Temporal Lobes

Short Definition:

The temporal lobes are the cerebral-cortex regions through which feminine (belonging) conflicts and (masculine) territorial conflicts relay.

Explanation:

In the temporal lobes of the cerebral cortex, the left temporal lobe corresponds to estrogen levels, while the right temporal lobe corresponds to testosterone levels.

Each temporal lobe contains four relays.

The left temporal lobe relays to:

  1. the larynx,
  2. the coronary veins and uterine cervix,
  3. the rectal mucosa, and
  4. the right side of the urinary tract.

The right temporal lobe relays to:

  1. the bronchi;
  2. the coronary arteries and vas deferens;
  3. the lining of the esophagus and stomach, the duct of the liver, the call duct, or the pancreatic duct; and
  4. the left side of the urinary tract.

The temporal lobes are concerned with masculine territory. Therefore, the primary influence on the temporal lobes is relative testosterone level.

If a temporal lobe conflict becomes active in the left hemisphere, the estrogen level will drop, creating a relative increase in the ratio of testosterone to estrogen. This will produce “masculine hormone status,” an orientation to territory or increased orientation to territory, and “mania” (increased aggression).

If a temporal lobe conflict becomes active in the right hemisphere, the testosterone level will drop, creating a relative decrease in the ratio of testosterone to estrogen, which will produce emasculation and “feminine hormone status.” Orientation to territory will diminish or disappear, producing “depression” (increased passivity and concern for inner feelings, needs, desires, etc).

Where the first temporal lobe conflict becomes active depends on sex and laterality:

  • a left-handed male or a right-handed female will experience their first territorial or feminine conflict (respectively) on the left hemisphere, causing a reduction of estrogen and a relative surplus of testosterone (in relation to estrogen). The right-handed female will become masculinized and the left-handed male will become aggressive (“mania”).
  • a right-handed male or left-handed female will experience their first territorial or feminine conflict on the right hemisphere, causing a reduction of testosterone. The right-handed male will become emasculated and the left-handed female will become passive (“depression”).

Once a conflict is active in either temporal lobe, perception shifts to the opposite temporal lobe (changing hormone status and whether perception is territorial or feminine).

A second active conflict in the opposite temporal lobe creates a “schizophrenic constellation,” producing de-realization. Hormone status will switch from masculine to feminine depending on which side carries less conflict load at the moment.

Third and subsequent temporal lobe conflicts depend on “rule of weight,” which is primarily governed by laterality.

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