Wednesday, 19 April 2023

Conceptual Memory

Does saving concepts in memory cause open mindedness? 

Saving a concept in the subconscious, using conscious comprehension, allows further ease of access to that concept as a neural combination. Neural pathways can reach the concept easily, and factors within the concept are more interchangeable upon a new scenario with new factors applicable to the same concept. 


Details of any concept are more difficult to access when a mind uses conceptual memory, rather than factoral memory, because when you access the concept as a memory from your subconscious, the memory cannot include multiple factors and their interaction. Accessing subconscious memory is accessing a neural combination representing only a factor, not the interaction of a factor, as that would be conscious memory. 


So when a mind saves concepts as memories, more so than details, the mind can later more easily subconsciously access any given concept. At the time of subconscious access, the concept is only a factor (or generalized entity) within memory. Subconscious is inaccurate at distinction, so subconsciously accessing a concept is similar to seeing a car and considering it as 1 entity. But when you look under the hood at details, you see it is a combination of components, which is like conscious memory access.


If concepts are saved in the mind for subconscious access, at times needing a more detailed view, you can consciously look under the hood, and see what components make the combination of the concept. This allows someone to be open minded to new components being potential part replacements for the engine. Ie new components of any given concept. 


No comments:

Post a Comment