I had an example of heat transfer but really all it says is that mental events are just a series of physical events inside you. Your attributing a disconnect there that really isn't. Or you made A=B when its still A under all the assumptions. — Frank Barroso
how experience can emerge de novo from non-experience. — schopenhauer1
In my head your question only goes two ways.
Either all experience is physical
or
Everything is 'experience' and our reality is simply God's experience. — Frank Barroso
Materialism requires that we jump across an epistemic chasm, unwarranted. — darthbarracuda
The more I study philosophy of mind and phenomenology the more I'm amazed materialism is as popular as it is. It's pretty obvious my mind, my experiences, my intentional, propositional, qualitative states, are not identical nor reducible to a neurological tissue state as it exists as a neurological tissue state. — darthbarracuda
It is far more likely, given what we know from the self-evident and obvious, that the mind and the body are separate, or, as I see it, that the mind has definitive priority over the body in the sense that the world is intrinsically "minded" rather than intrinsically an unconscious lump of "material". — darthbarracuda
Hmm, I'm not sure why God has to be in the picture here. Are you equating mental events with God? How about rephrase it "Everything is 'experience' and our reality is simply experience."? — schopenhauer1
Materialism requires that we jump across an epistemic chasm, unwarranted. — darthbarracuda
Claim: Emergence only works from physical to physical events. Emergence is incoherent from physical to mental events. Thoughts? — schopenhauer1
I personally do believe it be materialism. We didn't know quarks were a thing a few years ago. And a few years from now we might discover more about the reasoning behind mental events such as they are actually constituted in reality through physical events. — Frank Barroso
If you think of mental and physical as belonging to the same ontological category, then there is nothing strange about the idea of the relationship of emergence holding between them. If you frame these two concepts as belonging to radically different categories, then of course the idea of emergence will be incoherent. — SophistiCat
First let's establish what emergence is from a metaphysical point of view. It's not as simple as saying that a phenomenon suddenly starts happening that never happened before. That still entails something coming from nothing and seems quite incoherent. So how do you conceptualize emergence?Emergence — schopenhauer1
Indeed, but it only asks you to do so temporarily until science has caught up to how to explain it. — Frank Barroso
You really only have to accept abstract functional states can also have phenomenal identity. — JupiterJess
Interesting thread! — Agustino
First let's establish what emergence is from a metaphysical point of view. It's not as simple as saying that a phenomenon suddenly starts happening that never happened before. That still entails something coming from nothing and seems quite incoherent. So how do you conceptualize emergence?
But I would probably agree with you that I cannot see the mental emerging from the physical (whatever that is supposed to mean). — Agustino
In philosophy, systems theory, science, and art, emergence is a phenomenon whereby larger entities arise through interactions among smaller or simpler entities such that the larger entities exhibit properties the smaller/simpler entities do not exhibit. — schopenhauer1
The problem I immediately see with this, when applied to philosophy of mind, is that we see emergentism in physical-to-physical systems. It's quite a different thing to say there is emergentism in physical-to-mental systems due to them being two different kinds of things. Which is why the materialist has to hold that the mental, just kidding!, isn't actually really mental but simply a physical state. — darthbarracuda
NOT see the static of particles, lets call this reality B.
Our whole lives we walk around in reality B. It's the level that we see it, the level that our brains can reliably create experience out from.
Is it wrong to say that reality A isn't real? — Frank Barroso
You would have to explain this in order for me to talk more definitively on this. — schopenhauer1
If you think of mental and physical as belonging to the same ontological category, then there is nothing strange about the idea of the relationship of emergence holding between them. If you frame these two concepts as belonging to radically different categories, then of course the idea of emergence will be incoherent. — SophistiCat
So how is this relating to the problem of emergence of mental events? — schopenhauer1
The analogy simply expresses that big things may come from smaller things. If you don't see even the possibility of a larger event such as a thought coming from smaller events, It's fair to assume you don't believe in atoms, or evolution, or stars. — Frank Barroso
Sure, I have a longer post typed out, but I think this can be understood in fewer words.
How would your namesake express the identity of consciousness? It it identical to a particular manifestation of the Will? — JupiterJess
Correct, so I guess the claim is they are two radically different categories then, and that the former theory of ontological sameness is itself incorrect based on its radical difference that cannot be explained by heaping on yet more physical theories. — schopenhauer1
See response to JupiterJess for emergentism. — schopenhauer1
The problem with this is that it's not at all clear what emergence is. Apparently, you say that non-existent properties will arise from existent ones. I can see how this would happen in certain cases. For example, I can see how the uniform distribution of molecules in a closed container will occur over time out of their initially random motion. So I can see how uniform distribution emerges out of the conditions of random motion in a closed container. But I cannot see how something entirely new - like imagine a physical force - emerges from absolutely nothing. For example, we know that gravity is very weak in quantum mechanics so it's not even detectable. But it still exists - if it didn't exist, I couldn't see how it was possible for it to emerge - and become noticeable - on the macro scale.In philosophy, systems theory, science, and art, emergence is a phenomenon whereby larger entities arise through interactions among smaller or simpler entities such that the larger entities exhibit properties the smaller/simpler entities do not exhibit.
Emergence is central in theories of integrative levels and of complex systems. — schopenhauer1
And like I said, just stating the claim is not informative or productive. "Mental," "physical" - these are just words that don't stand in relation to anything in particular, until you unpack them and show how you use them in ways to which we all could relate. It's quite possible that, given your meaning, the claim is true, and even banal and self-evident. And then there would be no argument, because those who think that mental could emerge from physical obviously mean something else. — SophistiCat
Tell me more about the nature of this "mental". — apokrisis
In other words, nothing really emerges unless it is simply constructed out of pre-existent things. The notion of emergence in any other sense implies that something comes out of nothing, which is impossible. — Agustino
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