📄 Extracted Text (10,193 words)
I
Man is dead.
The choice is between the present and the past. The choice is between choice and no choice. There is no choice.
Man is dead, and all the categories that created and characterized human existence must be reconsidered. The key to
elimination of words? Ownership. Replace all words pertaining to ownership with words concerning functions, operations.
What did man own? Consciousness, feelings, emotions, mind, egos spirit, soul, pain, etc., words resulting from centuries of
belief, and no longer useful.
Consciousness does not exist; indeed, there is no reason to believe that it ever did exist. Not conscious, not unconscious. If
consciousness does not exist, there can hardly be a state of unconsciousness.
Man is an abstraction. Human abstractions are based on the past, on behavior, not on operant considerations of what is
happening. Considerations of the present? Patterns. Transaction. Activity. Doing. Considerations of the past? Behavior.
Environment. Man.
The abstractions of man characterize phenomena without regard to the operant activities of the phenomena. It is a limited
system of classification.
How to deal with what is happening? Search for rhythms and patterns. Man is dead. The analysis moves from the study of
fixed entities that are capable of ownership to the transaction of the species with environmental forces. Look to the
transaction. riceThe world about us is accessible only through a nervous system, and our information concerning it is confined
to what limited information the nervous system can transmit.al The brain receives information and acts on it by telling the
effectors what to do. The loop is completed as the performance of the effectors provides new information for the brain. It is a
new feedback loop, a nonlinear relationship between output and input.
Man always dealt with what had already happened, believing that it occurred in the present instant. What he thought was
happening coincides approximately between steps two and three of the loop. ficeMan was aware only of the past, and never
aware of the activities of his brain, where there are order and arrangement, but there is no experience of the creation of that
order. Experience gives us no clue as to the means by which it is organized. If the organization were produced by a slide rule
or a digital computer, consciousness would give no indication of that fact nor any basis for denying it. If the brain is capable
of producing such organization, then it may be considered the organizer.a2
To understand these notions, it is necessary to explore the concept of the interval. The interval refers to the moment of the
creation of the order of the brainaTMs activity. The activity of which man was never aware, the inaccessible present, the direct
experience of the brain. iiceThe rest of time emerges only in signals relayed to us at this instant by innumerable stages and
unexpected bearers. The nature of a signal is that its message is neither here nor now, but there and then. If it is a signal, it is
a past action, no longer embraced by the tnowaTM of present being. The perception of a signal happens a'now,aTM but its
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impulse happened then. In any event, the present instant is the plane upon which the signals of all being are projected.al This
instant, the interval, constitutes all that is directly experienced. It was for man the abstraction, his AchillesaTM heel.
In this evolutionary stage, a stage beyond space and time, the interval is closed forever, and man ceases to exist.
Man ordered his experience in terms of psychological considerations of the nonexistent mind. But the ordering of experience
is always on the here-andnow level. The interpretation of the ordering is always at the there-and-then level. Be aware that the
brainaTMs operation is a continuing activity of ordering in the here-and now. There was always ordering in the here-and-now
while man deluded himself with considerations there-and-then, considerations of a world that didnaTMt exist. A world that
never had existed. The world of the past. A fractional instant, and yet the past. Because of that interval man was able to exist.
Man, a relic of the instantaneous past. Man, an instant too old to exist. Things not existent should be of no interest to us. All
those things rendered unto man are based on a system that deals with illusion. The interpretation of the ordering of the brain
takes place while new ordering is continually happening. It is almost as though there were two parallel planes.
Almost. We might even assume there was a choice between living in one plane or another. Actually, there is no choice. There
is no choice. There is only the ordering and arrangement, the here-and-now. Some of us, most of us, cannot recognize this
level and continue by blindness, by inertia, by pretension, the delusion that we are men. ItaTMs a mistake. Man is dead. Man
never existed at all. Our awareness as experience is past experience. Dreaming.
Man is dead. ItaTMs a world of information. Information in this context refers to regulation and control and has nothing to do
with meaning, ideas, or data. arrAny system is said to be able to receive information if when a change occurs the system is
capable of reactions in such a way as to maintain its own stability.ii4 Information is nothing but an abstraction. As an
abstraction it will allow for new observations and associations, for discernment of patterns and organization. Note that the
reference is to a reaction to change. The concern here is only with the reaction, the effect. Information is a measure of the
effect. This refers to how the control center of the organism, the brain, reacts to change in order to maintain continuity.
