If the wavelength of the electromagnetic spectrum is of the red frequency, and this hits rods and cones, and this goes down the optic nerve and the cortical layers, and the neural networks, and the peripheral environmental things of time and space.. how does any of this account for the actual sensation of "red"? — schopenhauer1
I would imagine an example of this would be something like language generation creating exponentially greater cultural learning which then favors a trajectory away from fixed innate instinctual mechanisms for purely learning mechanisms. In this way, the higher level language creation influences lower level instinctual mechanisms (in this case reducing its efficacy). — schopenhauer1
So what is particular at the globally general level of the Comos – its will to entropify – becomes the context that makes sharp sense of its own "other" – the possibility of tiny critters forming their own local wishes and ambitions within what remains still possible in a small, but personally valued, way. — apokrisis
You haven't dealt with my naturalistic argument. — apokrisis
There is what I would call a faulty interpretation of Wittgenstein's "Philosophical Investigations", which assumes a "private language argument", as demonstrating the impossibility of the individual's "private language" as having a relationship with language as a whole. This is analogous to the interaction problem of dualism, the private language is portrayed as incapable of interacting with the public language. But this is a misinterpretation because what Wittgenstein's so-called private language argument really demonstrates is how it is possible for the private aspect of language to incorporate itself into, and therefore become a feature of the more general public language, through this causal relation which Wittgenstein saw as necessary to the existence of language.
Your naturalist argument is flawed for the reason I explained. You wrongly portray final causation as top-down. This is because you incorrectly conflate final causation, which is bottom-up causation empowered by the freedom of choice, with the top-down constraints of formal cause, of which "entropy" is one. It is very clear, from all the empirical evidence that we have of the effects of final cause, that the purpose by which a thing acts, comes from within the agent itself, as a bottom-up cause, and it is by selecting this purpose that it may have a function in relation to a whole.
It's a problem for anyone who thinks that consciousness arrived late in the universe, however that is construed. — bert1
On the other hand, the Aristotelian interpretation of structure you have presented does bring the problem of time front and center as a matter of principle. — Paine
If current public languages are insufficient for communicating something an agent wants to communicate, it can use other means to try to transmit the semantic content, e.g. drawing a diagram of inventing a new word — Count Timothy von Icarus
However, does this rule out theories of natural teleology to you? — Count Timothy von Icarus
These have a conception of teleology/final cause that isn't dependent on an agent, at least not in a straight-forward way. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Nagel's "Mind and Cosmos," proposes a sort of teleology of immanent principles underlying the universe that in turn result in its generation of agents. That is, the principles come first and in turn generate the agents that fulfill them. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I find these hard to conceptualize at times. The principles are what generate the agents who can recognize the principles and whose existence is part of the process of actualizing them. But then it seems like the agents are essential to defining the principles as teleological, even though the principles predate them, which, if not contradictory, is at least hard to explain in a straight forward fashion. — Count Timothy von Icarus
A "red" cone cell responds to all the light. It switches off when it "sees" too much "green" light. It can switch on when it "sees" a general lack of "green" light. So right from the get-go, it is turning physics into information. It is reacting to electromagnetism with its own interest-driven logicism. — apokrisis
How is a series of this responding not some sort of Cartesian theater fallacy? — schopenhauer1
It's a problem for anyone who thinks that consciousness arrived late in the universe, however that is construed.
