Seems that meditation is largely about looking in and one of the main obstacles is that looking out is so enticing that the motivaton to looking in is not apparent.
I would think that as a environemnt oriented brain the expectation of what the experience would be like would be largely different than what would actually be experienced.
Part of the problem with the setup is that normal human eyes need the visual cortext to be calibrated before vision even works. So do you get a miscalibrated or uncalibrated brain? If you get a “healthy” brain then part of the functional requirements would be all kinds of capacity for thought.
Seems that meditation is largely about looking in and one of the main obstacles is that looking out is so enticing that the motivaton to looking in is not apparent.
I would think that as a environemnt oriented brain the expectation of what the experience would be like would be largely different than what would actually be experienced.
Part of the problem with the setup is that normal human eyes need the visual cortext to be calibrated before vision even works. So do you get a miscalibrated or uncalibrated brain? If you get a “healthy” brain then part of the functional requirements would be all kinds of capacity for thought.