We are dealing with activity integrated on the neural, the brain level, i.e., the present. Thus, when discussing information, we
are talking about the brainaTMs response in terms of present, direct experience. This response is always effected without
consent or awareness. There is no choice. There is no information unless there is a change. aeelnformation does not exist as
information until it is within the higher levels of abstraction of each of the minds and computed as such. Up to the point at
which it becomes perceived as information, it is signals. These signals travel through the external reality between the two
bodies, and travel as signals within the brain substances themselves. Till the complex patterns of traveling neuronal impulses
in the brain are computed as information within the cerebral cortex, they are not yet information. Information is the result of a
long series of computations based on data signal inputs, data signal transmissions to the brain substance, and recomputations
of these data.r Information is an abstraction to be used for measuring the communication of pattern, order, and neural
inhibition.
What is the information from an electric light bulb? No information. What is the information from a book? No information.
keTo speak of a change as giving information implies that there is somewhere a receiver able to react appropriately to the
change, Be concerned only with the changes in the operations of the receiver, the brain, in terms of the transactional
present. Do not confuse information with signals or the source of signals. keThe mind of the observer-participant is where
the information is constructed, by and through his own programs, his own rules of perception, his own cognitive and logical
processes, his own metaprogram of priorities among programs. His own vast internal computer constructs information from
signals and stored bits of signals.117 Information is a process. There are no sources of information; there are no linear
movements of information to the brain.
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Information is an abstraction. Information is a measure of effect. Information is a concept that allows for relationships not
previously possible. Effect deals with the construction of information from both incoming signals and bits of signals stored in
the operant circuits of the brain. The incoming signals are transmitted by both internal and external receptors. aceEffect
involves the total situation and not a single level of information movement.W.' There are no single levels of information
movement. The total situation is the neural situation, the process of the nervous system. This system is operational. aceAll
thataTms traceably happening is a shimmering array of pattern shifting occurring in a centerless, edgeless network. ItaTMs
measurable piecemeal: trivial. The whole is immeasurable indeed except through effects.A9 Information is the measure of
effect, the measure of the ordering of the brainaTMs activity in the transactional present.
Communications theory is the study of messages. In this system, the message is nonlinear. The communication, the message,
is pattern, order, neural inhibition. The message is the change in neural activity. It can be considered as a program, and a
&grogram is nothing else but a set of commands: acedo this; do that . . .a which in other words means: aeedonaTMt do this;
cloning do that . We are dealing with the transmission of neural pattern from ficea brain and its outputs, through a
specifiable set of processes to the external world, through a portion of that world with specifiable modes, media and artificial
means to another body, another brain.fin We are dealing with a set of relationships which allows us to conceptualize the
communication of neural experience. The difference between human experience and neural experience is the difference
between illusion and reality, between choice and no choice.
In talking about the state of consciousness, do not deal in there-and-then considerations of interpretation of the ordering and
arrangement of the direct experience of the brain. The ordering and arrangement are a continual functional happening. The
ordering and arrangement are all that is actually happening. Nothing else ever happens. The ordering and arrangement are to
be measured in terms of information.
The most significant, the most critical, inventions of man were not those ever considered to be inventions but those which
appeared to be innate and natural. Man never understood to what degree all of nature was man-made. One such major and
crucial invention was talking. Talking was probably manaTMs most important invention. It was, undoubtedly, considered to be
innate and natural until a man, making a new observation, exclaimed, aceWeamire tallcing.au At that point no one had ever
heard of such a thing. Still, talking was an invention that changed the way the brain worked. Talking, a man-made invention,
provided information modifying the operation of the brain without any awareness. There was no choice. For thousands of
years man was molding himself in a certain manner, but the pattern was not invented until a man said, aceWeaTmre talking.fi
Man is dead. Credit his death to an invention. The invention was the grasping of a conceptual whole, a set of relationships
which had not been previously recognized. The invention was man-made. It was the recognition that reality was
communicable. The process was the transmission of neural pattern. Such patterns are electrical not mental. The system of
communication and control functioned without individual awareness or consent. The message in the system was not words,
ideas, images, etc. The message was nonlinear: operant neural pattern. It became clear that acenew concepts of
communication and control involved a new interpretation of man, of manaTMs knowledge of the universe, and of society.au
Man is dead. ficeWeaTmre talking"'
The system can be comprehended only by killing off man. We are not destroying a phenomenon. We are replacing one system
of abstraction with another system of abstraction. Man was nothing but a model, a technique. It is now necessary to construct
a new model, to invoke a new system of abstraction, no more truthful than the old one, no closer to any ultimate answer. An
abstraction is only an abstraction. The insanity of man is that he believed in his humanity as the very basis of reality, as the
ultimate end to evolution. But keit is of the utmost importance to be vigilant in critically revising modes of abstraction. It is
here that philosophy finds its niche as essential to the healthy progress of society. It is the critic of abstractions. A civilization
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which cannot burst through its current abstractions is doomed to sterility after a very limited period of progress:1P Man is
dead.
