THOUGHTS SHAPE THE BRAIN AND MAKE WHO WE ARE

Naomi Sherer

Presented at Women's World 2005, Seoul, Korea, June 19-22

The source of the spirit is the human brain. Not the male brain, not a female brain, but a human brain that changes in response to life experiences from cradle to grave physically reshaping its structures to adapt to changing environments.

Some of the forces that shape the brain are survival pressures from nature. Finding food and shelter, eluding predators and responding to other survival pressures changes the physical structures in the brain, as modern medical technology documents.

But our brain is also a social instrument so it is not surprising that it changes in response to social pressures. Although some social pressures are survival pressures, there are also social pressures that are based on how to control each other. While it is helpful that a child be controlled (guided) by adults, once the child becomes an individual, it is necessary for the individual to control itself even though it is easier to let supernatural parents take the place of vulnerable, aging, human ones. Religion, governments, traditions, all put pressure on the individual to remain controllable conformists.

Although conformity has some survival benefits, it comes at a high price of binding the spirit. Obedience is easy, self-determination is difficult, but each individual has the power to decide whether they will have a free spirit or one that is defined and confined by powerful institutions that have no special interest in the individual.
- Churches teach sin as a way of controlling the spirit. Depending on the culture, religion tells individuals how to dress, speak, what to believe, and where safety can be found. But churches do not function for the benefit of the individual, but for the benefit of the powerful few who lead the church.
- Governments use laws to control the spirit. Although laws against killing and thievery are useful social tools, laws that define everyday actions are simply another way for a powerful few to control individual spirits. Laws that dictate where women or members of different (races) can go, or what jobs they can have, exist only to threaten and coerce behavior.
- Traditions exist to control change from one generation to the next. There is often something comforting in traditions, but just as often they exist to prevent power from going from one group of people to another. In some countries, the traditions are expressed as ‘class.' People born in a noble class are thought to be, in some inexplicable way, superior to other people. Because this tradition is based on birth rather than on individual ability, their real purpose is to control who has power.

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These different elements, religion, laws, and traditions are powerful forces in shaping the human brain but they have one common flaw– the ideas they are based on can be examined and changed or cast aside. Just as our spirits have been shaped by experiences, we can reshape them.

Education and debate often open the spirit to new possibilities. By simply asking the question, ‘Is that true?' our brain structures leap into action, firing neurons, lighting up neural pathways, and measuring old information against new concepts. Like our muscles, once we exercise our brains with new concepts, our spirits becomes stronger.

The source of the spirit is the human brain. Not a male brain. Not a female brain. A human brain is special to each individual because it changes in response to each person's life experiences.

Survival pressures from nature shape the brain. Providing shelter, saving for food, eluding danger, preventing accidents and caring for family change the physical structures in the brain. These changes are documented by modern research technology.

Our brain is a social instrument. The brain changes in response to social pressures. Religion, governments, traditions, and laws are social pressures that require individuals to conform. Those pressures have some survival benefits which come at the high price of binding the spirit.

Obedience is easy. Self-determination is difficult. Each individual let her spirit be defined and confined by these social pressures or develop a free spirit by thoughts of her own.

 

Religions inspire fear and encourage judgment as ways of controlling the spirit. Depending on the religion, individuals are told how to dress, how to speak, what to believe, and where to find safety.

Governments use laws to control the spirit. Laws against killing and thievery are useful social tools. Laws that define everyday actions are another way for a powerful few to control individual spirits. Laws that dictate where individuals can go, what jobs they can have, or when they can work, exist to threaten and coerce behavior.

Traditions exist to control change in a society from one generation to the next. These traditions sometimes are comforting. They prevent power from going from one group of people to another. The purpose of traditions is to control the group.

These different elements - religion, laws, traditions - are powerful forces in shaping the human brain. They can be examined and changed or cast aside. Just as we shape our spirits by experiences, we can reshape our spirits with new thoughts and experiences.

Education and debate open the spirit to new possibilities. By simply asking the question, ‘Is that true?' our brain structures leap into action, firing neurons, lighting up neural pathways, and measuring old information against new concepts. New concepts come from imagination, education, and changing social contacts.

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