MIRACLE LIFE: CASE OF PEOPLE LIVING WITHOUT CAVE
Is dimension important to our brain? One of the biggest myths about the brain is that the bigger brain is always better. But have you ever thought of those at the end of the scale? Taking into account medical history records, there are many people with small brains, and indeed, some who do not possess the big chunks, which defies all possibilities.
Within each of us, there are vast rows of enigmas that medical science has yet to understand. Some people enter this world without a significant brain, but they survive and live for years in full consciousness. Some of them work as common members of society.
It is certainly amazing to know that people exist without a brain and indicates how little we know about the human body. Here are some miraculous cases of people living without a brain!
Aaron Murray, Lanarkshire, Scotland
A typical brain scan shows the brain filling the entire cavity of the head. The brain is considered a white area with black pockets of fluids that work outside the brain and across the brain to transmit vitamins and to clean toxins. In Aaron's case, the sweep revealed only the stem of the brain. It came and stopped under the cavity filled with liquid.
Jaxon Buell from Tavares, Florida
The case of Jaxon Buell of Tavares, Florida, is similar to that of Aaron Murray. However, Jaxon was born with a defect called anencephaly, in which absence of significant parts of the brain and skull. Jaxon has only one brain stem and a lack of cerebellum and most of his skulls.
The condition appeared early in the pregnancy, but Buells decided to go ahead with the baby, though doctors insisted this did not end. When Jaxon was born on August 17, 2014, he had no brain and an important part of his skull. Doctors predicted that Jaxon would die immediately after birth.
Adults with "no brain".
One of the most notable and famous cases is that of a 44-year-old French official. The article appeared in a 2007 Lancet study that stated that the person had gone to the hospital complaining of weakness in his leg. However, what surprises everyone and the person himself was that he only had a small amount of brain matter in the skull, the rest was filled with liquids.
The man led a normal life, had a regular job and a loving family. He always had a low IQ of 75, but was never considered mentally disabled. The man did not know the condition for the rest of his life. It is unusual for people with low brain to remain conscious. It is also impossible to imagine being a functional member of society.
Awareness and brain
In recent years, many people have challenged our beliefs about consciousness and its relationship to our brain. A hypothesis called a thesis of radical plasticity states that we were not born consciously, but our brain repeatedly learns the state of consciousness. In other words, the process of consciousness is carried out by various regions of the brain according to the situations we face in our lives.
According to this hypothesis, our consciousness is flexible and not limited to a part of our brain. This occurs because of the constant description of our brain and its activities and memories that ultimately constitute our consciousness. Thus, a person with a fraction of neurons can create a theory of themselves and maintain their consciousness.
Dr. Axel Cleeremans, who proposed this idea in 2011, says: "Consciousness is the non-conceptual theory of the brain itself, acquired through experience, is to learn, to interact with itself, with the world and with other people.
There are many mysteries our brains hold and we have little knowledge about what consciousness is and how it is generated. The cases we have seen in this article are incredible and leave you with a series of questions.
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