This is the end of the doctrine of specific causation. There are only the simultaneous neural operations of the present, the all-
at-once, the here-and now. No more talk about the environment. The only total situation is in what the brain is doing. There
is no past, there is no future, there is no time, there is no space. The beginnings, the endings, are all bound up in the
multiplicity of neural operations. The unity is methodological. Break through the limited framework of subjects and objects.
ItitTMs all happening at once, bound up in a universe of simultaneity.
WhoaTMs crazy? Mankind went out of its mind. There is no mind out of which to go. WhoiiTMs crazy?
aceThe supreme abstraction of the brain was indeed the mind. .. . From the confusion of metaphysics and psychoanalysis,
abstractions of abstractions, the thinking brain has turned to the first possible glimpses of itsellii" For years man understood
that animals did not act through a consciousness; now it is evident that man himself, the human animal, did not act with a
conscious sensibility. ItaTMs all a question of breaking through to new systems of abstraction.
iiceNeither the presence nor absence of consciousness can serve as an exclusive criterion either for the presence or absence of
any other characteristic in a particular thing. . . . The only way a particular individual can be determined to be conscious is
with reference to his observable behavior.V Behavior is a consideration of the past. The present is in the activity of the brain.
Analyzing the patterns of the present turned the world of man inside out and upside down. Insanity. WhoaTMs crazy?
eurCogito ergo sum.e I think therefore I am. But the only conclusion to be derived from thought is that the brain has direct
experience. We are not concerned with the existence of thought but with the activity of the brain.
There is no conscious self, there is no subconscious, there is no mind. Indeed, the word mental is an liceunfortunate word, a
word whose function in our culture is often only to stand in lieu of an intelligent explanation, and which connotes rather a
foggy limbo than a cosmic structural order characterized by patterningin Be concerned with discerning operant patterns on
the neural level. All experience can be accounted for in terms of neural operations. accOnly by renouncing an explanation of
life in the ordinary sense do we gain a possibility of taking into account its characteristicsin
This system of abstraction, based as it is on operant considerations, goes beyond linear systems. Nonlinear processes are
composed of interacting elements. Common Western language lends itself to pictorial interpretations. But, seethe description
of many aspects of human existence demands a terminology which is not immediately founded on simple physical pictures.V°
Nonlinear processes can be represented by operant mathematical symbols. Common language is a poor substitute. Pure
mathematical symbolism allows us to acerepresent relations for which ordinary verbal expression is imprecise or cumbersome.
In this connection, it may be stressed that, just by avoiding the reference to the conscious subject which infiltrates daily
language, the use of mathematical symbols secures the unambiguity of definition required for objective description.a2'
ticeA measure of the sum of the parts is larger than the sum of the measure of the parts.
F(a +b) >F(a) +F(b)
F = measure function of squaring
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F(a +b)=(a +b)2=a2+62+2ab
and
F(a)= a2, F(b)=b2
therefore
+2ab > +62
The product tab is nothing else but the measure of the interaction of the two parts a and b, namely the interaction of a with b
and b with a.ai2 To consider this interaction, start with effect and work backward.
The operation of the brain is a nonlinear process. It is a system of self-organization where given sets of oscillations pull
themselves together into a particular frequency band.
Man is dead. We are now concerned with the concept of process. aceln return for the renunciation of accustomed demands on
explanation, it offers a logical means of comprehending wider fields of experience, necessitating proper attention to the
placing of object-subject separation.F Instead of ficemanfi and ficenot man,fi move the object-subject separation one step back
to objectify a universe of simultaneous operations: the process of interaction of ficemanfi and ficenot man,fi integrated on the
level of the neural activity of aceman.a In this system there is ficenot only a universe, but there are also elements capable of
observing this universe.fil4 The observation is through a nervous system similar to that of the observer-participant in the
universe under consideration. Reality is no longer to be found hidden in the subjects and objects of ficemanfi and ficenot man.1
For discussing integration at the neural level we must look to the interval. The only way to capture that moment is with the
death of man, the death of the concept of the individual. It has been demonstrated that the brain responds to change in terms
of the information it has already received. ficeThe past experience of the person determines the manner of his response to a
given stimulus. The primary direct effects of stimuli commonly have little bearing on their ultimate expressions.e The brain
continually functions during the moment man termed the interval, this functioning being dependent on its physiological
construction and stored information. There is no interval. There is only what the brain is doing.
