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The very reason we need logic at all is because most reasoning is not conscious at all.
Julian Jaynes
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Julian Jaynes
Age: 77 †
Born: 1920
Born: February 27
Died: 1997
Died: November 21
Psychologist
University Teacher
Newton
Massachusetts
Needs
Reasoning
Logic
Conscious
Reason
Need
More quotes by Julian Jaynes
Poetry, from describing external events objectively, is becoming subjectified into a poetry of personal conscious expression.
Julian Jaynes
Poetry begins as the divine speech of the bicameral mind. Then, as the bicameral mind breaks down, there remain prophets.
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Our sense of justice depends on our sense of time. Justice is a phenomenon only of consciousness, because time spread out in a spatial succession is its very essence. And this is possible only in a spatial metaphor of time.
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Idolatry is still a socially cohesive force - its original function.
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History does not move by leaps into unrelated novelty, but rather by the selective emphasis of aspects of its own immediate past.
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There is no such thing as a complete consciousness.
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Consciousness is always open to many possibilities because it involves play. It is always an adventure.
Julian Jaynes
No one is moral among the god-controlled puppets of the _Iliad_. Good and evil do not exist.
Julian Jaynes
It is by metaphor that language grows.
Julian Jaynes
We know to much to command ourselves very far.
Julian Jaynes
Consciousness is a much smaller part of our mental life than we are conscious of, because we cannot be conscious of what we are not conscious of.
Julian Jaynes
Every god is a jealous god after the breakdown of the bicameral mind.
Julian Jaynes
The changes in the Catholic Church since Vatican II can certainly be scanned in terms of this long retreat from the sacred which has followed the inception of consciousness into the human species.
Julian Jaynes
I shall state my thesis plain. The first poets were gods. Poetry began with the bicameral mind.
Julian Jaynes
Memory is the medium of the must-have-been.
Julian Jaynes
Reading in the third millennium B.C. may therefore have been a matter of hearing the cuneiform, that is, hallucinating the speech from looking at its picture symbols, rather than visual reading of syllables in our sense.
Julian Jaynes
Indeed, it is sometimes almost as if the problem had to be forgotten to be solved.
Julian Jaynes
The vestiges of the bicameral mind do not exist in any empty psychological space.
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This breakdown in the bicameral mind in what is called the Intermediate Period is reminiscent at least of those periodic breakdowns of Mayan civilizations when all authority suddenly collapsed, and the population melted back into tribal living in the jungles.
Julian Jaynes
Abstract words are ancient coins whose concrete images in the give and take of talk have worn away with use.
Julian Jaynes