Temporal and
Spatial Standards
he development of context is sensual The
classification of two types of sensual data is
perceptual. The first two percepts formed are
self-generated external and simple external data.
A deeper meaning of the distinction between the two
types is necessary.
Identifying the difference depends on the
contextual development of a sense of statistical
probability. For this, standards of time and space
are required.
The heartbeat is the brains hardware clock which
becomes the standard by which input is temporally
measured. External inputs per heartbeat (rate of
input) is a form of contextual data stored in the
brain.
A sense of spatial displacement and position (where
an arm or leg or hand is in space relative to
default positions) also forms a context which can
be used in the discrimination of self-generated and
simple external inputs.
These two contexts form the basis for estimating
the probability that an arm movement (spatial
input) is logically correlated with a given
external input (the sense of fluid passing over the
arm, etc.). The coincidence or non-coincidence of
both inputs becomes a new distinction in the types
of input. i.e. double inputs which are coincidental
on a regular basis (position change of arm-input
#1: fluid flow over arm-input #2).
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