Media do not exist. Media must be considered as a single level of information movement, which is a consideration of the
world of the past. There arc no linear movements of information. Information is a process. Its whole is measurable only by
effect. Be concerned with process, with transaction, not with media. Media are in the world of the past. They are the received
signals from there-and-then. The medium is not the message. The medium is the confusion. The message is operational. It is a
process.
Information is a process. Not words or ideas, or ace! like it,a ficeI clonfinit like it,ft but the total effect of experience, of the
brainfirds operation. Not ideas or opinions, but the changes brought about by the experience, the neural involvement.
Information is a nonlinear relationship established between output and input, the simultaneous universe of experiential
feedback of information. Points of view are beside the point.
If media do not exist, neither do separations such as form and content, concepts which belong to the treatment of signals
there-and-then. In the simultaneous operations of the brain there is neither form nor content. There is information that directs
the brainaTMs activity. All imagined considerations of form and content are considerations of the interpretation of the ordering
of direct experience. This is in the past. Be concerned only with the ordering, with the present.
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No more talk about media, no more talk of the senses, of perception, etc. Such considerations are presented within a
conceptual framework that does not allow us to account for contemporary experience. Be concerned with activity integrated
on the neural level. It is a process. aceThe only unit of currency in the process is the neural impulse or permeability wavelt26
In studying the transmission pattern of these waves we learn that ficeeach local area of the cortex interprets the message
according to its local pattern of response. Nothing in the message itself can indicate its source of origin.ft21 On the integrative
neural level there are no visual images, no sounds, no taste, no physical feeling, no odor. aeelt matters nothing whether these
trains of neural impulse arise in the car, the eye, or any other sense organ; they arc all the same, they have no more
individuality than the elemental dots and dashes of the telegraph code. There is no more of a sound or sight or pain in a nerve
impulse during transmission than there is love or grief in the underground lines of the telegraph.P
ficeThe qualities of a neural impulse bear no relation to the sensory stimulus which sends them on their way. Only the quantity
or frequency varies.a' Forget about signal source; forget about sensory source. The eyes see nothing; the ears hear nothing.
Our sensory receptors are capable of transmitting neural impulses that are variable only in two waysfratnamely, the diameter
of the conducting fiber and the strength of the sensory stimulus. The former determines the speed of travel; the latter, the
frequency, or distance between members of the procession.a — The eyes see nothing; the ears hear nothing. Give credit to the
brain, where there are no pictures, no sounds. There are only electrical neural impulses. keit is these purely physical
phenomena, whose qualities are fully prescribed by certain numerical data and determined by the semipermanent structures of
the anatomy, which constitute the unit of currency in the nervous system. There is no other form of activity of nerve, no other
physical movement in the tissues of the brain, out of which the processes of thought may be constructed:am
The brain is the organizer. Seeing, hearing, perceptiona"all take place in the brain. The brain, which sees nothing, hears
nothing, knows nothing. Each of the sensory receptors has a reception area in the cortex where neural impulses are received
and acted upon in terms of a local pattern of response. acelf an operation could be devised to change the pathway of the optic
nerves so that they delivered their messages to the auditory reception areas of the cortex, and to divert the auditory nerves to
the visual area, the patient would hear noises when the lights were turned up, and see patterns and colors when the bell was
rung.ii32
iiceThe mechanism whereby a sensory receptor which has important information to convey can transmit this information to
the cortex of the brain, along a neural axone which is as featureless as a telegraph wire, has interesting properties of a
quantitative nature. Two methods are available whereby the stark yes or-no, which is all that the nerve can carry, may be
elaborated into the wealth of sensory detail which actually reaches the brain. One method is to vary the number of nerve fibers
engaged in the work of transmission: twenty fibers will convey a message more efficiently than ten fibers. The other method is
by modulation of the frequency of the impulses as they follow each other along the single track.a" It becomes a question of
frequencies, or numbers.
Man created a dehumanized, computerized world, a world in which he was nothing more than a number. But it was really the
other way around: numbers representing neural patterns had somehow become humanized. From an unambiguous and
objective representation of patterns of activity, the number became transformed into iicemana and scent manit This arbitrary
object-subject separation assured ambiguity, vagueness, and illusion.
