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  • Hey, Vsauce. Michael here. Where are your fingers?

  • Seriously. It's a pretty easy question. You should be able to answer it.

  • But how do you know? How does

  • anyone know anything? You might say, well, I know where my fingers are. I'm looking

  • right at them.

  • Or, I can touch them, I can feel them, they're right here and that's good.

  • Your senses are a great way to learn things.

  • In fact, we have way more than the usual five senses we talk about.

  • For instance, your kinesthetic sense, proprioception.

  • This is what the police evaluate during a field sobriety test.

  • It allows you to tell where your fingers and arms and head and legs in your body

  • is all in relation to each other

  • without having to look or touch other things.

  • We have way more than five senses, we have at least twice as many

  • and then some. But they're not perfect. There are optical illusions,

  • audio illusions,

  • temperature sensation illusions, even tactile

  • illusions. Can you turn your tongue upside down?

  • If so, perfect. Try this. Run your finger

  • along the outer edge of the tip of your upside down

  • tongue. Your tongue will be able to feel your finger, but in the wrong place.

  • Our brains never needed to develop an understanding

  • of upside down tongue touch. So, when you touch the right side of your tongue

  • when it's flipped over to your left side you perceive a sensation

  • on the opposite side, where your tongue usually is but isn't

  • when it's upside down. It's pretty freaky and cool

  • and a little humbling, because it shows the limits of the

  • accuracy of our senses, the only tools we have to get what's out there

  • in here. The philosophy of knowledge,

  • the study of knowing, is called Epistomology.

  • Plato famously said that the things we know

  • are things that are true, that we believe

  • and that we have justification for believing. those justifications might be

  • irrational

  • or they might be rational, they might be based on proof,

  • but don't get too confident because proven is not a synonym

  • for true. Luckily, there are things that we can know

  • without needing proof, without needing to even leave the house, things that we can

  • know as true

  • by reason alone. These are things that we know

  • a priori. An example would be the statement

  • "all bachelors are unmarried." I don't have to go survey

  • every bachelor on earth to know that that is true.

  • All bachelors are unmarried because that's how we define

  • the word bachelor. Of course, you have to know what the words

  • bachelor and unmarried mean in the first place.

  • Oh, you do? Okay. Perfect. That's great. But

  • how do you know? This time I mean

  • functionally, how do you know? Where is knowledge biologically

  • in the brain? What are memories made out of?

  • We are a long way from being able to answer that question completely

  • but research has shown that memories don't exist in the brain in single

  • locations. Instead, what we call

  • a memory is likely made up of many

  • different complex relationships all over the brain between lots of brain cells,

  • neurones. A major cellular mechanism thought to underlie the formation of

  • memories

  • is long-term potentiation or

  • LTP. When one neurone stimulates another neurone

  • repeatedly that signal can be enhanced overtime

  • LTP, wiring them more strongly together

  • and that connection can last a long time, even

  • an entire lifetime. A collection of different brain cells,

  • neurones that fire together in a particular order

  • over and over again frequently and repeatedly

  • can achieve long-term potentiation, becoming

  • more sensitive to each other and more ready to fire in the exact same way

  • later on in the future. They're a physical thing

  • in your brain, firing together more easily

  • because you strengthen that pattern of firing.

  • You memorized. This branching forest of firing friends

  • looks messy, but look closer. It could be the memory

  • of your first kiss. A living souvenir

  • of the event. If I were to go into your brain and cut out

  • those cells, could I make you forget your first kiss

  • or could I make you forget where your fingers are?

  • Only if I cut out a lot of your brain.

  • Because memories aren't just stored in one relationship, they're stored

  • all over the brain. The events leading up to your first kiss are stored in one

  • network,

  • the way it felt to the way it smelled in different networks, all added up together

  • making what you call the memory of your first kiss.

  • How many memories can you fit

  • inside your head? What is the storage capacity

  • of the human brain? The best we can do is a rough

  • estimate, but given the number of neurons in the brain involved with

  • memory

  • and the number of different connections a single neurone can make

  • Paul Reber at Northwestern University estimated

  • that we can store the digital equivalent of about 2.5

  • petabytes of information. That's the equivalent of recording a TV channel

  • continuously for 300 years.

