There's a fairly recent essay on exactly this at Aeon, The Blind Spot, which I happen to think is a tremendously important essay. (I got lot of flak on this forum for posting a discussion of this essay a year ago when it came out.) — Wayfarer
This framework faces two intractable problems. The first concerns scientific objectivism. We never encounter physical reality outside of our observations of it. — Blind Spot link
This sounds so obviously true that it simply has to be the problem. I perceive myself as living being with a material form. The abstraction of the epistemological subject already is ideal. So is the concept of "observation". If one derives the "blank mind floating over the world in souvereign supremacy" you are already far away from what defines your being in first place. — Heiko
Something I've wondered, could our most advanced neural net be performed on our oldest computer, albeit at an extremely slow pace? — Forgottenticket
'Physical reality' is just the shadow cast by some mysterious mental substance. It's two sides of the same coin. IMV the great 20th philosophy was an attempt to break free or at least get some distance from this way of framing the situation. — path
What goes along with this is the assumption of some kind of pure meaning that isn't dependent upon social conventions. — path
Is there anything meaningful apart from social convention? Isn't this simply relativism - 'the doctrine that knowledge, truth, and morality exist in relation to culture, society, or historical context, and have no inherent reality?' — Wayfarer
‘Physical reality’ is ‘what is described by physics’. ‘Physicalism’ is ‘the thesis that everything is physical, or as contemporary philosophers sometimes put it, that everything supervenes on the physical‘ (SEP). The essay I referred to is questioning physicalism, it’s not trying to defend it. — Wayfarer
I can agree with you on this. We are just unlikely to ever put subject-talk aside. It's too basic for our form of life. So abolishing the subject is not a live option. I agree. On the other hand, we can as philosophers do as you just did, and think of the 'I' or 'consciousness' as caught up in especially basic or foundational conventions.
Note the connection to 'freedom of choice' and implicitly to responsibility. A body is trained to take responsibility for its self. This is tied up with reward and punishment. Children aren't held to the same level of responsibility for their actions. Alcohol complicated consent to sex, etc. So in practice we have a continuum of consciousness, agency, responsibility. No doubt.
The issue is whether we want to reify these important conventions into some quasi-mystical substance and get trapped in the old metaphysical maze. — path
I fail to see whether there lies a need to deprive ourselves of a discussion of the subjective, to further expound over our source of understanding, and the faculties through which the whole of the world, in representation, is mediated. — Vessuvius
queries of the sort that disconsider the subject, in full, neglect a tenet that remains fundamental to all forms of human experience, — Vessuvius
OK, but my employer doesn't see any need for me to philosophize at all. In worldly terms, I should be attending to something else right now. Why am I so addicted to philosophy? — path
To reiterate, we couldn't get rid of the 'subject effect' if we wanted to. We can't disconsider it. Not us anyway. In 1000 years humans may manage it, but they might be neo-humans with green skin who live on sunlight, water, and minerals. What we can do is intervene in today's routine hazy intelligibility and use it against itself to reveal our being entrapped in it as false necessity. We can see that we were dominated by metaphors without realizing it. We can see that we had strangely been satisfied with mud and fog (what everybody knows), because it was familiar mud and fog. — path
The worlds onto which our lives are so often projected, are self-contained, and hence inaccessible to most if their workings are not rendered explicit. I am however curious, as to what particularities can be found, beneath the surface of yours. — Vessuvius
On the basis of behavior, we do have a pattern, both individually and in sum, of resigning ourselves to the familiar, and the already known. I would imagine it to be the reason for which life seldom borders on the thrilling. — Vessuvius
This is the desire to be as polymorphous in our adjustments as possible, to recontextualize for the hell of it. — Rorty
Neotony, play. Philosophy keeps us young ? — path
OK. I guess my point is that if we ultimately reduce 'semantic' to pointing symbols...that at some point AI may satisfy our intuition. — path
IMV, Derrida was making the kind of point that I'm trying to make, dissolving some pure subject or consciousness into social linguistic conventions. — path
One of Searle's points is that you can make a computer out of anything - lengths of pipe, water and stones, — Wayfarer
The problem would be insufficient memory as I understand it. If my network has 10 billion parameters, then I have to store them somewhere. During training I have to be able to update them as the data come in... — path
Minds have to exist on certain material. — Forgottenticket
the mind is supposedly an equation. — Forgottenticket
The Chinese Room (and the chips and dip?) just (or partly) cautioned against conflating the mere production of tokens with the actual pointing of them.
The fact there is no 'actual' about it is what makes the social game of pointing so sophisticated. (imv.) — bongo fury
If that means trying to explain our sense of consciousness as a natural effect of our thinking and conversing in symbols, then hooray, cool. — bongo fury
Its study fosters a desire to know, to understand, that is almost child-like in intensity. Which in some sense, would correspond to the retention of a certain trait that is little apparent in those of adulthood, and which deserves to be cherished for all time.
Forever the instrument(s) of a young mind, we are. — Vessuvius
As once seen, and understood, there can be left only an impression of awe at its majesty, at the character of fullness and refinement of that wondrous system upon which we depend; — Vessuvius
https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/48410/days-56d229a0c0c33What are days for?
Days are where we live.
They come, they wake us
Time and time over.
They are to be happy in:
Where can we live but days?
Ah, solving that question
Brings the priest and the doctor
In their long coats
Running over the fields. — Larkin
Perhaps. But have we ever seen a human being with more than just nominal autonomy? — path
For what it's worth, I'm not saying that we are zombies or denying consciousness. I could be accused of suggesting that a certain hazy way of looking at consciousness has some serious problems that we mostly ignore. You might say that I'm trying to shine some light on the fog as such. — path
[More can always be said. When I read this next week it won't 'mean' what it 'means' to me now, tho it might be the same-enough for me to plausibly elaborate on it.] — path
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