How does the picture get put together? It doesnamt. All that is happening are volleys of neural impulses. What is the point of
attempting to correlate patterns of neural activity to mind, feelings, emotions, etc.? Dispense with these abstractions. They are
from another epoch. They are of little usefulness in dealing with operant phenomena.
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The basis of living systems is self-organization. The brain organizes its activity in a continuous fashion, always in the present.
It incarnates the operations it has performed as operant circuits. It exists and can be talked about only in operant terms on
what it does. What it does depends on information it constantly receives informing it about changes in itself, environmental
forces, the physiological functions of the body. It uses this information to adapt, to change, to maintain its stability and
continuity. Information is not to be confused with the source of information. It is not power. It is an abstraction. It is not
energy. It is an invention.
A mathematical theorem holds that for any formal system capable of producing arithmetic there is a truism proving the system
which cannot be proven within the system. For man there was consciousness, the system for which there was a truism proving
the system which could not be shown to be true within the system?' All man was sure of was that he was conscious. End of
discussion. He could never tell whether this consciousness was the result of a digital computer, religious incantation, etc.
Information is a measure of effect. Start with effect and work backward. Information is a measure of the operant response the
brain makes in terms of its nonlinear experience. Information relates to direct neural coding, to brain imprinting.
Understanding the nature of nonlinear communication through the process of information closes the gap, gets rid of the
interval. Every instant becomes the ordering of the brain in the simultaneous, continuous present. Even the notion of instants,
of time, disappears.
The evolutionary significance of all this is unbelievable, for man. It is the end of importance. It is the end of man.
This exercise merely presents a system, a methodology. No truths are to be found here. The author doesnaTMt believe a word
of what is set forth and is not interested in formulation of new dogma. It is the formulation of a system, an abstraction from
reality not to be confused with reality. Reality as a whole is unmeasurable except through effect. The unity is in the
methodology, in the writing, reading, in the navigation. This system cannot provide us with ultimate answers, nor does it
present the ultimate questions. There are none.
The static, fixed, linear system is now superseded by one that is operational and nonlinear. aeelt is important to observe that if
the frequency of an oscillator can be changed by impulses of a different frequency, the mechanism must be nonlinear. A linear
mechanism acting on an oscillation of a given frequency can produce only oscillation of the same frequency, generally with
some change in phase and amplitude. This is not true for nonlinear mechanisms, which may produce oscillations of
frequencies which are the sum and differences of different orders, of the frequency of the oscillator and the frequency of the
imposed disturbance.fi” There is no information in a linear system. The only way to consider such a system is in terms of the
nonexistent past.
DonãTMt look for beginnings, for endings. Navigate through reality with no pretense of knowledge. The unity is
methodological. The unity is in the activity and will not lead to any final answer. it is a path. ficeAll paths are the same: they
lead nowhere.V6 Keep moving.
Man was oblivious to the changes taking place as a result of man-made actions. Had that level been appreciated, television
sets might have been viewed in a different light. Within the linear construct he could not see the information patterns. Deaths
were caused by fits induced by the flicker of faulty television tubes.31 Scientific institutes warned that sitting within four feet
of color television sets could cause cancer? Yet the same old questions were asked: keDid you like the progranfift All the
while the information of the television experience was coding the operation of the brain.
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Consider that the experience of television violates innate biological rhythms programmed into the genetic homeostatic
constitution from the earliest evolutionary eras. These biological rhythms are invisible, yet nevertheless are information in
terms of the experience of the brain. The most obvious and perhaps least recognized rhythm is the day / night, light / dark
flicker. The experience is a constant input of information for the brain,39 effecting change without consent or awareness. Note
also recent experiments indicating that acein all animal species gonadal activity is increased by light rays reaching the retina.
