出版社:文芸社 著者:大野靖志 定価:1,680円
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It is Nanasawa’s belief that a practical application of the mythical wisdom of the Kojiki and the principles of the five strata would be useful to advance human understanding in many ways. The Japanese language itself is of particular cultural heritage as the world’s most developed living syllabary based language, and it has been suggested by Tadanobu Tsunoda, of the University of Tokyo that the Japanese brain (and other Polynesian language based people) process sound differently from people who speak other languages. His research claims that when a syllabary language brain processes the sounds of nature such as insects, birds, running water, etc… the information is processed more on the analytical / language side of the brain (left brain). When compared to the information processing brain activity in people whose native language is alphabet based the sounds of nature are processed by the creative side of the brain (right brain) to process these sounds. While some people criticize Tsunoda for his experiment design, and question his expertise in brain science and linguistics, his research has not been definitively discredited. Instead, the entire left brain / right brain theory of information processing is being revealed as an incoherent theory. Despite our increased abilities to record data from the brain, the source of consciousness has yet to be identified. Tsunoda’s research in this area shows evidence that the mental processing of sound differs based on native language brain conditioning. By extending this principle, there must exist a mechanism behind this flexibility (or shape-ability) of our consciousness as the mind learns to perceive and use information from its surroundings. If this is true, then consciousness is a kind of energy that fills a void based on an interaction with its surroundings, much the way modern astro- physicists describe the paradox of seeing to the edge of the universe. As we are able to pick up the distortions of the field of the edge of the universe, we only ‘see’ the Cosmic Microwave Background Radiation (CMBR). It is like looking at the static on a television station with no broadcast.