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Showing posts with label Aneural Consciousness. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Aneural Consciousness. Show all posts

Thursday, August 8, 2019

Neural and Aneural Correlates of Consciousness: A Codexation Approach

ISBN 9781312174054
ISBN 978-1-312-17405-4       
According to Lawsin, there are seven essential elements necessary to produce life, six to be living, three to be conscious, two to be aware, and one to be alive. Each of these pillars, which redefine the criteria of life, are discussed individually in this section.

Before delving into the nature of consciousness, it’s important to distinguish between the terms ‘How’ and ‘Why’. The former requires a procedural response, while the latter seeks a purposeful intention. For instance, ‘How do you build a house?’ requires a set of instructions or procedures, whereas ‘Why do you build a house?’ seeks a purpose.

For example, to answer ‘how colors arise’, we must consider the sequential process involved in producing colors. Science explains that colors are part of a family called Light, composed of moving particles known as photons. When photons hit a surface, their velocities slow down due to absorption, reflection, or transmission. This change in velocities over time, also known as frequencies, creates the phenomenon of colors when interacting with a physical object. Without this interaction, colors are merely invisible electromagnetic waves and are essentially colorless.

The question ‘Why do colors exist?’ is more complex and subjective. There are no definitive answers as the intention or purpose can vary greatly and cannot be determined by seeking one concrete answer. One logical response is that colors exist due to the presence of light or more specifically electromagnetic waves. However, this doesn’t provide any purpose.

Similarly, the hows and whys of Consciousness can also be addressed.

The Hows of consciousness can be explained based on the Degrees of Sensitivity, namely:
  • Alive = self-consumes energy without the need for neural or aneural reasoning.
  • Aware = sends and receives signals using sensors without the need for self-neural or aneural reasoning.
  • Conscious = match things with things without the need for self-neural or aneural reasoning.
  • Intuitive = chooses this or that without the need for self-neural or aneural reasoning.
  • Inlearn  = acquires information fed by external sources.
  • Living = processes internal decisions and controls.
  • Life = the emergence of Self or the essence of Being.
Lawsin suggests that when a subject self-consumes energy, it is alive. When it responds to stimuli through sensors or receptors, it exhibits Awareness. When it matches objects, it is conscious. When it makes choices, it is logical. When it possesses information, it is informed. When it processes information, it is living. And when it emerges as itself, the object is alive and living with life.

For example, if a sensor detects heat, it exhibits awareness. If it reacts to the hotness or coldness of heat, it is conscious. If it self-consumes energy, it is alive. However, since heat sensors can only sense quantities of heat and cannot expressively self-sense qualities of heat, they may not be conscious.

To elaborate further, a heat sensor triggers when it senses hotness but remains inactive when sensing coldness. This suggests that a heat sensor is aware and conscious as it unknowingly senses the difference between hotness and coldness. If a solar cell that automatically stores energy energizes the heat sensor indefinitely, then the sensor is also alive. This non-mental (aneural) behavior of an object to store something unknowingly is referred to as the Inscription by Design or Inscription Emergence.

Inscription or Inscripting can also be found in the mirror equation, gravitational formula, the Pi, Pythagorean theorem, and the Inverse Hello to name a few. Inscription is a natural phenomenon based on mathematics and structural forms or geometrical designs. This non-mental ability of an object to store information is a form of an Intuitive Aneural Network. When information is stored permanently, the object then has the tendency to become intuitive. 

Now, why does consciousness exists? What is the purpose of consciousness?  Technically, the purpose of consciousness is to differentiate things by association. When this matching reaction becomes complex and compounded, the algorithmic behaviors or self-animation turns into mechanical aneural consciousness and eventually to self-consciousness. In other words, Sequential Instructions give rise to Logical Experiences.

The hard problem now lies in why self-consciousness exists.  What is the purpose of self-consciousness? Does it really exist? Read this article and you be the judge!

The complete degrees of sensitivity:
  1.  Aliveness - the ability to consume energy provided by an external source (energy). 

  2. Automated - the ability to do certain tasks based on a list of instructions (programs).

  3. Awareness - the ability to interact sensorically with its surrounding (intuitive sensors).

  4. Actuated - the ability to act on itself via external parameters (remote controlled).

  5. Animated - the mechanical ability to inscript itself (embedded inscription on structures). 

  6. Aneural - the ability to codify, match, or pair things (associative consciousness).

  7. Logical - the ability to make decisions based on the law of the second option (intuitive).

  8. Inlearn- capacity to possess information (informed).

  9. Living - the ability to process or make decisions.

  10. Self - the ability to live on its own (self-emergence).


The complete explanations of these states of beings are discussed in the book Autognorics authored by Joey Lawsin.