. . . As is the case for other biological cycles, interference with the natural cycles of light exposure can result in physiological
disturbances. . . . Until the last century, man lived in the dark for long hours during the winter months, and this is still true in
many primitive societies. Modem man, in contrast, was exposed to bright light for sixteen hours a day throughout the year. In
view of the fact that light rays can affect hormonal activities, and that many, if not most physiological functions are linked to
circadian and seasonal cycles, it seems possible that this change in the ways of life had long range consequences for the
human speciesle
Television, as direct experience, can be considered in this instance on two levels. First, it is a potent source of light. The
cathode-ray experience is the only instance where man looked directly into a light source for any sustained period, possibly
averaging four hours a day. Light is actually projected onto the retina by the cathode-ray tube. Second, man responded not
only to light perceived by the senses but also to factors of biological rhythms such as the day / night flicker. Television alters
this rhythm violently. Man talked about the violence evident on television programs. In light of the above considerations he
might have developed a ficeTheory of Neural Programs, Television, and Violence:a which hypothesized that acedue to
circumstances beyond our control, this tprogramãTM is out of order,a which is to say that licethere may well be limits beyond
which the natural rhythms are not amenable to frequency synchronization with new environmental periodicities.541 Violence.
ficeWeirmre talking.a The direct experience of the brain is communicated. Communicated through information. Man ceased
to exist when nonlinear extension of experience was comprehended. It always existed, but now, once again, items time to
say, ikeWeandre talkingli Thought control? Absolutely. Them is one hundred percent thought control. Indeed, any
considerations on this level are beyond manaTMs morality. it is a question of a major leap in evolution.
We arc beyond space and time; we are beyond good and evil. There is only information. It is the control, the measure by
which the operation of the brain changes. There is always complete control.
Man was always blind to considerations of the present. In the transactional present, manaTMs brain was continually coded
through information. This information was of manaTMs own devising. Man determined what he would be, what he would
think. This ordering took place in the present. But man, who made the mistake of confusing abstraction and reality, deluded
himself into thinking he was conscious, and then proclaimed that this consciousness, this delusion, was reality. There are
several stumbling blocks to communication between linear and nonlinear systems. The major one is that linear systems do not
exist. All that exists are the operations of the brain, the direct experience, a nonlinear oscillation.
Instead of looking to the world of man, to the linear abstractions, to the conscious motivations, etc., attention must be turned
to a universe of control patterns, patterns of complete control, the nonlinear process of neural activity. The message in this
system is the communication of pattern. accA message need not be the result of a conscious human effort for the transmission
of ideastlz Work on the level of deciphering the patterns that have always existed but that man hardly even suspected.
Consider the notion of power engineering: aceThe main function of power engineering is transmission of energy or power
from one place to another with its generation by appropriate generators and its employment by appropriate motors or lamps
or other such apparatus. So long as this is not associated with transmission of a particular pattern, as for example in processes
of automatic control, power engineering remains a separate entity with its own techniquer Man was a separate entity with
its own technique. The unity is methodological. Concentrate on communication of operant pattern. The only experience that
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is real is in the operations of the brain. The individual experience, the private experience, the personal experience: illusion.
The end of the individual.
Man concerned himself with meaning. His books, plays, movies, television programs, were considered only in terms of what
they had to say, what they had to communicate in ideas. But experience was itself the communication, what the brain did.
Man was oblivious to these changes. A story was a storya"complete with plots, morals, points of view, and ultimate
meaningseto fit within preestablished value systems. Considerations of story on the neural level are another story. Recent
research has shown that seethe pans of the brain from which memories are evoked so easily and regularly arc those we find
most liable to exaggerated electrical discharge during flicker, and it is here too that in normal subjects the pattern of incoming
stimuli can be seen abstracted and preserved for some time after the stimulation has ceased:Er
The movie experience is a flicker experience of a frequency of twenty-four times per second, slightly higher and safer than the
level considered dangerous for certain brains. The reflection of projected light from a treated surface, a surface encompassing
up to eighty percent of the visual field, can have the effect on the neural level of an electronic brain message. Where is the
meaning when we realize the emotional response is a function of the flicker experience reactivating memory imprints stored in
the operant circuits of the brain? The implications of such a hypothesis are obvious. How can we merely discuss ace' like it / I
donaTMt like its without reference to questions about the brainfiTMs activity, a universe without lam's.
