His philosophy of mind is not: dualism, idealism, panpsychism, or physicalism. It does not contradict dual aspect monism, and MUI is consistent with species-specific semiotic modelling. Beyond that, I understand very little. — Galuchat
Bergson, like Kant, strives hard to show that spiritual values can co-exist with the findings of science. He does this by contrasting the largely false world of common sense and science (in which he, nevertheless, takes a keen interest) with the true world of intuition. He is perfectly lucid and even superb so long as he demonstrates that both the intellect and our practical preoccupations manifestly distort the world view both of everyday experience and of mechanical science. But, when he comes to the way out, to his dur‚e r‚elle and his "intuition," vagueness envelops all and everything. His positive views have therefore been rightly described as "tantalising," for "as soon as one reaches out to grasp his body of thought it seems to disappear within a teasing ambiguity." Mature and accomplished spiritual knowledge can be had only within a living tradition. But how could a Polish Jew, transplanted to Paris, find such a tradition in the corridors of the CollŠge de France or in the salons of the 16th arrondissement? It is the tragedy of our time that so many of those who thirst for spiritual wisdom are forced to think it out for themselves--always in vain. There is no such thing as a pure spirituality in the abstract. There are only separate lineages handed down traditionally from the past. If any proof were needed, Bergson, a first-class intellect, would provide it. His views on religion are a mixture of vague adumbrations and jumbled reminiscences which catch some of the general principles of spirituality but miss its concrete manifestations. Tradition furnished at least two worlds composed of objects of pure disinterested contemplation--the Buddhist world of dharmas and the Platonic ideas in their pagan, Christian, or Jewish form. Here Bergson would have had an opportunity to "go beyond intellectual analysis and to recapture by an act of intuitive sympathy the being and the existence in their original quality." But for various reasons he could not accept either of these traditions. Like Schopenhauer, he regarded art as one of the avenues to the truth, but, otherwise, his "intuition," this "ecstatic identification with the object," this "spiritual sympathy by which one places oneself within an object in order to coincide with what is unique in it, and consequently inexpressible, " is never explained as a disciplined faculty.
There is no clear statement about an epistemic cut that gives you a "duality" of information and matter. — apokrisis
neurotransmitters/neuroarchitecture/physiological------------------------------>Qualia/inner experience
It's like there is some HIDDEN theater of inner experience that is always in the equation but is never explained away. — schopenhauer1
He doesn't believe matter is real at all. He says that at several places in the Atlantic article - only experiences are real. — Wayfarer
The Peircean pansemiotic position is that they do. And that commonality of process is semiosis or the triadic sign relation. That involves the "dualism" we need to have anything actually happen - a separation (via the epistemic cut) of a causal realm of information and a causal realm of material dynamics. But semiosis also then accounts for the subsequent interaction of the two species of causality thus divided. Together they make a functional whole with a purpose. — apokrisis
Given that our starting point is simple experience, we need to realise that even our notion of "being a conscious being" is a social construct. It is a story we learn to tell to organise our experiences. We reify both the world, and our selves, then wonder why we have this explanatory gap. — apokrisis
And pansemiosis isn't about solving the hard problem by showing how "consciousness works". That would be to accept the goalposts of a dead philosophy. It is about reconceiving the metaphysical constructs which we would use to organise our experience so that we are no longer dazzled by either the "illusion" of the material world, or the aware mind. As we learn to think differently - existence understood as a common functional process, semiosis - then the old problems that obsessed us will slip away. — apokrisis
Matter and information apparently cause it. — apokrisis
It is fundamental and so not in fact caused by underlying processes (of matter and information I'm guessing). — apokrisis
It is not a picture, or a theatre, or an illusion. — apokrisis
Drops of experience. A mental stuff. — apokrisis
neurotransmitters/neuroarchitecture/physiological----------------->Qualia/inner experience
Now, how to bridge this gap? — schopenhauer1
Observe how he uses the behavior of the beetle to show how we could be inaccurately perceiving reality. If we aren't perceiving reality accurately, how do we know that there is actually a beetle there misinterpreting it's perceptions and mating with a bottle? There would be no sense in doing science if we don't have some consistent reality that we share in order to test each other's theories! - and he's a scientist? No, he's a hack.I guess a lot of you will have heard of Donald Hoffman. He's a Californian (natch!) professor of Cognitive Science, whose philosophy is called 'conscious realism'. — Wayfarer
been discussing in terms of the intractableness of experience. I think you would appreciate it. Can you watch the video and then see if what I am saying makes more sense? — schopenhauer1
I don't see a gap to bridge. Your equation is an expression of Aristotle's form (species-specific genetic predisposition to develop and exercise a particular set of functions) - matter (body) unity which is species substance (dual aspect monism). — Galuchat
I enjoyed the video in the manner it poses "new possibilities". It is fitting that Whitehead and Sheldrake are featured in the video, both of whom are heavily influenced by Bergson. — Rich
Hoffman's papers have all the hallmarks of an academic crank. — apokrisis
Neurons, brains, space … these are just symbols we use, they’re not real. It’s not that there’s a classical brain that does some quantum magic. It’s that there’s no brain! Quantum mechanics says that classical objects—including brains—don’t exist.