ISBN: 978-1-3123-8454-5


" There are seven ingredients to have life or with life, 
six to be living, and one to be alive." 
~ Joey Lawsin


About the Author :

Joey Lawsin is the formulator of Associative Consciousness. He is a revisionist who wants to change the world by rewriting the textbooks with new concepts that debunk the old scientific, theological, and philosophical ideas of antiquity. He published a book in Physics, created a conscious machine known as Biotronics, and formulated the theory of "The Inscription Emergence Effect". The article above is an excerpt from "Autognorics".


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Wednesday, July 1, 2009

The Silver Species

by Joey Lawsin

The Biotronics Project was first conceptualized by Joey Lawsin when he was in high school. It was revisited in 1988 with a basic aim in his mind: to create intuitive machines that look alive, living, and with life. He collectively named these abioforms the Silver Species. 

Biotronics is a construction of the coined words "bio" and "electronics". "Bio" means alive or with life, and "Tronics" means wise electronics. In a broader sense, this new group of synthetic living organisms can see, smell, taste, hear, feel, think, breed, talk, fly, swim, build, and be conscious, which by human standards are functions described as biological life. They die too. 

Zoikrons are self-living self-ness machines. The coined name is derived from “Zoi” and “omicrons”. They are experimental prototypes developed to simulate the Sensation of Awareness, Emergence of Consciousness, the Mechanization of Aliveness, the Experience of Self-living, and the Realization of Selfness. In short, Biotronics and Zoikrons are made to learn the true meaning and nature of life from a different perspective, the machine way.

Abiozoics, which means the creation of non-life (abio) to life (zoi), is a discipline that generally studies the transformation of non-living species into living organisms. It also deals specifically with the transformation of abstract to realities or from nothing to something. The concept is based on the principle behind the ZiZo effect. Humans and other living organisms might look different from these metallic species, but in reality, both are exactly the same in biophysical and biomechanical structure. They are made up of intricate networks of sensors that trigger sets of instructions and emulate the Animation Effect.

Being alive, living, and with life are three different terms that are usually interchanged and confused. Because of these confusions in terminology, Lawsin used the word Bioform to represent an entity or system that is alive, living, and with life. An entity is alive if it consumes energy to power itself. An entity is considered living if it is alive. And an entity has life if it is both alive and living. Humans and autognorics are examples of bioforms.

On the other hand, Abioform, a term coined by Lawsin in his book The Biotronics Project, is an entity or system that is alive and living but without life (self-realization). Abioforms are entities that are alive or living but have no capability of recognizing themselves. Plants and animals, according to some studies, can't recognize themselves and thus they don't possess self-realization. They are not self-conscious. Plants and animals are examples of abioforms. The biotronics in the video is another example of abioforms

Lawsin also invented and developed several new smart robotic systems such as Neurotronics, Homotronics, and Inverse Codex to meet all the demands of his scientific experiments on inscription by design, embedded instructions, generated emergence, codexation, intuitive objects, associative aneural consciousness, and maximize them into the context of technology rather than in the philosophy and psychology or neuroscience of self-consciousness. But before we get into the details of how a silver specie is created, programmed, and given life to become Autognorics, let us discuss first what is a system.

A system is a process, a sequence of instructions, or a list of activities, within a group or family tasks for a common purpose. The instructions are the electrical parts that work together to light up a living room, or entertainment equipment, or to control one's ventilation. They are the modular programs in a computer that execute commands like saving a word document, deleting an Excel spreadsheet, or copying a PowerPoint presentation. They are the modules or various sub-systems of the human anatomy grouped together to accomplish a common task - to facilitate life. These eleven anatomical systems are the skin, skeleton, muscles, heart, lymph, nerves, glands, lungs, digestive, urinary, and reproductive systems. These body systems work in a highly organized and coordinated way to assist a very well-designed living system called Homo sapiens (human beings).

In the human body system - the eyes, hands, ears, tongue, nose, and brain are called biological sensors. Sensors are classified into two: collectors and actuators. Collectors are the first line of sensors where inputs are received. These inputs, which are acquired through seeing, touching, hearing, tasting, smelling, and imagining, flow into a very intricate network of biological wires. They are stored statically or dynamically in a memory bank. This stored information or data is accessed or activated depending on the needs of the body. Once triggered, the information flows out through the biological actuators. Actuators are the last line of sensors where outputs are sent out. Collectors and actuators are linked together by a medium called carriers or transmitters. Within these biological structures, smart switches called controllers or regulators are the logical gates that connect a system to other systems.