Neural energy is not produced by the major receptors for sensory stimuli. The sources for neural energy are the gravitational
receptors, the stretchingtype muscles. ficeThe visual receptors, bringing in up to two-thirds of the sensory stimuli for the
brain, are useless as a source of neural energy.a45 In this light, look to the transaction between the environmental force and
the organism in terms of the information provided to the brain. The visual receptors tend to pick up light as motion. ficeThe
human eye has economically confined its best form and color vision to a relatively small fovea, while its perception of motion
is better on the periphery. When peripheral vision has picked up some object conspicuous by brilliancy or light contrast or
color, or above all by motion, there is reflex feedback to bring it into the fovea. . . . We tend to bring any object that attracts
our attention into a standard position and orientation, so that the visual image which we form of it varies within as small a
range as possible.a*
Consider the motion-picture experience not in terms of the images of the movie, but the motion of the flickering light, the
flashing on and off, twentyfour times per second. A relationship can be established between the information this experience
provides for the brain and the production of new quanta of neural energy. Unlike the usual situation where the eye scans one
hundred percent of the visual field, picks up motion, and brings it into the fovea, the light as motion of the movie experience
can encompass up to eighty percent of the visual field. The normal reflex feedback, bringing the movement into the fovea, is
not possible, as the outer muscles are locked into a pattern of stretching activity quite unlike any other performed in the daily
routine of contemporary life. The information from this experience is measured by what the brain does to adjust to the
change. In this case there is every reason to speculate that the experience will provide a potent source of neural energy. The
source is not in what the eye secs, but in what the eye is doing: the stretching of the muscles, the gravitational receptors,
providing information for the brain.
These speculations on the relationship of the environmental force and the activity integrated on the neural level raise an
interesting question. Going beyond the nonexistent linear construct of movie and into the direct experience of the brain, we
can easily see that the very same movie, experienced in two different theaters, can provide the brain with significantly
different information. Sitting to the rear of a theater with a postage-stamp screen will expose only about five to ten percent of
the visual field to light as motion. Sitting in the first few rows of a seventy mm. theater will expose up to eighty percent of the
visual field to light as motion. It appears obvious that the latter experience would be more intense on the neural level. But
man, the nonexistent linear construct, could not get past the level of ficeWhat did it saynt aceWas it good% or aceWas it bad?fi
His mind saw a movie; the experience in the present changed the way the brain worked.
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Every movie is the first movie. ficeMechanisms for perceiving and responding to stimuli are at least partly generated by earlier
stimulation.e aceThe information received by the brain both determines the manner of response and inhibits the establishment
of new programs:1O irceThe ability to apprehend the external world with freshness of perception commonly decreases as the
mind and the senses become conditioned by repeated experiences. Human beings thus perceive the world, and respond to it,
not through the whole spectrum of their genetic potentialities but only through the areas of this spectrum not blocked by
inhibitory mechanisms and made functional by environmental influences, especially the early ones.149 The information
received by the brain from the movie experience at once serves to encode and rigidify operant programs. This encoding and
rigidification as information must be considered in terms of the continuous operations of the brain. ficeThere is reason to
believe that information is stored in the brain by alteration of the storage elements.a5° Once this change is effected, the
information provided by the experience of new stimuli may be to activate the programs stored as alteration of the storage
elements, giving form to extant operational patterns.
Certain programs have been coded into the brainaTMs operation as species information. These patterns activate the
orthosympathetic systems, pan of the autonomic or involuntary, muscular systems of the body. The orthosympathetic systems
supply the energy for ateflight or fighta responses by pumping adrenalin through the system!' The hormonal changes
necessary to perform the act are set in motion by the brain before the performance actually begins./2 Every movie is the first
movie. The brain goes into its stereotyped movie program even before the ticket is purchased. The information received by
the brain from the experience of purchasing a ticket may be enough to activate the hormonal responses of the movie
experience. Buy your ticket: See the movie.
We can talk about information-patterning for the brain only in the present. There is no other universe for the brain, only the
all-at-once universe of simultaneous operations. Every action performed is ever present, programmed into the operant
patterns of the brain as information. Thatirms all there is; there is no more. aceWhatATMs hereaTMs everywhere; whataTMs not
hereaTMs nowhere.'" All that is real can be found in the operations of the brain. Time and space are considerations of the
interpretation of the ordering, and not of the transaction. Causality and sequence are myths. There is no first time. Sequence
is simultaneity.
ficeMan created his world and was molded by his use of it.a£4 Nature was a man-made phenomenon. The invention-realization
of the nonlinear extension of the brainaTMs experiencea"the socialization of minda"is on the same level as that of the invention
of talking. Man did not realize he was talking until the day a man said, liceWermre talking' By understanding that the
experience of the brain is continually communicated through the process of information, it can be seen that the extensions of
man are to be viewed as communication, not as a means for the flow of communication. As such they provide the information
for the continual process of neural coding. The interval is closed. No more individuals. No more man. Itirms a process. We
construct a loop where output provides the information for input. On the species level the output (behavior) is environment.
The input is the neural impulse. A change in environment (output) provides the brain with information it needs to maintain its
continuity through adaptation, or a change in its operations (input). Man was the creator of acemind.fr Man determined his
evolution. Man died. Dead and gone.
