In other words, he believes consciousness arises from non-consciousness via weak emergence. — Eugen
He doesn't believe in strong emergence and what he calls radical or brute emergence is just a matter of our ignorance, not a real fact. — Eugen
He says we don't know how consciousness arises from matter, even if we are sure that it does.
But he further adds that we don't understand how motion works, something that seems to be quite a deal simpler than consciousness. — Manuel
Do you see what he's doing there? He conflates two totally different problems. The problem of movement doesn't claim to have any logical issue, it's just a mystery, while the hard problem is a totally different animal. The hard problem claims to be a logical problem, not a mystery.
By raising empirical evidence over logic, Chomsky faces problems with the latter. So his only way is to strawman things, conflate terms, and remain in a grey area. This is exactly what he's doing.
If he were intellectually honest, he would say: yes, there might be logical issues with consciousness arising from non-consciousness, but we should still do what empirical evidence is telling us. Instead of that, he either denies them or conflate them. — Eugen
I don't agree on consciousness being a logical problem, we don't know, — Manuel
I don't agree on consciousness being a logical problem, we don't know, how matter could give rise to consciousness, that is to say, within current science, we have no way of capturing experience and submitting it to experimental procedures, such as are used in biology or any other field. — Manuel
And it's not only Chomsky, but also Raymond Tallis, Colin McGinn, — Manuel
The hard problem states it's illogical to get consciousness from non-consciousness, and there is absolutely no answer to that to this moment. — Eugen
Dude, I was sarcastic... of course I won't start the classic silly debate ''Hey, we can get to flying from parts that don't fly." — Eugen
The hard problem states it's illogical to get consciousness from non-consciousness, and there is absolutely no answer to that to this moment.
There is no hard problem because <<How is it like to see a sunset?>> is a non-question" :vomit: — Eugen
What Chomsky is doing with that statement is attempting to foster a recognition in his listeners. It didn't work in your case, but that's just the way it goes.
Matthew 13:1-8 — wonderer1
It seems to me you're suggesting there's something interesting there that I'm too ignorant/dumb to see it. — Eugen
Could you please shed some light onto it for me, please? — Eugen
I think it is largely a matter of intuitively grokking what Chomsky meant, and I'd suggest that the best way for you to do that might be to think about the problems you would run into if you tried to provide a full explanation of what it is like for you to see a sunset. — wonderer1
Monism is that although the property of consciousness is different to the property of matter of the brain it is of the same kind. — RussellA
What is the difference between same kind and different kind? — Eugen
- No, there are no physical properties in Idealism, there are only mind properties.Idealism is the idea that there is only one mental substance and mental properties and physical properties are of the same kind. — RussellA
Mr. Chomsky created/uses Mysterianism to conflate two things that shouldn't be conflated, namely weak and strong emergence, i.e. full reduction or not. If you use this trick, yes, it's impossible. If you're honest with yourself and stop inventing sophisticated false stories, you will have a clear image. Moreover, Mr. Chomsky doesn't seem to find any problems in deciding if there are many kinds of properties or not. He clearly says no, there aren't. And he says that in spite of admitting we don't really understand things.In practice, trying to decide whether two things are of the same kind or of a different kind is almost impossible. — RussellA
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