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Why the Brain isn't a Computer—It’s a Wave Interference Engine

​Most people think the brain "calculates" anomalies like a digital processor. They’re wrong. Digital is too slow. ​If you look at a 20x20 matrix and spot the "odd" numbers instantly, you aren't running an algorithm. You are performing Analog Subtraction.

​The Theory

The brain doesn't process data; it manages Waves.

  1. The Prediction: Your internal model generates a "Counter-Wave" (Anti-Phase) based on expected patterns.
  2. The Reality: Sensory input hits as an incoming wave.
  3. The Interaction: When they meet, Destructive Interference occurs.

​The Result

The predictable world—the "normal" numbers—simply cancels out into silence. No CPU cycles needed. No "processing" required. The "Oddness" (the anomaly) is the only thing that doesn't cancel. It survives the interference as a high-energy spike. Consciousness isn't the whole picture; it’s the "Residue" of the subtraction.

​We don't "think" the difference. We feel the interference where the world fails to match our internal wave. Mathematics calls this a Fourier Transform. Nature calls it Perception. Memory must be wave-like: sensory inputs are converted into waves whose resonance generates meaning from reality.

Source: Cankay Koryak

#OSC #NeuroScience #ML