Is it not amazing to realize how little we know of how the brain actually works. We know about the chemical and electrical signaling that is taking place, and we try to map out how the connections correlate to one another, but really we know so very little. How do all these signals and such turn into the complex and beautiful thoughts and memories that we have in our minds all the time, while still keeping our bodies functioning and alive? And how does a premature, supposedly damaged, brain like Derek's here, store and create such mindbogglingly beautiful music? We may have mapped out the human genome, and we may know everything about the evolution and maturation of the brain, but with all we have learned the brain is still mystifying us.
Life beats down and crushes the soul and art reminds you that you have one. ~Stella Adler
Sunday, July 1, 2012
Derek Paravicini - British Musical Savant
Is it not amazing to realize how little we know of how the brain actually works. We know about the chemical and electrical signaling that is taking place, and we try to map out how the connections correlate to one another, but really we know so very little. How do all these signals and such turn into the complex and beautiful thoughts and memories that we have in our minds all the time, while still keeping our bodies functioning and alive? And how does a premature, supposedly damaged, brain like Derek's here, store and create such mindbogglingly beautiful music? We may have mapped out the human genome, and we may know everything about the evolution and maturation of the brain, but with all we have learned the brain is still mystifying us.
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