Im usually sceptical to theories thike that, — Anirudh Sharma
The sensation of "mind" is a series of chemical and energetic processes that result in self awareness — whollyrolling
They don't exist as ethereal or non-material or whatever other fantasy could be thrown at them. — whollyrolling
A Reductive Physicalist view upon it would not call it phenomena. — SethRy
You are right in saying, that if the brain dies, it is the the communication between the cells that has ended,the cells are still alive by themselves.Which implies that maybe your consciousness is merely an illusion created by a mass of cells,and nothing significant. — Anirudh Sharma
The sensation of "mind" is a series of chemical and energetic processes that result in self awareness — whollyrolling
the "mind" is an evolutionary adaptation whereby the body tells itself that it exists. — whollyrolling
Reductionists can say that relations and processes are parts that have to be accounted for. — Terrapin Station
Why did evolution select for it if it offers zero survival advantage? — leo
Nevertheless, immediate existence is naturally appropriated into understanding through creative reasoning, and it is only by superimposing rational concepts upon existence that it takes on a logical aspect. But that logical aspect is confined to the realm of the ideal, it has no concrete reality — Merkwurdichliebe
Neuroscience has been trying to work out the intricate mechanism of thinking, but we haven't quite grasped it, not to say that it won't be explained in the next few decades. — Anirudh Sharma
so we divide it into smaller and smaller pieces, in the hope that we can understand them individually, and somehow assemble all the little understandings until we can understand the big thing we started with. This works where the functionality that concerns us is intrinsic to the parts, but not where the functionality depends on the interconnections between the parts, — Pattern-chaser
Just one of many possibilities: evolution selected for something else, and your "it" just happened to be connected to the thing that's being selected-for by evolution. This is very common. Ask an applied evolutionist. — Pattern-chaser
It doesn't exclude the interconnections between the parts if it includes relations and processes. — Terrapin Station
So in this case the mind would be connected to the motions of electrons and molecules, which leads to panpsychism. — leo
But if it includes relations and processes, it can't be reductionism. :chin: Dividing the Big Thing into many Little Things - necessarily destroying and losing all of the interconnections between those Little Things - is central to the technique of reductionism. — Pattern-chaser
How do you come to that conclusion? — Pattern-chaser
I mean, who would say something like that? — Terrapin Station
By all accounts I'm a reductive physicalist. I call it phenomena. — Terrapin Station
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.