As one who was accused before of presenting a 'charicature of physicalism', I have to take issue with this statement. First, I think it is a reference to David Deutsch's so called 'constructor theorem', which is not actually a predictive scientific theory at all, but sleight-of-hand pop metaphysics based on questionable interpretations of quantum physics. — Wayfarer
Secondly, the conundrums that have been thrown up by physics about the nature of matter have given rise to all manner of metaphysical speculation, such as those proposed by David Deutsch and also by Max Tegmark, comprising the idea of infinitely many parallel universes. And these extravagent speculations are based on nothing more than the difficulties of explaining what is seen in experiments involving sub-atomic particles (so called). There's nothing in any of that which comes close to addressing the physical issues involved in the origination of Life OS (otherwise known as DNA). — Wayfarer
So how it can now be declared that 'the mysteries of life' have been 'solved', when the purported 'simplest components in the Universe' turn out to require the inference of infinite parallel dimensions? As if this has all been solved, as if we know what there is to know. Remember well Lord Kelvin's famous prediction, that 'the details have all been worked out, now it's just a matter of decimal places'. — Wayfarer
The "intentional stance" is identified with the objects of experience - the actual pain, smell, belief, etc. The exhibited behavior enables us to form the relevant language concepts for those objects. But things are not always as they appear - a person might be in pain but concealing it, or a person might not be in pain but faking it. — Andrew M
'Particles shifted around' is not in question, but 'shifted by what' is. The materialist must say that they are only shifted around by physical forces or at any rate by some factor which is ultimately attributable to same; according to which 'mind over matter' can never occur. — Wayfarer
Right, so then we couldn't say that the intentional stance is the same thing as what exhibits behaviorally. — Terrapin Station
No. We are interested in what the person is really experiencing, not what they appear to be experiencing. — Andrew M
What you take to be sufficient to believe or not believe a claim can't be anything other than a personal opinion. — Terrapin Station
Be honest, you haven't read a single Constructor Theory paper. — Tom
t's a reference to the theory of evolution, maybe you've heard of it? — Tom
a theory at the correct level of emergence was discovered, which not only explains life, bit explains it rather simply as a phenomenon of replicators.
For the non-eliminativists about mind, mind is an abstraction over matter. — AndrewM
'An object' is just what it sounds like - ping-pong balls, computers, cars, trees, planets, stars, to pick a random sample. Objects are just that - things that exist in the world. — Wayfarer
Sure, say that you're experiencing the walls melting. Well, that's both what you appear to be experiencing and what you're really experiencing, since there's no difference.
However, what's really going on that caused that experience might be that you took some LSD. But that you took some LSD and it's having the effect of making you see the walls melt isn't what you're experiencing when you experience the walls melting. (Earlier, of course, you surely experienced taking some LSD (well, unless it was given to you surreptitiously).) — Terrapin Station
But is mind reducible to matter? — Wayfarer
A foreigner visiting Oxford or Cambridge for the first time is shown a number of colleges, libraries, playing fields, museums, scientific departments and administrative offices. He then asks ‘But where is the University? I have seen where the members of the Colleges live, where the Registrar works, where the scientists experiment and the rest. But I have not yet seen the University in which reside and work the members of your University.’ It has then to be explained to him that the University is not another collateral institution, some ulterior counterpart to the colleges, laboratories and offices which he has seen. The University is just the way in which all that he has already seen is organized. When they are seen and when their co-ordination is understood, the University has been seen. His mistake lay in his innocent assumption that it was correct to speak of Christ Church, the Bodleian Library, the Ashmolean Museum and the University, to speak, that is, as if ‘the University’ stood for an extra member of the class of which these other units are members. He was mistakenly allocating the University to the same category as that to which the other institutions belong. — Gilbert Ryle
OK, but you're using the word "experience" in a subjective sense here. In its objective sense ("practical contact with and observation of facts and events"), you're experiencing an hallucination. — Andrew M
you're in the realm of subjectivity, not objectivity. — Terrapin Station
No. Mind and matter belong to different categories — AndrewM
The term "category-mistake" was introduced by Gilbert Ryle in his book The Concept of Mind to remove what he argued to be a confusion over the nature of mind born from Cartesian metaphysics. Ryle alleged that it was a mistake to treat the mind as an object made of an immaterial substance because predications of substance are not meaningful for a collection of dispositions and capacities.
The phrase is introduced in the first chapter. The first example is of a visitor to Oxford (as given in your quote)... .
Ryle goes on to argue that the Cartesian dualism of mind and body rests on a category-mistake. In the philosophy of the mind, Ryle's category mistake argument can be used to support eliminative materialism. By using the argument, one can attack the existence of a separate, distinct mind. The argument concludes that minds are not conscious, but a collective predicate for a set of observable behaviour and unobservable dispositions.
Because Charmers is acting like our experience are reduced that particular idea of "experience." The premise of the "hard problem" relies on this reductionism. Materialism is strawmanned with the accusation they claim exhaustive account account of subjects. — TheWillowOfDarkness"
No. Mind and matter belong to different categories and to suppose that mind reduces to matter is a category mistake. Mind is not matter. Instead, mind is an abstraction over matter. — Andrew M
I'm fine with their being different "levels" of consciousness. I just don't see a good reason to buy that one level features the subject with no awareness of consciousness. — Terrapin Station
But it's never the whole story. Any "object" I might experience is also more than my experience. A ping pong ball, a computer, a car, a tree, a planet, a star, a human arm or a memory of what someone had for breakfast are all subjects. — TheWillowOfDarkness
You're much more inclined to condescension than debate. — Wayfarer
I don't think that any such theory has been established. — Wayfarer
But is mind reducible to matter? — Wayfarer
"The argument concludes that minds are not conscious, but a collective predicate for a set of observable behaviour and unobservable dispositions."
That underlined sentence is the basis for Dennett's 'intentional stance' argument (and as noted, Dennett was a student of Ryle's.) — Wayfarer
Now as for your description of mind as 'an abstraction over matter' - what do you propose that means? — Wayfarer
Usually when a materialist says that matter exists or is real, she means that matter exists or is real independently of all and any thoughts about it, that is, that matter is not a mere abstraction. If mind exists or is real independently of all and any thoughts about it, then it must be something more than a mere abstraction, no? — John
But rejecting dualism doesn't mean resigning oneself to the machine half of the bargain — AndrewM
minds are not conscious, human beings are. — AndrewM
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