There's an easy way to show that I'm wrong, to establish that it's not b.s.--how? Well, simply reference a study done under the rubric of physics that claims that "the brain 'maximizes entropy.'"
Re very non-specifically mentioning Penrose, for example, I'd guess that you're referring to The Emperor's New Mind. I read that, though quite some time ago, so I don't recall anything Penrose said in it about entropy, but at any rate that's a popular work that doesn't count as any sort of research, and it's especially not physics research. — Terrapin Station
the notion of "consciousness" of these papers seems to be different from the ability to have phenomenal experience and qualia, it seems to refer to high level consciousness — Babbeus
Thanks for at least attempting an answer here. First, it's better to link to the actual paper, rather than a news article about the paper.
the notion of "consciousness" of these papers seems to be different from the ability to have phenomenal experience and qualia, it seems to refer to high level consciousness — Babbeus
What would you say the difference is? Are you referring to reasoning with "high level consciousness" maybe? — Terrapin Station
Why would you believe that people are conscious while in a coma?
Anyway, I would agree that there's a difference between consciousness, when present, while asleep and while awake, although it seems to be more of a qualitative difference. — Terrapin Station
Why would you believe that people are conscious while in a coma? — Terrapin Station
In a universal recursion of the law of identity it would display four fold supersymmetry vanishing into indeterminacy. — wuliheron
You're joking, right? — Terrapin Station
You must send me some photos from your planet some day. — Wayfarer
OK forgive the sarcasm. But the thread is about a specific topic, namely, qualia, which I've already noted, is a clunky piece of philosophical jargon only found in debates conducted by a clique of academics. Nevertheless, it is a particular topic, with a particular scope, which doesn't include the LCH, Wheeler, super-symmetry, and all the rest. — Wayfarer
There are recognizable qualitative characters of the given, which may be repeated in different experiences, and are thus a sort of universals; I call these "qualia." But although such qualia are universals, in the sense of being recognized from one to another experience, they must be distinguished from the properties of objects. Confusion of these two is characteristic of many historical conceptions, as well as of current essence-theories. The quale is directly intuited, given, and is not the subject of any possible error because it is purely subjective.
Then I suppose I have to suggest insanity. — Terrapin Station
"But you will surely admit that there is a difference between
pain-behaviour accompanied by pain and pain-behaviour without any
pain?" — Admit it? What greater difference could there be? — "And yet
you again and again reach the conclusion that the sensation itself is a
nothing" — Not at all. It is not a something, but not a nothing either!
The conclusion was only that a nothing would serve just as well as a
something about which nothing could be said. We have only rejected
the grammar which tries to force itself on us here.
Wittgenstein, Philosophical Investigations, 304
You might say it is something that can only exist 'in a mind' or 'in a brain'. But if you take the primitives of mathematics and geometry - natural numbers and geometrical forms and theorems - these are able to be discovered by any mind, so they're not in the mind, in the sense of being the product of brain-states. They are only perceptible by a mind, but they are not created by the mind; any mind that perceives that A=A, will be perceiving the same thing. — Wayfarer
I am a monist.H. sapiens has evolved to the point where such things as numbers and forms can be recognized by them, but they're not the creators of those things, nor can they be feasibly described in terms of neurology, in my view. That is simply the wish to provide an account for mental activities in terms that are explicable by neuroscience. It all goes back to one of the fundamental materialist dogmas, that 'the brain secretes thought'. I think, however, it can be shown that thought (in the sense of ideas, as defined above) are of a different order to the kinds of things that neurology can be expected to explain. — Wayfarer
As you mention, qualia is not an object of experience. But that doesn't mean for Dennett (as also for Wittgenstein) that there is nothing there. It only means that qualia should not be reified as an object of experience. — AndrewM
The mind is, in my view, and I think his, irredeemably spooky, so a thorough-going objectivism can't admit its reality. — Wayfarer
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