Antony Nickles
I have been assuming throughout that consciousness is a state, not an object — Clarendon
T Clark
So if your point all along has been the precise path, I definitely agree. If your point is that it's impossible for me to take the same path twice, I disagree, even though it is astronomically unlikely to happen. — Patterner
Questioner
Surely if brain structure were all identical, then our consciousness must be all identical too. — Corvus
Clarendon
Corvus
But no two humans brains on the entire planet are identical. No two brains have the identical shape in the pattern of gyri and sulci (ridges and furrows). Not two brains have the same circuitry, the vast patterning of connections between neurons. that develops in response to how brains are stimulated. — Questioner
Questioner
It is something we don't have definite answer. Without actual detailed examination, investigation and comparison, we can never tell if they are exactly the same or not. If they are all different, then how are they different, and how the difference of the structure of the content of brains affect consciousness. We need detailed conclusive answer to claim that they are different. — Corvus
Corvus
Well, we do, and the most basic knowledge of brain development will provide you with an answer. — Questioner
Patterner
Certainly not. Getting back to the universe, only Laplace's demon could do that, and only if all aspects of reality are strictly deterministic.The question is, could I have predicted it in advance? — T Clark
Questioner
OK, let us suppose that they are different. How does the content of brain difference affect on what aspect of human consciousness? — Corvus
T Clark
Intelligences vastly greater than ours might be able to predict various emergent things, like liquidity. — Patterner
Patterner
Corvus
How we analyze incoming information, a thought, a memory, an instinct, represents a fixed neural pathway. We all have different neural pathways. They can be changed even into adulthood because of neuroplasticity. A brain develops (connections made between neurons) according to the stimuli it receives. Since one person's experiences are unique to the person, so too is the way the brain develops. — Questioner
Questioner
Here we are talking about consciousness not the contents in consciousness — Corvus
Corvus
How do you separate the two? — Questioner
Patterner
Questioner
The content of consciousness is not consciousness itself, is it? The content is the input data of your experience via perception, sensation and imagination etc. Consciousness itself is your mind which is the theater of all the images, sounds and thought are appearing in. — Corvus
T Clark
Consciousness can't be. Those who say it emerges from sufficient complexity of whatever types of physical processes cannot explain it in the ways we can explain biological processes, and don't have a guess as to how it might work. — Patterner
frank
Still, biology does emerge from physics and chemistry. Even if we couldn't start from the beginning and predict it, working backwards, we can see that every biological process can be explained by the principles of chemistry and physics. — Patterner
Corvus
I understand it differently. Consciousness is the function of the structures of the brain. Consciousness consists of the "content" produced.
Otherwise, it would be like saying something else than the wind flaps the flag in the breeze. — Questioner
AmadeusD
I understand it differently. — Questioner
Questioner
Corvus
neurons are firing — Questioner
Patterner
There are many biological processes. Respiration, metabolism, reproduction, circulation, protein synthesis, the immune system, glycolysis, the Krebs Cycle, etc. They are physical processes that are understood down to the atomic level. Things like ions passing through membranes. We know why elements like carbon and oxygen are so incredibly important, and what they do.Sure we can explain it. We call it biology, neurology, and psychology. — T Clark
T Clark
We cannot look at any aspect of consciousness and see how it emerges from any lower level process or properties. — Patterner
Patterner
In Life as No One Knows It: The Physics of Life's Emergence, Sara Imari Walker says much the same.According to Robert Rosen, you'll end up without a definition for life if you try to reduce it to chemistry. He says you need final cause to understand what we mean by life. He proposes getting Kantian about it.
Would it therefore qualify as strong emergence? Debatable? — frank
I agree with them. Life is a bunch of chemical processes, all working together to keep the unit working. The fact that the result is a unified structure seems to be emergent, though I am clearly not going to be able to figure out if it's strong or weak emergence. But is there an extra something that is Life?At the 2012 meeting of the American Chemical Society, in a session on the origin of life, Andrew Ellington proposed a radical theory: “Life does not exist.” Andy is a chemistry professor from the University of Texas at Austin, and this was the first slide of his presentation on RNA chemistry and the origin of life. His idea left me incredibly perplexed.
I was perplexed because I probably should have agreed with Andy. But I don’t. When I attended Andy’s lecture I was pretty sure I was alive, as I am now. You’re probably confident you are alive too. Haven’t you spent your whole life, well, living? Being alive matters. It’s very different from not being alive.
Yet despite our natural confidence in our own existence, some scientists challenge it and argue that life may be just an illusion or epiphenomenon, explainable by known physics and chemistry. Physicist and public intellectual Sean Carroll is one such individual. In a crowded evening lecture on the Arizona State University campus where I work, I was aghast in my seat as Sean stated how the equations of particle physics are sufficient to explain the existence of all matter—including you and me. Jack Szostak, a Nobel Prize winner, holds a similar view, arguing that the focus on defining life is holding us back from understanding life’s origin. According to Jack, the closer you look at any of the “defining” properties of life, the more the boundary between life and nonlife blurs.
Patterner
Damasio doesn't not even suggest an explanation. I really like his writing. I like the detail, the poetic feel, and the way he builds all along.I know enough to say this isn’t true, but not enough to get a better explanation. You wrote that you’ve read “Feeling and Knowing” by Antonio Damasio. He also wrote “ The Feeling of What Happens.” Those tell the story better than I could. If you read those and aren’t convinced, there’s not much more I could say. — T Clark
Damasio just lists ones physical thing or event after another, and eventually says now there is consciousness.There is no analogous further question in the explanation of genes, or of life, or of learning. If someone says “I can see that you have explained how DNA stores and transmits hereditary information from one generation to the next, but you have not explained how it is a gene”, then they are making a conceptual mistake. All it means to be a gene is to be an entity that performs the relevant storage and transmission function. But if someone says “I can see that you have explained how information is discriminated, integrated, and reported, but you have not explained how it is experienced”, they are not making a conceptual mistake. This is a nontrivial further question. — Chalmers
Questioner
What is actually happening when firing? — Corvus
How do they differ when seeing an apple and when seeing a cup? — Corvus
When imagining them and remembering them? — Corvus
frank
But is there an extra something that is Life? — Patterner
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