“Meaning” and “worthwhile” have no physical description or any other relationship to the physical world. Therefore, these thoughts cannot be held in the brain because it is a physical organ. If the brain can be said to hold thoughts, it is only in the same way a computer does. As Sir John Eccles and Wilder Penfield and other neurologists agree, thoughts are nonphysical and can only be held in the nonphysical mind. The mind exists in a dimension separate from the brain. It is in the mind that these immaterial thoughts originate and from whence they influence the physical world through one’s voice, words used in anger, expressions of love, or possibly persuasive arguments. But the brain does no more than that.