Message from @JeffDog

Discord ID: 593957784404361217


2019-06-28 00:09:33 UTC  

I love the math behind physics, and any science has elegant math that can blow the mind.

2019-06-28 00:09:38 UTC  

How about adrenaline?

2019-06-28 00:09:53 UTC  

Testosterone?

2019-06-28 00:10:00 UTC  

Cortisol and adrenaline affect neurons, no? Else they would be less relevant to emotions, right?

2019-06-28 00:10:11 UTC  

You are citing neurotransmitters.

2019-06-28 00:10:18 UTC  

Affect and caused by are different.

2019-06-28 00:10:28 UTC  

And, I'm citing hormones.

2019-06-28 00:10:49 UTC  

Right. Neurotransmitters, which are certain types of hormones, right?

2019-06-28 00:11:05 UTC  

Like adrenaline and testosterone

2019-06-28 00:11:11 UTC  

No, different system. Endocrine system.

2019-06-28 00:11:24 UTC  

how is dik make hard

2019-06-28 00:12:26 UTC  

... What?

2019-06-28 00:13:19 UTC  

Okay, so noradrenaline and norepinephrine, for example, are neurotransmitters, while adrenaline refers to the hormone. I just looked it up. Is this right?

2019-06-28 00:13:44 UTC  

Adrenaline-epinephrine

2019-06-28 00:13:48 UTC  

=

2019-06-28 00:14:12 UTC  

man i'm hungry

2019-06-28 00:15:03 UTC  

Oh, noradrenaline IS norepinephrine, isn't it?

2019-06-28 00:15:06 UTC  

No. Your adrenaline glands are right above your kidneys.

2019-06-28 00:15:36 UTC  

Yes, I knew where the adrenal glands were.

2019-06-28 00:15:48 UTC  

Which isn't in your brain.

2019-06-28 00:16:11 UTC  

So for something to be a neurotransmitter, it has to be produced in the brain?

2019-06-28 00:16:17 UTC  

Hormones are too big to enter the brain. It's called the blood brain boundary.

2019-06-28 00:16:52 UTC  

In the brain or nervous system. For example, serotonin is in the nerve ganglia of the gut.

2019-06-28 00:17:16 UTC  

Okay

2019-06-28 00:17:18 UTC  

Hormones are too big to enter the brain. They act on other organs.

2019-06-28 00:17:51 UTC  

So how is the neurotransmitter noradrenaline related (if it is) to adrenaline?

2019-06-28 00:19:27 UTC  

Complex explanation. Simple one is hormones do things that make your body feel different. You feel this and interpret it as emotions the same way your brain turns photo sensetive chemicals in the eyes to sight.

2019-06-28 00:20:09 UTC  

Like when your anxious, you know you're anxious because your stomach tenses up, your heart speeds up, etc

2019-06-28 00:20:18 UTC  

Right.

2019-06-28 00:20:41 UTC  

You know you're hungry because your stomach feels empty.

2019-06-28 00:20:54 UTC  

When I'm anxious, my thoughts race too.

2019-06-28 00:21:21 UTC  

Thoughts and emotions can be mutually inductive.

2019-06-28 00:21:33 UTC  

A mental response to a physical effect?

2019-06-28 00:21:42 UTC  

Racing thoughts can cause anxiety or vice versa

2019-06-28 00:21:47 UTC  

Uhhh, no.

2019-06-28 00:22:03 UTC  

Just like when I'm dreaming, if I feel physically a certain way, I dream something that fits that feeling.

2019-06-28 00:22:11 UTC  

That's some complex Math to explain, lol

2019-06-28 00:23:11 UTC  

No?

2019-06-28 00:23:49 UTC  

Basically, human consciousness is similar to holding a mirror to a mirror. You get a ton of smaller mirrors. Those are called fractals, and fractals can be drawn with Chaos Games. Basically, you can get a nest of abstract structures.

2019-06-28 00:24:49 UTC  

As you scale the images, you get uncertainty, or you can't draw a straight correlation from environment to experience.

2019-06-28 00:25:28 UTC  

the brain named itself