Friday, July 10, 2015

The Snake Brain, the Eve Brain and the Adam Brain

I don't know where I got this from or even the title to it. I found it on my hard drive and it's probably a few years old.

But I agree with a lot of it.

The author is correct that the most primitive part of the brain is reptilian - it's called the r-complex, for reptilian complex. On top of that is the limbic system, which is the emotional brain. And on top of that is the neocortex. Which is the rational part of the brain.

The r-complex is often trying to overthrow the rest of the brain, and the limbic system is often trying to overthrow the neo-cortex. Life would be hell if this happened. It has been in the past.

Since women are generally ruled by their feelings, the limbic system, being the emotional part of the brain, could be considered female. The neocortex could be considered the male part.

The rational part of the brain has to control everything under it. At its best - and here I quote a famous saying from Taoism - "Yang protects Yin and Yin supports Yang." The masculine protects the feminine and the feminine supports the masculine.

Not so strangely, you can find this in brain structure. The limbic system, being underneath the neocortex, supports it, and since the limbic system cannnot survive by itself, it needs the neocortex to protect it.

Look at the havoc feminism has caused. This is what happens the emotional part of the brain rules. And we have known for thousands of years what the r-complex does. For one thing, it has no shame or guilt. And envy is located in the emotional part of the brain.

Feminism is leftist and feminine and based on envy. Socialism is feminine and envious. Observe what it has created: catastrophe, every time.

Eve, after all, is shown to be envious, shameless and guiltless. And at the end of Genesis, it's written the woman wants to rule the man but the man shall always rule the woman.

Looked at this way, the Nachash, which is what the "serpent" really is, is a combination of the shameless, guilt-free Snake brain, the envious Eve brain, and because it talks, is also the Adam brain. But it's mostly the Snake brain and Eve brain, because it tries to overthrow Adam.

Some religions are far more envious and emotional-driven than others. Specifically, Judaism and Islam (both shame-based cultures). That makes them "feminine." That's what makes them catastrophes. Judaism is for all practical purposes a matriarchy and since both are "feminine" it's one of the reasons both are parasitical. Unfortunately, even Christianity (mostly a guilt-based culture) is falling headlong into a feminine-centered church.

When Adam and Eve ate of the fruit and became self-conscious and aware, the "good" and "evil" they became aware of was that narcissistic and primitive "all good" and "all bad" in which someone else is considered the cause of all your problems and so must be eliminated. You can see than dynamic in the murder of Abel by Cain, which is why I call Adam, Eve, Cain and Abel the first dysfunctional family. And their story explains about 99% of the bad in the world.

Here starts the article.


Myth is a gateway to understanding the drama of consciousness as it plays out in a grand scale. Joseph Campbell once said, " The images of myth are reflections of the spiritual potentialities of every one of us. Through contemplating these, we evoke their powers in our own lives." This statement was taken out of book detailing his conversations with Bill Moyers entitled The Power of Myth.

One of the most powerful mythological stories is that of the story of the events in the Garden of Eden.

While this story is considered by most people as symbolic rather than historical; it does have unsettling parallels in the physiology of guilt. The human brain has been established to have three levels of functions. The brain as it is today, is  a product of a series of three biological upgrades. Paul Mclean called it the Triune Brain some forty years ago.

The theory states that the brain is made of three parts for three purposes. The Brain Stem, also called the reptilian brain, is in charge of bodily concerns as well as reflex motions that ensure survival. This brain is attributed to more primitive traits like social dominance, selfishness and things our culture labels as "evil". This brain is very similar to the ones that run snakes and other reptiles.

Sitting on top the reptilian brain is the mammalian which is common in birds. Together these two brains forms the limbic brain. Through this upgrade, we recognize family. It is in this stage of the brain's evolutionary development that animals began to care for their young. Babies soon began to suckle milk until they wean to ensure their survival. Protective feelings stem from this region. The mammalian brain is also where memories are processed. It is the part where fight or flight responses are triggered. This part of the brain mediates between the reptilian brain's impulses and the cortex brain's reasoning. The cortex, the most recent upgrade is where we strategize, plan and become objective.

At the very center of the two hemispheres in the cortex is the medial pre-frontal cortex, heavily studied for its role in providing motivation and for such positive traits in humanity such as altruism and kindness.

