In other words, consciousness can't be a simple. It is already complex. — apokrisis
To paraphrase that SEP entry - when you experience a noise and a pain, you is not conscious of the noise and then, separately, of the pain but of the noise and pain together, as aspects of a single conscious experience. — Wayfarer
but that has been shown not to account for the subjective unity of perception — Wayfarer
In fact it gives no reason why the central synchronisation of a set of distributed components should result in "feeling like something". — apokrisis
The idea I'm contemplating is that the organising principle that gives rise to the unity of consciousness in the individual is an analogy for, or instance of, the same organising principle that of the cosmos; whatever it is that puts the 'uni' in 'universe'. — Wayfarer
:100: :up:Stability of form and structure is an illusion. It is a product of our minds' frequency relative to the frequency of what is being observed. Change is relative and minds change relative to every other process. The rate at which they change, or process external information, is relative to the speed or frequency at which the external world changes. Some changes happen very fast and some very slow. Those that happen fast appear as "non-physical" processes, while those that happen very slow appear as stable "physical" objects. — Harry Hindu
Stability of form and structure is an illusion. It is a product of our minds' frequency relative to the frequency of what is being observed. Change is relative and minds change relative to every other process. The rate at which they change, or process external information, is relative to the speed or frequency at which the external world changes. Some changes happen very fast and some very slow. Those that happen fast appear as "non-physical" processes, while those that happen very slow appear as stable "physical" objects. — Harry Hindu
What I think I mean, is that there is an objective truth that A=A, that things are what they are, and that would be true in any possible world that came into existence through random happenstance.
A=A, the law of identity, a thing is what it is, is an immutable truth. There are objective truths in this universe, in this reality.
I may have gotten lost there. The content of this thread is way over my head. I'm not really sure if I answered anything or contributed anything valuable to our exchange. — Watchmaker
It's the ingredients of consciousness that is said to be fundamental. Someone here offered another perspective, that information is fundamental. I think information would be more accurate, or it least it reduces it a little more — Watchmaker
Panpsychism attempts to get around this by making the mind (or 'consciousness') an attribute of simple material particulars (presumably atoms or their constituents) - as if it's something that is there all along, like velocity, mass, and the other primary qualities of objects. They interpret the idea of 'consciousness everywhere' in a literal sense - literally distributed throughout the Universe in latent form, existing in a very rudimentary manner even in atoms themselves.
So that kind of makes panpsychism sound naturalistic - but at the cost of introducing an attribute or quality for which critics will say there can't be any direct evidence.
That's what I see as the state of play. — Wayfarer
The problem is that this runs up against the naturalist taboo against anything that sounds theistic - a divine intelligence or intellect or whatever, which is more or less verboten in secular philosophical discourse. — Wayfarer
I think you are being too harsh here. You almost suggest an irrational theophobia from naturalists towards theists and such generalisations are always at best inaccurate on a case-by-case basis. — universeness
But consciousness is neither an object, a substance or a property, but a relational activity. — Joshs
Something has to explain how I can both drive a car down busy streets, and yet do so completely automatically to the point I can't even remember the experience if I am too happy in my own day-dreaming — apokrisis
Consciousness seems to be able to employ un/sub/conscious automation of bodily actions whilst 'focussing' on the 'day-dreaming' state you describe in your example above but is this not in fact 'a lesser attentive' brain state compared to a non-daydreaming state and full focus on the driving. — universeness
Consciousness as a Cartesian substance - a mysterious extra glow that attaches itself to all the physical processes - fails so spectacularly to connect with any neuroscientific account that it is no surprise that folk want to chase it all the way down to "quantum information" or "psychic atoms" — apokrisis
And yet I do think there is a remnant of that Cartesianism lurking in the treatment of affectivity ... All that’s left of the old inner subject is somatic sensation , the bare registry of positive and negative valence within the body. — Joshs
...yet there remains what for me is an unsatisfying immanence or intrinsicality associated with feeling , as much as it has been embedded within irreducible webs of somatic-cognitive-environmental interactions. — Joshs
"I find it interesting that information is suggested as being fundamental. In Computing, information is a composite of the labels data and meaning. Raw data has no meaning. 25 is raw data, 25 apples, is data with meaning, and is therefore information. Data is unlabeled, so how can information be fundamental if it is made up of 'parts.'
Perhaps 'data' is fundamental and 'meaning' is fundamental" - Universeness
How about meaningful data is fundamental?
If meaning is fundamental, wouldn't that imply a mind? — Watchmaker
mind is a mirror that mirror that mirrors man's mind. — Watchmaker
Why do you feel the need to add "consciousness" as some further reified being that sits above and beyond the brain processes of attending and habit-emitting — apokrisis
Why do you say that consciousness "employs" various habits and automaticisms, while it goes off to "focus" on the day-dreaming and not on the road?
What extra work does invoking some further spooky and homuncular Cartesian regress – the "display that is also being watched" - do here?
I prefer a naturalistic account where consciousness just is the sum of everything involved in responding intelligently to the world — apokrisis
But my definition of consciousness includes all that which is ignored, forgotten, emitted without further thought. In fact - as neurological theory, the Bayesian Brain story - it is based on that — apokrisis
So consciousness has this structure, this dynamic, of attention~habit. And each explains the other. To the degree you can ignore, you don't have to attend. To the degree you can't ignore, you then must attend.
And now we have a proper connection between the phenomenological experience of being a mind in the world, and a neuroscientific account in terms of the necessary structure of any useful world-model — apokrisis
Consciousness as a Cartesian substance - a mysterious extra glow that attaches itself to all the physical processes - fails so spectacularly to connect with any neuroscientific account that it is no surprise that folk want to chase it all the way down to "quantum information" or "psychic atoms".
But starting the story with a dichotomous structure of attention and and habits, differentiation and integration - the logic of the processing that would be needed so to act as a self in a world - can halt this slithering down the slope of the physicalist fallacy.
We can see how panpsychism isn't even the right kind of thing before we start debating what might be its best theory. — apokrisis
How about meaningful data is fundamental? — Watchmaker
If meaning is fundamental, wouldn't that imply a mind?
Some really interesting ideas there. That last sentence, in particular. — Wayfarer
A computer looks at an image of a bird and it sees 1s and 0s — Agent Smith
It's a start for computers, they can now at least "see" the general shape of objects; rudimentary animal vision, won't you agree?
Something's not quite right, yes? — Agent Smith
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