— bert1
That’s an assertion and not an argument. — apokrisis
The only way I can reconcile everyone's claims to be non-representational direct realists, is to interpret each and every person as referring to a different world. — sime
A rebuttal would be a counter argument. It is pretty obvious why consciousness is a bigger problem for anyone who thinks it arrived early in the Universe’s evolution. So much more than your glib assertion is required here. — apokrisis
Maybe it's not a hard problem at all, only it seems hard to people, like me, stuck in outmoded habits of thought. It's just a name for an issue (possibly a pseudo-issue) that needs addressing. — bert1
but I don't deny that there is a serious issue called the 'combination problem' that panpsychists have a burden to address. — bert1
All I ever see is folk saying consciousness is a fundamental simple of the Cosmos, but somehow the complex functional neurology of creatures with evolved nervous systems are needed to get it to the point of being able do stuff that gives evidence it exists. — apokrisis
It is pretty obvious why consciousness is a bigger problem for anyone who thinks it arrived early in the Universe’s evolution. — apokrisis
How about, consciousness is a fundmental simple of experience? — Wayfarer
Why do we attribute agency to evolution? Saying that evolution does things or creates things or produces outcomes? When the way natural selection acts is as a filter - it prevents things that are not adaptive from proliferating. Evolution pre-supposes living organisms which adapt and survive, but to say that evolution is the cause of the existence of organisms seems putting the cart before horse. — Wayfarer
I think there is a tendency to attribute to evolution the agency that used to be assigned to God. It's kind of a remnant of theistic thinking. — Wayfarer
As regards consciousness being the product of an evolved nervous system - what about the panpsychist (or maybe even pansemiotic) idea that consciousness is an elemental feature of the Cosmos, that exists in a latent state, and which then manifests itself through evolution. — Wayfarer
The lecturer I had in Indian philosophy used to say, 'What is latent, becomes patent'. — Wayfarer
The fallacy is only being committed by those who believe in homuncular reifications like “consciousness” and “experience”. — apokrisis
It's not a reification that I am sensing things — schopenhauer1
Who is this "I" if not a reification? It is the socially constructed objectification of the quality of "you-ness" that arises as a necessity of semiosis. — apokrisis
Why does socially constructed change the fact that there is a sensation any more than the rods and cones? — schopenhauer1
The terrain is matter not experience and the map is semiosis, but where’s the experiential aspect? — schopenhauer1
You mean, ‘manifested’. — Wayfarer
As outlined in this paper - http://www.rpgroup.caltech.edu/publications/Phillips2006.pdf - and in this book - http://lifesratchet.com/ - the nanoscale turns out to a convergence zone where all the key structure-creating forces of nature become equal in size, and coincide with the thermal properties/temperature scale of liquid water.
So at a scale of 10^-9 metres (the average distance of energetic interactions between molecules) and 10^-20 joules (the average background energy due to the “warmth” of water), all the many different kinds of energy become effectively the same. Elastic energy, electrostatic energy, chemical bond energy, thermal energy – every kind of action is suddenly equivalent in strength. And thus easily interconvertible. There is no real cost, no energetic barrier, to turning one kind of action into another kind of action. And so also – from a semiotic or informational viewpoint – no real problem getting in there and regulating the action. It is like a railway system where you can switch trains on to other tracks at virtually zero cost. The mystery of how “immaterial” information can control material processes disappears because the conversion of one kind of action into a different kind of action has been made cost-free in energetic terms. Matter is already acting symbolically in this regard.
This cross-over zone had to happen due to the fact that there is a transistion from quantum to classical behaviour in the material world. As the micro-scale, the physics of objects is ruled by surface area effects. Molecular structures have a lot of surface area and very little volume, so the geometry dominates when it comes to the substantial properties being exhibited. The shapes are what matter more than what the shapes are made of. But then at the macro-scale, it is the collective bulk effects that take over. The nature of a substance is determined now by the kinds of atoms present, the types of bonds, the ratios of the elements.
The actual crossing over in terms of the forces involved is between the steadily waning strength of electromagnetic binding energy – the attraction between positive and negative charges weakens proportionately with distance – and the steadily increasing strength of bulk properties such as the stability of chemical, elastic, and other kinds of mechanical or structural bonds. Get enough atoms together and they start to reinforce each others behaviour.
So you have quantum scale substance where the emergent character is based on geometric properties, and classical scale substance where it is based on bulk properties. And this is even when still talking about the same apparent “stuff”. If you probe a film of water perhaps five or six molecules thick with a super-fine needle, you can start to feel the bumps of extra resistance as you push through each layer. But at a larger scale of interaction, water just has its generalised bulk identity – the one that conforms to our folk intuitions about liquidity.
So the big finding is the way that constrasting forces of nature suddenly find themselves in vanilla harmony at a certain critical scale of being. It is kind of like the unification scale for fundamental physics, but this is the fundamental scale of nature for biology – and also mind, given that both life and mind are dependent on the emergence of semiotic machinery
No need to rewrite physics. — apokrisis
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.