Paul Mclean decades ago visualized a brain to be made of three archetypal characters. A snake, a woman and a man. This theory suggest a fragmentation of the single brain relegating lower functions to the snake brain and higher functions to the male brain. It was in recent years that we discovered that the brain is not as fragmented in function as it seemed decades back. Rather, the brain are separate parts that function in unison. Although the brain indeed has three levels that clearly show our evolutionary origins, researcher Ned Herrman refined the theory further and re-introduced it as the Whole Brain Theory.

While this is so, Mclean's gender associations to the parts of the brain shows up in myths that persist in our culture. The familiar dynamic of the snake, the woman and the man in the Tree of Knowledge shows that we have subconscious knowledge of the true nature of our own minds. One such myth is The Story of the Fall of Adam and Eve.

Judeo-Christian mystics identifies the story of Adam and Eve's fall from God's grace as the source of all our hardships on earth. Christian theology calls it the source of original sin when man was born with "automatic guilt". The amazing thing about all this religious beliefs is that in may more real than we think it is. However, it is not from an actual historical point of view, but from an anatomical one.

Daniel Goleman explains this in detail in the Emotional Intelligence published around a decade back in a chapter he titled the "Anatomy of Emotional Hijacking." In this chapter, he explains how the mammalian brain, can be duped by signals of survival threats coming from the snake brain to override logical thought in the cortex.

An example that Goleman used to demonstrate this is a real story about a father shot her daughter on the neck with a pistol. His fears that the sounds he heard when he entered the house were from a burglar blinded him from seeing his own daughter come out the closet to surprise him. This potential for colossal mistakes is an anatomical glitch in an otherwise perfectly engineered brain. It is highly possible for reason to fail when we become slaves of our own fear.

In the story of Adam and Eve, the reference to the "Tree of Knowledge between Good and Evil in the midst of the garden" resounds the location of the amygdala at the center the brain. In the beginning of the story of Adam and Eve, "In the middle of it is the tree of life and also the tree of knowledge between good and evil", implying in the way only biblical stories can, that it is the same tree. It is also quite known in esoteric tradition that Tree of Life pertains to the human brain.

The Tree of knowledge between good and evil may be a metaphor for this trap.  The Mammalian Brain (or what I like to call the Eve Brain) mediates reasoning between two different kinds of impulses. The one coming from logic (Adam) and the other from reflex (Snake). In our evolutionary history, something happened that triggered the first amygdala hijack. Since then, it became standard fare in our existence.  We are now hardwired to tend to act before thinking and do things that we will later regret--we call this phenomenon, Guilt. So it is true that we are born with this guilt. Only altruistic acts done consistently through generations, could we possibly usher our evolution away from this anomaly.

The practice of rising above fear and letting better judgment reign in our decisions will create corresponding anatomical organs to better facilitate this habit. Our anatomy changes because of our environment the choices we make everyday. Habits of choice become later on embedded in our anatomy so our offspring will be better equipped to make better choices. Mindfulness means that the cortex is present and functional. Past memories stored in the limbic brain do not interfere with the present circumstances when action in being computed. Lack of mindfulness makes us jumpy. We react before thinking.

The neanderthal brain is different because of the large occipital bun which may mean a larger reptilian brain.

The Neanderthal brain is theorized to have a larger cerebellum than the brain of modern humans because of their enlarged occipital bun. Modern humans have no bulge at the back of their skulls. Instead the budge is on the forehead, right where the skull is housing the pre-frontal brain.

This shows that evolution favored the reptilian brain to shrink beneath the limbic brain. One passage in the myth of Adam and Eve seems to convey this story."...And its head will be crushed by the foot of the woman". The phrase is a fitting metaphor. The reptilian aspect of our consciousness has been relegated to the ground, "beneath and apart from the woman who desires only the man who in turn will rule OVER her." It is clear that this story is all internal story all humans share.

In the ending passages of the story, the Creator put the Eden Cherubim in the east of the Garden. Cherubim are commonly mistaken for angelic beings. They actually symbolize Spiritual Truths in the mystical tradition. These spiritual truths are like hidden doors that open to help us transcend our anatomical predispositions.

In order for man to overcome this tragedy in the Garden of Eden, Adam, (the Cortex) must extend his hand (seek) to partake of the fruit of the Tree of Life. The Tree of Life is the mystical path to Eternal life. The Tree of life essentially is saying that all of creation is one. Good and evil, light and darkness are parts of the Whole. Christian theology states that the Tree of Life is Jesus on the Cross. The idea of Jesus centers around mystical sacrifice to save mankind from sin. This is altruism and altruism is a pre-frontal cortex activity. Our religious beliefs are instinctive directives of human consciousness to move away from habits that are dangerous to our collective survival.

