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558eeb4e9f3237 It's a warm day. A beam of hot sun crashes through your closed curtains and warms up your bed. You lie there, enjoying the warmth, before you slowly drift off to sleep. The last thing you said before falling asleep is that you're exhausted from the long week of work and will soon forget it all as soon as you wake up tomorrow morning. But how would you describe this experience? Where was your soul while you were sleeping? Where did your consciousness wander off?

It's a cold night. You're at home. After having dinner, you go to the usual spot on the chair in front of the TV and sit down. You've just started watching a crime drama when suddenly the phone rings. A relative informs you that your mother has had an accident and is in hospital. You feel anxious and upset about this news so you stop watching the TV, turn off the lights and run out of the house. It's raining outside so you take an umbrella with you for protection from rain drops as well as from getting wet under a sudden downpour. But where are you running to? Where is your soul? Where did your consciousness go?

It's a rainy day. A traffic jam on the road makes you want to get out of the car and walk to work or school instead of sitting inside and listening to the radio. You leave home and start walking along the pavement. But where do you think about? Where do you want to go? Where is your soul? Where did your consciousness wander off too ?

We all have had these experiences at least once or twice in our lives. We grasp them as real, immediate experiences. Only when we remember them do they appear to be somewhat less than real. Strangely enough, most of us accept them as part of our reality.

But what exactly is the nature of these experiences? Do they exist or are they just projections of our mind? Once again, these experiences are born out of the brain's activity. That's why scientists can talk about "sensations" and "consciousness."
A sensation is anything that the mind perceives as an internal experience with its own properties or characteristics. It can be, for example, a pain or a feeling of warmth in one part of the body or an image formed in the visual cortex. A sensation can also be a thought, an emotion, a desire or a memory. But the sensation always has its own characteristics. It is always associated with a particular part of the body. It is also specific to a person and time and place. A pain caused by a stomachache feels different from a headache or a stomach ache caused by indigestion. The experience of having an image formed in the visual cortex while you're watching TV is very different from when you're looking out of your window at night and seeing streetlights shining in your room through the raindrops on your window.

You experience sensations every day but hardly ever take them for what they are: internal experiences that don't exist outside your mind or brain.
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