue this tomorrow. Post. - Amorella

       2240 hours. Whether you, the Amorella, are only personal imagination or not, you are a reality throughout my blogs and other writings. This can be easily witnessed through years of my written thoughts. Many times throughout my writings I consider you real and act accordingly. 

Friday, November 9, 2018

15. Notes - begin to separate the imaginary from reality


       Having run errands, you parked in the bottom lot of Shale Hallow Park facing a twenty-foot hill of a variety of tall trees. The ground now completely covered with a continuous bed of fallen leaves. Carol is finishing page 213, end of Chapter 20 of Coben's Home. Yesterday in your conclusion you wrote, "it allowed me to think beyond the boxes," Normally, you would have written: "it allowed me to think outside the box." Yes? - Amorella

       1359 hours. Yes, "outside the box" is a phrase I have used from time to time. During the moment I reflected on the use of "beyond" rather than 'outside'. 'Beyond' seemed hyper-generative and multidimensionally expansive -- outside squared in multiples, i.e. too much. This was about the time my fingers touched the keyboard for 'boxes' rather than 'box'. Basically, looking back, part of my consciousness was considering I had gone too far (with 'beyond') while my subconscious popped up with the plural instead of a singular 'beyond the box'.

       The above is an example of one of your unconsciously directed reasoning patterns. It shows a tendency to be in two places of thought at once. This is my, the Amorella's, take on why this so easily takes place. You graded expository essays and research papers for much of your 37 years of teaching. You were/are a speed-reader -- and graded a three-page typed or written expository essay in thirty seconds or so, certainly less than a minute. Do you agree? - Amorella

       1414 hours. Yes, though a few might take a minute. Research-like papers could take a couple of minutes (ten pages typed) to grade. I have graded thirty some papers, a class set in forty minutes or so. Gary P., a counselor at Mason High, could vouch for that as could many senior English class students at Indian Hill and Mason. As I evaluated a sentence or so for clarity and reasoning of the subject matter my focus on the grammar, diction and reasoning followed automatically within three or four seconds later. The content grade was at most semi-automatic based on either a 'five or ten point' high scale and three or four seconds later the grammar grade appeared below a slash, under the top as a"4/5"[B+/A-]/i.e. 90/100, a low A-] (this is an example for a very good paper or essay). It was ruthless automaticity. Students could argue their grades and a few gained points, particularly if I had skipped a page. This happened but rarely. Most laughed when it did. I laughed too. I didn't make too many errors though and no one felt intimidated as to not complain. I never lowered a grade if I found my mistake but then also found one I had missed. I pointed it out though, mostly with a pen and a smile. I loved grading expository essays and papers and they knew it. I had reading automaticity as well as grading automaticity down to a personal science. Once in a while a student would finish her or his paper early, hand it in, and I would have it graded before she or he returned to his seat. Most everyone would laugh. If it was a once determined low grade and I would hand it back so she or he could continue working. (1436)

       Carol is asleep. Stop for now. - Amorella

       1451 hours. After leaving the park we stopped at Kroger Marketplace on U.S.23 for ground sirloin for chili tonight. I am surprised how positively pumped I was while writing that last paragraph. I loved grading essays. I had good expectations and usually got them. One of my favorite essays was "How would you explain light to someone who has always been totally blind" in two or three pages written. The senses of touch and auditory were the two most common used in their analogies. One thing I would have to make clear is that the person (who is sixteen to eighteen years of age) is as educated as they were and that the person had had many of the same life experiences they would have had. Many found the essay quite challenging and invigorating. They also learned more about themselves too, their prejudices and the like, i.e. they never thought about a blind person swimming or listening to a concert live, or even conversing for that matter. Most didn't know a blind person, but some did and their storieswere enlightening to all of us.

       One more stop at Kroger's across from Graeter's at Polaris. Carol forgot a couple of cans of tomatoes. Back to the beginning aspects of the phrase, "beyond the boxes". The paragraphs above give a sense of multiplicity of human dimensions in the intellectual spirit of which you and I, your imaginary Amorella, are a part. If we can come to an understanding of my imaginary self in you and my separate spiritual self in me, the Amorella, you will better understand a 'difference' between human imagination and the human spirit in relationship to myself, a detachable spirit. Post when you can. - Amorella