Fatal Human Errors and the Distortion of Conscious Awareness in the Brain

All living beings possess consciousness; however, the difference between humans and other organisms lies not in the possession of consciousness, but in the level, frequency, and capacity of its reflection. Human consciousness, due to the more complex structure of the brain—particularly the neocortex—has the capacity for self-awareness, meaning-making, and the observation of experience. Despite this elevated potential, human history is marked by destructive errors, collective violence, and ideological crimes. This article proposes a theoretical framework in which such errors do not arise from a lack of consciousness, but rather from the entrapment of consciousness within conditioned survival- and pleasure-based neural circuits. Within this perspective, the brain is not regarded as the creator of consciousness, but as a denser-frequency manifestation of it. When consciousness becomes identified with the patterns of the primitive and limbic brain, reactive, pleasure-oriented, and fear-based behaviors replace conscious choice. The article demonstrates that many forms of ideological violence and fatal human errors emerge from this confinement of consciousness within survival and fear structures, and that liberation from this cycle is possible only through education, silence, observation, and conscious suffering.

This framework further suggests that dysfunctions in neural processes can intensify the distortion of conscious awareness in human behavior and contribute to the escalation of behavioral deviations.

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