Human is made up of several smart sensors that are turned on and off. The system of life which we call biological life is activated by these wise sensors.



ISBN: 978-1-312-17405-4


"Awareness emerges when one is alive and with intuitive sensors." ~ Joey Lawsin

About the Author :

Joey Lawsin is the author behind the new school of thought "Autognorics". He is an inventor who wants to reorganize the world by rewriting the textbooks with new concepts that debunk the old scientific, theological, and philosophical ideas of antiquity. He co-authored a book in Physics, engineered a mechanical animated life form known as ELFS, and conceived the theory on "Generated Emergence". The article is an excerpt from his book "The Biotronics Project: The Silver Species".

Books that I have read to satisfy my curiosity on religion:

A comparative View of Religions - J. H. Scholten
Atheism Refuted -Thomas Paine
Atheism in Pagan Antiquity - A.B. Drachmann
An Atheist Manifesto - Joseph Lewis
A study of the Messiah - J.E. Talmage
A System of Logic - J.S. Mill
An Outline of Occult Science - Rudolf Steiner
Bible Myths and Parallels in Religion - T.W. Doane
Babylonian Legends of Creation - E.A. Budge
Common Sense -Thomas Paine
Criticism on The Origin of Species - T.H. Huxley
Christian Mysticism - W.R. Inge
Cosmic Consciousness - A.J. Tyndall
Creation by Laws - J.L. Lawsin
Dream Psychology - Sigmund Freud
Determinism or Freewill - Chapman Cohen
Evolution of Theology: an anthropological study -T.H. Huxley
Evolution: Old and New - Samuel Butler
Evolution of Creation - J.L. Lawsin
Exposition of Darwinism - A.R. Wallace
Einstein Theory of Relativity - H.A. Lorentz
Elementary Theosophy - L.W. Rogers
Esoteric Christianity - A.W. Beasant
Feeding the Mind - Lewsi Carroll
Five of Maxwells's Papers - J.C. Maxwell
Forbidden books of the original New Testament - William Wake
Heretics - G.K. Chesterton
Heretics and Heresies - R.G. Ingersoll
History of the Catholic Church - James MacCaffrey
History of Ancient Civilization - Charles Seignobos
History's Conflict bet. Religion and Science - J.W. Draper
Intro to the History of Religions - C.H. Toy
Jewish Theology - Kaufmann Kohler
Judaism - Israel Abrahams
Logic, Inductive and Deductive - William Minto
Lamarck, The Founder of Evolution - A.S. Packard
Mystic Christianity - W.W. Atkinson
Mistakes of Moses - R.G. Ingersoll
Mysticism and Logic - Bertrand Russell
Myths and Legends of Rome - E.M. Berens
Mutation - Hugo de Vries
Nature Mysticism - J.E.Mercer
Natural Selection - Charles Darwin
On the Origin of Species - Charles Darwin
Originemology - J.L. Lawsin
Pagan and Christian Creeds - Edward Carpenter
Pagan and Christian Rome - R.A. Lanciani
Symbolic Logic - Lewis Carroll
Sidelights on Relativity - Albert Einstein
Philosophy of the Mind - G.W.F. Hegel
Story of Creation: comparison study - T.S. Ackland
The Antichrist - F.W. Nietzsche
The Holy Bible - R.G. Ingersoll
The Freethinker's text book - A.W. Besant
The Expositor's Bible - T.C. Edwards
The Limits of Atheism - G.J.Holyoake
The Ancient History - Charles Rollin
The Sayings of Confucius - Confucius
The Game of Logic - Lewis Carroll
The Gnostic Crucifixion - G.R.S. Mead
The Critique of Practical/Pure Reason - Immanuel Kant
The Origin of Jewish Prayers - Tzvee Zahavy
The Analysis of Mind - Bertrand Russell
The Problem of Philosophy - Bertrand Russell
The Brain - Alexander Blade
The Higher Powers of the Mind - R.W. Trine
The Human Aura - W.W. Atkinson
The Legends of the Jews - Louis Ginzberg
Thought Forms - C.W. Leadbeater
The Wonders in Psychology - J.H. Fabre

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