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Medical Forum / General / General / July 2006

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cognitive thinking

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zero-sum-game - 11 Jul 2006 02:10 GMT
description of psychosis as a type of cognitive thinking.

the thoughts I have occur in a specifiable state of mind.  that state
of mind is how i subvocalize them. specifically, they are subvocal
utterances which are only cognitions.  hence my mind can be said to be
cognitive.  what else is there to subvocal utterance in the mind?  is
the state of cognition said to be that of thinking?  what state of mind
is that of subvocal utterance and is not thinking but cognitive?  are
all cognitive states equal to that of thinking?  possibly all the known
states of mind are, because thinking describes them all inclusively.
so by science, there is no other state of mind than cognitive
thinking.is psychosis some cognitive state of mind that is other than
that of cognitive thinking?  are there types of psychosis that are
explained by claims of parapsychology?  are there unknown variables
that can't be explained by parapsychology for certain forms of
psychosis?could a person deduce another person's state of mind by
speech to be other than cognitive thinking?

these are issues with psychosis that I would like comments on.
Marcia - 11 Jul 2006 17:26 GMT
> description of psychosis as a type of cognitive thinking.
>
[quoted text clipped - 15 lines]
>
> these are issues with psychosis that I would like comments on.

What?

Could you try to explain your ideas a little more clearly? Cognitive
means conscious intellectual activity, like thinking, reasoning or
remembering. Cognitive impairment is a risk factor for, and possibly a
cause of, psychosis.

I don't understand what you're trying to say. Sorry.

marcia
Pete - 11 Jul 2006 20:05 GMT
> description of psychosis as a type of cognitive thinking.
>
[quoted text clipped - 15 lines]
>
> these are issues with psychosis that I would like comments on.

This belongs in the Guinness book of records for the worlds longest run on
sentence that says nothing - congratulations.
Phil Anthropist - 12 Jul 2006 12:20 GMT
> description of psychosis as a type of cognitive thinking.
>
[quoted text clipped - 15 lines]
>
> these are issues with psychosis that I would like comments on.

I must have developed some cognitive impairment. You don't make any sense to
me.
 
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