When we overcome our fears relating to survival constantly, we begin to make use of our more advanced brain. Use cues evolution on which anatomical parts are needed. If it is needed it gets larger and more efficient part of the anatomy later on. The part of the brain enables us perceive harmony and oneness is the pre-frontal cortex. Through this brain, the good Samaritan recognizes his need to help someone who is not his relative, his friend, nor part of his tribe. Through this part of the brain, we can "love our enemies" and are able to sacrifice our own lives for the lives of others. Heroes came to be when this part of brain evolved.

Today's knowledge of brain functions is now showing us where these stories come from. It comes from our subconscious knowledge of our nature; how we came to be as we are and where we are poised to evolve. These stories that persist in our cultures as myths are in fact (in my opinion at least) events in our physical evolution from the time we evolved from snakes to the time when we began to see ourselves as Children of a Higher Being. These symbols are stories of life's drama. Through them, we remember what consciousness went through on its way to becoming a human consciousness.

Andrew Newberg M.D. and Mark Robert Waldman wrote in conclusion of their recently published book HOW GOD CHANGES YOUR BRAIN: "Go deeply in your contemplation of God because you'll eventually discover yourself. This is how...God and science, when the two come together in the brain, can affect and transform your life".

To evolve into better human beings, our myths urge us toward the small part of our brain that inspires altruism. To do this, we must continuously transcend fears stored in our primitive consciousness until it no longer exists in our anatomy.

14 comments:

Dana said...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Dragons_of_Eden

Carl Sagan

Anonymous said...

Great post Uncle Bob. Love the analogies drawn. As above, so below. As below, so above. Seems like there are layers upon layers of meaning in all stories, myths, sacred texts.

Anonymous said...

It's funny Dana links to Dragons of Eden. I don't know if Sagan had anything to do with it, but I remember decades ago that book is where I first heard the "reptile brain" idea. Stayed with me ever since.

Mindstorm said...

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Up_from_Dragons - I haven't read it. Seems to be too pop-science for my tastes.

Mindstorm said...

Ah, and your schema would contradict the Bible on the subject what is derived of what, as Eve was supposed to be made from the rib of Adam, not the other way around. So, equivalently, 'Eve brain' would arise later than 'Adam brain'. Also, going with your line of thinking, that would mean that all 'demons and devils' are innate and can't be scapegoated as external influences nor ever really 'exorcised'.

Unknown said...

"Up From Dragons"

"Rewired by symbols."

Oh yes, that certainly is true.

Unknown said...

"reptile brain"

I first read about it in Richard Restak's book, "The Brain." I could never forget it.

Mindstorm said...

I guess that 'cognitive stand-ins' that are mentioned in the Wiki article mean the same as 'shorthand abstractions' coined by James Flynn (the guy from the Flynn effect). His term is more widespread in the human 'memespace'/'noosphere', if you subscribe to these ideas.

BTW, recently Vox Day accused me of writing 'word salad'. Is my way of expression cryptic and obfuscatory, in your opinion?

Unknown said...

I laugh in Vox Days's general direction with much contempt.

AAB said...

Mindstorm, 'Word salad' is something that you're more likely to write about than write like.

It's sounds like Vox just using fancy jargon again, this time to insult people (like solipism when plain old selfish would do). I'm sure you've checked it up already but word salad is a style that schizophrenics write in because they are more scatter-brained than most.


Mindstorm said...

Solipsist in the original sense would mean 'doesn't believe in independent existence of others'. So it's not exactly the same as 'selfish'. I would guess that speaking or writing word salad would make one hard to be understood. Am I hard to get? I'm not speaking about my reluctance for divulging personal info or for expressing what I feel (not what I think) about things. It's just doesn't make much sense to be accused of.

Mindstorm said...

http://www.the-philosopher.co.uk/butter.htm - that would be solipsistic, to believe that everything around you is a figment of your imagination.

Unknown said...

The Manosphere's use of "solipistic" is utterly wrong. I suspect what the Manosphere means is closer to narcissism.

Mindstorm said...

Wouldn't be that closer to this attitude: 'believes that everything around her exists solely for her convenience'?