The IIT's two major proponents, Koch and Tononi have both come out as panpsychists of a kind. They think that inanimate systems are conscious, for example simple molecules, atoms and thermostats. — bert1
Where do you stand on multiple realisability? That gets you out of the brain doesn't it?
But you cited the IIT as one of your respectable theories that shows consciousness only occurs in brains. But the IIT is expressly an panpsychic theory. It attributed consciousness to any system at all that integrates information. Have you blundered here? Or have I misunderstood you? — bert1
Functionalism of any kind suggests that any system that can replicate the function of a system we know (or believe) is conscious, is also conscious. So a faithful brain-simulator would be conscious like a brain, no? — bert1
As one of the dissenting "denizens" of The Philosophy Forum, I'll reiterate my contention that empirical scientists and theoretical philosophers are interested in different kinds of "evidence". Some early philosophers, such as Aristotle, included both observational evidence, and speculative reasoning under the heading of Natural Science. Yet, he astutely separated his generalizations from the specific observations .One topic that denizens of TPF seem to be under the impression that empirical research has left the door open for the discussion of philosophers to "speculate" about. — Garrett Travers
One example of that division of labor is Albert Einstein — Gnomon
Instead, the role of Philosophy is not to reveal the structure of Reality, but to dissect our subjective beliefs-about and mental-models-of Reality. Mind-excavating Philosophers ask the hard questions -- e.g. about unknown-unknowns -- then speculate on possible answers, but ultimately leave the pragmatic spade-work to lab-laborers. — Gnomon
Moreover, I would caution anyone cognizant of the history of science from making "unequivocal" assertions. When scientists resort to exasperated use of such absolute categorical declarations, it's usually in cases of harsh political backlash, as in Global Warming. But, this is not a political forum, so the hyperbole is unnecessary. You won't convince anyone here by shouting "you're a pseudo-scientist, if you don't agree with my unequivocal worldview". — Gnomon
The brain controls the heart; the heart controls the brain. Funny, the anus is the first thing to develop, so in a chicken or egg scenario. Sorry dude, our entire bodies are one codependent organism. We're not "just" brains. — theRiddler
No. It's actually that you have completely ignored the very nature of empiricism and how the way things are observed influences how we think about brains and their accompanying conscious. You seemed assert that brains and consciousness exists without having ever seen them, but only heard about them.One topic that denizens of TPF seem to be under the impression that empirical research has left the door open for the discussion of philosophers to "speculate" about. This would be the topic of consciousness, and the nature of its presence here on Earth, and in the human race. — Garrett Travers
No. It's actually that you have completely ignored the very nature of empiricism and how the way things are observed influences how we think about brains and their accompanying conscious. — Harry Hindu
In the other thread I mentioned that neuroscience an QM need work together to provide a better explanation of consciousness, but you called that unscientific and woo mysticism, and then continued to berate others, so excuse me if I don't think you're intellectually honest enough to engage in this type of conversation. — Harry Hindu
IIT is a functional theory, but is having some issues with falsification at the moment. Apart from that, it's very sound. — Garrett Travers
I read Christof Koch's book about IIT, and in my judgement it is a complete non-starter! — Daemon
Brains don't work by processing information, they work by ion exchanges at synapses and that sort of thing. — Daemon
Information is observer-dependent, in the sense that money and marriage are observer-dependent. Something is only money, marriage or information because we say so. — Daemon
Ion exchanges and that sort of thing are observer-independent, in the sense that mountains, metals and molecules are observer-independent. — Daemon
So, from what I can gather, the actual theoretical description of how the conscious process works is, in fact, sound, and accepted as a genuine theory in the field. — Garrett Travers
Information processing is not something that is disputed by researchers. — Garrett Travers
Ion exchanges and that sort of thing are observer-independent, in the sense that mountains, metals and molecules are observer-independent. — Daemon
Yes, but it is the "observer" part that is important here. An observe has to have something to observe that can be computed in the mind in a manner that is both interpretable, as well as accurate in its representation. It wouldn't make sense to be seeing a mountain, when such is actually a table, right? — Garrett Travers
Which field? And what does "accepted as a genuine theory" amount to? Is it still a "genuine theory" if it's demonstrably false? — Daemon
Similarly, a brain works through electrochemical processes, and suchlike, and when you've described the brain in those terms, again, there isn't anything for "information" to do. — Daemon
Your response here is not relevant to my point. — Daemon
Cognitive Neuroscience? And, it isn't demonstrably false, it's one of the leading theories. — Garrett Travers
Do you think that the leading theories can't be false? — Daemon
Similarly, a brain works through electrochemical processes, and suchlike, and when you've described the brain in those terms, again, there isn't anything for "information" to do. — Daemon
Right, and that's really the direction they're going in now, especially in the branch of computational neuroscience, specifically. — Garrett Travers
I don't see how that can be. For the same reason the brain doesn't work through "information", it doesn't work through "computation" either. And neither does a computer.
That was my point about the observer-dependence of computation and the observer-independence of brain processes and consciousness.
Consciousness can't be produced by something that only exists because we say so. — Daemon
You see, I've discussed this issue with numerous people on this sight, and nobody has been able to clearly articulate to me what they think consciousness is — Garrett Travers
I've said a few times that it are not the physical processes situated in the interest me "brainy" world, un-untieably connected with us and the physical world, that explain consciousness, but, rather, the contents of those processes that lay at base of consciousness. — EugeneW
Consciousness can't be produced by something that only exists because we say so. — Daemon
the brain doesn't work through "information" — Daemon
Consciousness can't be produced by something that only exists because we say so. — Daemon
This assertion is going to need some support. — Garrett Travers
the brain doesn't work through "information" — Daemon
This assertion is going to need some support. — Garrett Travers
"The optic nerve carries sensory nerve impulses from the more than one million ganglion cells of the retina toward the visual centres in the brain. The vast majority of optic nerve fibres convey information regarding central vision. Encyclopedia Britannica" — Daemon
Other animals, such as chimpanzees, were conscious before there was anybody around capable of saying anything at all. — Daemon
As a concrete example, take the optic nerve. "The optic nerve carries sensory nerve impulses from the more than one million ganglion cells of the retina toward the visual centres in the brain. The vast majority of optic nerve fibres convey information regarding central vision. Encyclopedia Britannica"
Now suppose you're a scientist looking at the optic nerve. You are able to identify those nerve impulses. But you can't identify "information" in addition to the impulses. — Daemon
But I don't think "We Are Our Brain" (book). I think the brain helps us. — EugeneW
But still... The experience is not explained. — EugeneW
It's just, the data that has been gathered is currently indicating the opposite — Garrett Travers
I get that, but gaps in knowledge are not arguments against what the data currently indicate, nor is it an argument for the position that you are trying to argue. That's an argument from ignorance, and it is merely an attempt to negate an assertion through a lack of knowledge that the evidence implies, but cannot verify as if yet — Garrett Travers
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.