Sheldrake is a biologist who has developed an entirely new way to conceive of life forms. — Rich
I did not assent to any real label to it, — schopenhauer1
Your equation is an expression of Aristotle's form (species-specific genetic predisposition to develop and exercise a particular set of functions) - matter (body) unity which is species substance (dual aspect monism). — Galuchat
Pansemiosis was not devised by Peirce. — Galuchat
However, semantic information is processed by living beings on a psychological level, not by inanimate objects, and not on any other level. — Galuchat
So consciousness is not a monistic stuff, nor a dyad of world and image, but a triadically irreducible relation - a modelling relation in which sign-making results in a lived co-ordination between a "self" and its "world" — apokrisis
And yet quantum theory says the epistemic cut - the issue of observers and measurements - is fundamental in some causal fashion — apokrisis
because it is just obvious to theoretical biologists in particular that life and mind are semiotic processes — apokrisis
Maybe it's more an epistemic matter than an ontological one, i.e.more about the nature of knowledge than the nature of matter. Thorny question, I know. — Wayfarer
However it is somewhat harder to see how that applies to physics and chemistry - that's where pansemiosis looses me. — Wayfarer
Sure, the pictures in the head story makes at least one good point. There is a disconnect - an epistemic cut - where what we experience is not the thing-in-itself but our constructed impression. An appearance, a display, an illusion, a hidden theatre, a virtual world, etc, etc. But then that very idea just pushes the experiencer of the experience to yet another remove. — apokrisis
In simple terms, the map side of the equation has to become "self-experiencing". That is, the self is also what the mapping produces in dynamical or process fashion. A sense of self, a point of view, is what emerges as the other half of the same act of discrimination or sign mediation. — apokrisis
In simple terms, the map side of the equation has to become "self-experiencing". That is, the self is also what the mapping produces in dynamical or process fashion. A sense of self, a point of view, is what emerges as the other half of the same act of discrimination or sign mediation. — apokrisis
All that is felt is the world's invariant or recalcitrant being - in opposition to the freedom and creativity of the interpreting "self". All we are psychologically interested in is the limits the world can impose on actions, so we can know what limits to push. — apokrisis
Can you watch the video and then see if what I am saying makes more sense? — schopenhauer1
Then pansemiosis - or semiosis at the physico-chemical level of "dumb matter" - is external semiosis — apokrisis
A cell is its own wee universe — apokrisis
You have to explain what you mean by discrimination and sign mediation. Explain it, don't repeat the same language. Also, you use the term "emerges". That to me sounds like you just hid the Cartesian Theater in the "emerging" process. This "steam" of emerging ectoplasm (the illusion) comes out of the right amount of sign-signifier-referent- material-form process compilation. — schopenhauer1
Freedom/creativity is oddly a part of Whitehead's philosophy as well. You may have some common ground there. How is it that freedom against an invariant world looks like green, feels like this or that? AGAIN, wouldn't OTHER processes then be in the same boat? What is this extra "illusion" built into specifically this semiotic process? After all, it is a PAN-semiotic theory- indicating that essentially it is all the same bits of information being processed in the same manner. Yet this one gives rise to the very experience which is used to understand the other processes..hmm. — schopenhauer1
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