It means that the "states of the world" cannot be explained in purely physical terms. — tom
Everything obeys the laws of physics. — tom
They are both abstractions and they are both real. But there is a dependency and a direction of dependency. Mind depends on matter, just as universities depend on buildings. But mind is neither reducible to matter nor something immaterial in addition to matter.
That's my account of the logical landscape here. As you note, that leaves open the question of what mind and matter is. — Andrew M
These two statements seem to contradict one another, or to be, at the very least, inconsistent with one another. If states of the world cannot be explained in purely physical terms then what warrant do you have for saying they obey the laws of physics? — John
Yes but on this account "to be itself" is not to be anything at all; and so seems somewhat oxymoronic. — John
Depends, there's a whole school of thought which uses the "noumenon" as an excuse to say we don't reallu know anything, as if our experiences not being the thing-in-itself meant we don't really know the thing. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I would object in the strongest possible terms. It's substance dualism or "magical woo (in a wider sense, I take this to mean: "presence, force, state or action outside the world" )," where our experiences are considered of a seperate realm and having nothing to do with what exists.
The distinction means representation or ideas cannot form existence. No state can be dependent on experience because that amounts to reducing an object to its representation.
No matter how accurate a representation (e.g. "Willow is a poster on ThePhilosophyForum"), it's not enough to define existence. Experiences cannot give existence. No matter what is know, it takes more than that idea to form existence.
You seem to want to accuse me of making up new terms which have no bearing on arguments of the past. I am not. My point always been focused on the errors of substance dualism. You appear to saying I'm using terms differently, so the positions, such as substance dualism or idealism, cannot be mistaken. As if because what I'm saying isn't really "materialist," it doesn't show that positions opposed to materialism are incoherent.
To this I say you are not paying attention to what I have argued. My initial was a statement directly opposing substance dualism: minds are states of the world, not something of another realm. You objected this was only an "obvious truism." How can this be so when a major, quite possibly the major if we go by Western philosophical canon, metaphysical postion on mind and body explicitly denies minds are part of the world?
Yes, this is true, but only in relation to phenomenal existence; phenomenal existence is never exhausted. But it makes no sense to say this of an emptily purported noumenal 'existence', because we have no contentful idea at all of any such thing. — John
The red cup I see is not my representation of the red cup. It's it own state. It exists. — TheWillowOfDarkness
By your definition, a mindless facial-recognition-equipped robot would have the "experience" of "seeing" Alice. — tom
"What would you think it would happen to the pehonomenal experience, to the self and/or to the consciousness when there is no "awareness of consciousness"? Would it stop its existence?"— Babbeus
Yes. It's not some single object that moves around. Consciousness, sense of self, etc. only obtain when particular brain states obtain. That it only obtains sometimes is no different than saying that something like the need to urinate only obtains sometimes. It obtains when your body is in a particular state, and not otherwise. You don't need to posit that you ALWAYS have a need to urinate, just sometimes it's hidden in the background, do you?
Or to take it out of the realm of the body, it would be like needing to say that an arroyo or wash is always flowing with water, just sometimes the water is hidden in some other metaphysical state or something like that. — Terrapin Station
need to urinate is a way of feeling of a conscious being in the same way as being bald or having brain/heart is a way of being a living organism, it is a property, not a substance — Babbeus
Why do we have to think that consciousness behaves like a property — Babbeus
"need to urinate is a way of feeling of a conscious being in the same way as being bald or having brain/heart is a way of being a living organism, it is a property, not a substance" — Babbeus
Figuring that you'd probably read it as a reference to a feeling rather than a requirement to empty one's bladder because it's full, so that the body would automatically evacuate one's urine whether the feeling were present or not, — Terrapin Station
Or to take it out of the realm of the body, it would be like needing to say that an arroyo or wash is always flowing with water, just sometimes the water is hidden in some other metaphysical state or something like that. — Terrapin Station
Over the last 200 years, the understanding of the laws of physics has reached a point where we know certain principles that all future laws will respect: unitarity, conservation laws, computational universality, Lorentz invariance ...
When quantum mechanics and general relativity are unified, do you really think that will render the statement "everything obeys the laws of physics" false? — tom
Consciousness is very much a mystery, but pretending to solve it by declaring that matter possesses some unyet discovered physics that only manifests itself in the human brain, seems strikingly unscientific. — Tom
You should be saying that you had a subjective experience of seeing Alice--that's what seeing Alice is, after all, but of course you're also saying that you trust your subjective experience to be an accurate perception of something objective--Alice crossing the street. Alice crossing the street isn't identical to having the experience of seeing Alice cross the street of course. — Terrapin Station
But mind can also act on or have causal influences over matter, in fact, it does this all the time. For instance, in the case of brain injury, the mind is able to re-route its activities so as to repurpose parts of the brain to fulfil its needs. The subjects of 'mind-body medicine', psycho-somatic illnesses, the placebo effect, and neuroplasticity are evidence for such abilities. Whereas if mind was purely a consequence or result of cellular interactions, these couldn't be accounted for, as all of the causation could only act from the physical to the mental. — Wayfarer
Humans are 'rational animals', i.e. able to grasp through abstract thought, language, intuition and imagination, things which animals cannot. In my view, machines are not sentient, being simply assemblies of switches. They can emulate some activities of intelligence, but they are not beings. If we were to create a truly sentient machine, then we would have to endow it with rights, as it would no longer be a machine, but a being... — Wayfarer
Conversely, from the point of view of perception, insofar as no matter can appear at all except it be to a mind, we have matter dependent on mind. — John
I think it is a mistake to think of the mental as a kind of ethereal parallel to the physical. Mental terms and physical terms operate in very different ways. — AndrewM
The analogy/question was whether we need to say that an arroyo or wash is always flowing with water, just sometimes the water is hidden (however it is). I wasn't asking you about other ways that you could look at water. — Terrapin Station
The question is about the arroyo/wash as such, not about the water as such, by the way. But okay, if we don't need to say that the arroyo/wash is in the same state when it seems dry, but that the flow is just hidden or whatever, why do we need to say that in the case of consciousness?We don't feel the need to say that the water is flowing and hidden when there is no water, — Babbeus
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