How Can We Interfere With the Human Brain's Frame Bursting Memory Component


Have you ever wondered how come you can identify things so fast when you see them at a distance? Your mind does not have enough data for you to adequately and immediately see what it is you are looking at, when viewing at a distance. Ah, but your memory can, because it can fill in the blanks. For instance if you see a car in the distance you know that it is a car, and your mind fills in the details due to the subtleties of its shape, color, and other various clues. Your mind is very good at this, and obviously highly evolved and it uses a good chunk of your brain for blowing up that image in your mind.
Now then, scientists have discovered they can erase memories in rats, and events such as being chased or tormented by a cat, to the point at which the rat is no longer afraid of the cat, because it doesn't remember that it is dangerous, or might harm it. That's rather interesting, the ability to erase memories, isn't it? Nevertheless, it's been empirically proven, and that research and those types of studies have been duplicated, and therefore we know that it is no longer a theory, it is a proven fact that we can do this.
Okay so, we also know that the kids at MIT have been able to make objects disappear by allowing the light to bend around them. Without the light reflection you can't see something that is in front of you. But perhaps there is another way to make something invisible to the human eye, what if we were to interfere with the human brain's "Frame Bursting Memory Component" - or modify it and change it. Therefore when you look at a car, you might think you were actually seen something else? That would foul people up wouldn't it? Sure it would, but it's possible.
Indeed, it might also be useful. Now then, you might ask; why would you want to erase a memory in a human brain in the first place, as the researchers did with the rat? Well, what about post traumatic stress disorder or PTSD? If you could erase certain memories, they would not be re-occurring, and that would take away depression, unintentional responses to similar type events, and allow the person to live a normal life again. Likewise, there are uses for modifying a human brain's Frame Bursting Memory Component.
Further, I do believe it's possible, and I believe we have the tools to do this now, and perhaps we should start testing this to see what else we will learn. Indeed I hope you will please consider all this and think on it.

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