If what I experience is the present and the instantiation of my experiential processes on the brain takes time, it means that my brain lives in the future
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Replying to @Plinz
How much time do 'I' lag behind, and how would you measure it?
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Replying to @richarddorset
You don’t lag behind by a constant. Sometimes even the experienced order of events is not correct. It takes between tenths of a second and tens of years before an experience of a sensation is generated by the brain. It is more pronounced than the Libet experiment implies.
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Replying to @Plinz
Tens of years? That sounds quite speculative. Such a conceptualised experience might not be veridical. I'm guessing those who have experienced trauma when not fully cognisant, and then manage to model it later on?
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Experience is a memory. Some childhood experiences take a lifetime to construct.
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