The study of ligand-receptor potential processing has made it possible to understand the natural principle of analytic-synthetic brain activity: this principle implies that the brain operates at the level of natural sensory signals, without any transformation, and that conclusions and decisions are made on the basis of the natural interference pattern created by these signals.
Because of nervous system malfunctions, this principle can be used by a few people; more people can use it partially, in relation to specific phenomena, thanks to which they can see the properties and regularities of these phenomena, which they can use to their advantage, as well as formalize and formalize them in the form of knowledge, including scientific knowledge, for understanding by those who do not have this ability.
In the vast majority of people, analytic-synthetic activity occurs in a special range into which sensory information must be transformed by means of attention concentration, which requires either an internal or external stimulus.
This stimulus does not arise for everyone and not always the transformation takes place correctly and in the volume sufficient for the qualitative result of analytical-synthetic activity, and in combination with high expenditures of time and effort, many substitute this activity with its imitation, which makes the quality of conclusions and decisions extremely doubtful.