  • That's a lot of information. That is a lot of information about

  • skills you can do and facts and people you've met,

  • things in the real world.

  • The world is real, right?

  • How do you know? It's a difficult question,

  • but it's not rocket science. Instead, it is

  • asking whether or not rocket scientists even exist in the first place.

  • The theory that the Sun moved around the earth

  • worked great. It predicted that the Sun would rise every morning

  • and it did. It wasn't until later that we realized what we thought was true

  • might not be. So, do we

  • or will we ever know true reality

  • or are we stuck in a world where the best we can do is be

  • approximately true? Discovering more and more useful theories every day but never

  • actually reaching

  • true objective actual reality.

  • Can science or reason ever prove convincingly

  • that your friends and YouTube videos and your fingers

  • actually exist beyond your mind? That you don't just live

  • in the matrix?

  • No. Your mind is all that you have,

  • even if you use instruments, like a telescope

  • or particle accelerators. The final stop

  • for all of that information is ultimately

  • you. You are alone in your own brain,

  • which technically makes it impossible to prove that

  • anything else exists. It's called

  • the egocentric predicament. Everything you know

  • about the world out there depends on

  • and is created inside your brain.

  • This mattered so much to Charles Sanders Peirce that he drew a line

  • between reality, the way the universe truly is,

  • and what he called the phaneron, the world as filtered through our senses

  • and bodies, the only information we can get.

  • If you want to speak with certainty you live in,

  • that is you react to and remember and experience your

  • phaneron, not reality.

  • The belief that only you exist

  • and everything else, food, the universe, your friends are all

  • figments of your mind is called solipsism.

  • There is no way to convince

  • a solipsist that the outside world

  • is real. And there is no way to convince someone who

  • doubts that the universe wasn't created just three seconds ago

  • along with all of our memories. It's a frightening realization

  • that we don't always know how to deal with. There's even

  • The Matrix defense. In 2002

  • Tonda Lynn Ansley shot and killed her landlady.

  • She argued that she believed she was in the matrix, that her crimes

  • weren't real. By using the matrix defense

  • she was found not guilty

  • by reason of insanity, because the opposite view is just way more healthy

  • and common.

  • It's called realism. Realism is the belief that the

  • outside world exists independently of your own

  • phaneron. Rocks and stars and Thora Birch

  • would continue to exist even if you weren't around

  • to experience them. But you cannot

  • know realism is true. All you can do

  • is believe. Martin Gardner, a great source for math magic tricks,

  • explained that he is not a solipsist because realism is just way more

  • convenient

  • and healthy and it works.

  • As to whether it bothered him that he could never know realism was true,

  • he wrote "if you ask me to tell you anything about the nature of what lies

  • beyond the phaneron,

  • my answer is how should I know? I'm not dismayed by ultimate mysteries,

  • I can no more grasp what is behind such questions

  • as my cat can understand what is behind the clatter i make

  • while I type this paragraph." Humble stuff.

  • What strikes me

  • is the cat. Cats do not understand keyboards,

  • but they know the keyboards are a fun place to be.

  • It's a great way to get the attention of a human, they're warm

  • and exciting, surrounded by noises and flashing lights plus

  • cats love to get their scent on whatever they can,

  • a mark of their existence.

  • We aren't that much different, except instead of keyboards

  • we have the mysteries of the universe.

  • We will never be able to understand all of them. We won't be able to ever answer

  • every single question,

  • but walking around in those questions, exploring them,

  • is fun. It feels good.

  • And as always,

  • thanks for watching.

  • Do you want more unanswered questions? Well, you're in luck.

  • Today, nine other amazing channels on YouTube have made videos

  • about questions we still haven't fully answered.

  • Alltime10s has organized them and to watch them all

  • click the annotation at the end of this video or the link

  • at the top of the description. Enjoy.

Hey, Vsauce. Michael here. Where are your fingers?

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