Dangers exist because the frames of reference which enable the deciphering of the patterns of communication arc not easily
understood. Man, living in a nonexistent illusory world of the past instant, could not readily discern the patterns of the activity
of his brain. Change took place too rapidly. Man changed himself into non-existence. Man is dead.
A word from the author: It is not the easiest activity to escape the human race and then effect the destruction of mankind.
Perhaps the death of an abstraction is the most difficult death. The brain is conditioned by the activity of an abstract way of
thinking, by the information it receives. These patterns do not die easily. Their destruction is the ultimate violence. What
remains is the ghostly dreamworld of mann world, an abstraction, in which participation is no longer possible.
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The brain tends to respond to new experiences in certain stereotyped ways. The prior responses to experiences determine
response to new experience. There is a tendency for operational patterns to rigidify, inhibiting the acquisition of new
experience. All coding, all neural imprinting, takes place in the present. The operational imprint can be said to be a measure of
information, the adaptive change. This imprinting is continually happening. Man was never aware of it; he was never asked to
give, and never gave, his consent to it. There was, there is, no choice.
The most important feature of the age of electric technology is the moving of information. This is not to be confused with
words, images. It has to do with control, with the extension of the central nervous system outside the body, into the world as
the world. New technologies effected a change in the operation of the brain. Telephone companies, electric companies,
construction companies, hardware manufacturers, etc., were all in the same business: moving information. Telephone
companies based charges on time; electricity companies charged for power; television manufacturers charged for a product.
None of them based charges on information, on the evolutionary effect of their products and services upon mankind.
Electricity is the unitive factor that can make all brains in the world perform the same operations simultaneously. Through
electronic technology, millions upon millions of brains can act on the same information at the same time. Information is a
measure of a change in the brainaTMs activity, a frequency modulation. Every brain working the same way, on the same
frequency, the same wave length, performing the same operations simultaneously. Not brotherhood, but unity.
The past is illusion. ficeThe future is notis It is even necessary to stop talking of the present, which implies other aspects of
the abstraction of time. Time, which cannot be directly experienced. Time, which does not exist in the neural world.
Considerations of the interpretation of the ordering of the brainaTMs experience pertain to the world of the past. The past is
illusion. There is no sequence. There is no specific causation. There is only the ordering and arrangement of the experience of
the brain in a universe of simultaneous operations. The past is illusion. Sequence is simultaneity.
The brain is a terminal machine in the process that is itself the dynamic, the reference point. This reference point is not to be
found as a substantial basis, but in considerations of function and operations. It will be found in the process of transmission of
neural pattern. It is through observation of operations, measurement of information, that this dynamic situation can be dealt
with. Observation and measurement, not classification and categorization.
The brain is constantly synchronizing with new rhythms. As such it programs itself as a self-organizing system called
evolution. This constant transaction with new rhythms and the ordering process is the level to which attention should now be
applied. Not sex, not unconscious urges, not iconic archetypes, not metaphysics. There is no purpose. There are no goals.
Man always valued his identity, but knowing who he was proved only to tell him what had already happened. People are no
longer important or worthy of any consideration. Man is dead. No more people, with their loves, fears, longings. it has been
said that Acta man thinks he amounts to a great deal, but to a mosquito he is only something good to eat.a$6 Do not recognize
peopleaTMs feelings. Human feelings do not exist. Respect no one. People do not exist. No more dreams, no more illusion.
fie am in love.a The neural impulse does not necessarily bear relationship to the sensory stimulus. Stereotyped neural
programs can be activated in any number of different situations. awl am in love.ii Faces, bodies change but the same love
remains, the same feeling. Such stereotyped programs are established by prior experience which both encodes and rigidifies
the operant activities of the brain, delimiting the range of potential responses. &el am in lovelt All pleasures, all love exist in
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the brain. Neural programs. Not heart.
Every movie is the first movie. Every lover is the first love in terms of the simultaneous operations of the brain. The brain
most likely has an operant circuit for the experience of orgasm. Whenever an appropriate partner happens along, the button is
pressed . . . bzzz . . . the circuit is activated. The acquisition of experience by the brain inhibits acquisition of new experience.
It is an ordering and rigidifying process. The bzzz activating the orgasm circuit gives form to what is already happening in the
brain. The brain can set off this circuit with or without the active participation of the partner. Some of manaTMs finest
moments occurred when he was fast
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