On 9/10/2015 1:33 pm, John Clark wrote:
On Thu, Oct 8, 2015 Bruce Kellett <bhkell...@optusnet.com.au <mailto:bhkell...@optusnet.com.au>>wrote:

        ​
        ​ >> ​
        The same person can have several neurons, he can have 100
        billion in fact, so why can't he have more than one other
        biological part, why can't he have more than one brain? ​


    ​ > ​
    Neurons within the one brain communicate directly. Neurons within
    distinct, separate brains do not.


​ If two brains ​
​ are identical they don't need to communicate directly or indirectly, ​
​ they will keep on having the same thought regardless. If 2 phonographs are synchronized and playing the same symphony and one phonograph is destroyed the music does not stop.
Have you ever tried to run a computer without a clock on the bus? Or run two processors in parallel without a common clock?

Bruce

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