Attention. Awareness. Consciousness.
All too vague to be of much use.
— creativesoul
Harsh but true! No one of them guarantees either of the other two. — bongo fury
Put forth a duration. — creativesoul
Talking of language...
Some people (i.e. Searle) associate consciousness, in particular, with a linguistic capability having an irreducibly semantic component. Or at least, they associate lack of (or failure to demonstrate) consciousness with a reduction of semantics to syntax. (As in the Chinese Room.)
This particular association (i.e. consciousness <---> genuine semantics) seems a useful one, to me. What about you — bongo fury
You asked "Put forth a duration."The relations or the river? — creativesoul
Talking of language...
Some people (i.e. Searle) associate consciousness, in particular, with a linguistic capability having an irreducibly semantic component. Or at least, they associate lack of (or failure to demonstrate) consciousness with a reduction of semantics to syntax. (As in the Chinese Room.)
This particular association (i.e. consciousness <---> genuine semantics) seems a useful one, to me. What about you? — bongo fury
Remember that time is simply changes/motion. — Terrapin Station
If you are conscious you will know what consciousness is and if you're not you won't — khaled
Just think about what "awareness" and "attention" mean without thinking about consciousness. How can you be aware of something without being conscious? — khaled
Other concepts like this include "line" or "number". You can't define them to someone who doesn't already know them. All you're doing when defining them is assigning an already present meaning to a word. — khaled
'Knowing what consciousness is' could mean a number of things. I think one could say that experiencing is going on. How much information this adds I don't know, but I think the word 'experiencing' is a bit more phenomenological. Consciousness reads like a thing noun, an object. But I agree with you. What is experiencing without the contents of experiencing? is it the same as other consciousnesses, just that the contents are different? Or is every consciousness, to put in metaphorically, a different tone, even if the contents are the same?Since i am conscious right now i should know what consciousness is .. but i don't and nobody really knows. Also, If one is conscious that doesn't mean he will know necessarily that he is conscious, it requires self-consciousness for one to "see" himself. — Basko
I don't think this is an issue of knowledge but rather one of definition. I think that is a good synonym. That's how I would want to define it. That or 'experiencing.' IOW I don't think one can dissect and analyze consciousness and decide that it is constituted by awareness, but rather that it's a possible definition.Then, does consciousness = awareness ? — Basko
That's nonsense. How do you account for the difference between past and future with a definition of time like that? — Metaphysician Undercover
It's all about meaning. — creativesoul
This endeavor also requires thinking about thought/belief. — creativesoul
Things were meaningful to us long before we became aware of it. — creativesoul
So, I'm unsure what "genuine semantics" is supposed to be referring to. — creativesoul
However, unless I'm mistaken he [Searle] is a speech act theorist, or was. They work from thought/belief having propositional content, — creativesoul
Earlier, you mentioned what we can do that chimps and babies and robots cannot. Point to both an actual symbol and it's referent. — creativesoul
...taking proper account of obvious prima facie meaningful and attentive thought/belief of language-less creatures. — creativesoul
I don't think this is an issue of knowledge but rather one of definition — Coben
Yes, but it's not the same kind of knowledge. It's an agreement with others on how we will use a word. Like if we are discussing 'what is consciousness`?' and we decide to use it for experiencing, this is a knowledge of at least that facett of 'things' that there is experiencing, and our justificaiton might include knowledge about why this is a good choice. But to answer the question of what consciousness is ty something like 'a side effect of having a soul' or 'a byproduct of a complex neural net' is a whole other kind of knowledge. The first is about how best to separate out terms, the latter is actual knowledge of the make up of something. The first is phenomenogical, the second is scientific or ontological. I would almost call the former the sign of a skill, more than the sign of knowledge. Now that's also a bit artificial, but it involves,I think vastly less claims to knowledge. I am assuming that you too have noticed that you experience things, and I 'point' at that and say 'let's agree to call that consciousness'. The second goes beyond agreement, a formality and beyond phenomenology. With the latter we are saying what things are really like and made of.Definition require some sort of knowledge don't you think ? — Basko
Things were meaningful to us long before we became aware of it.
— creativesoul
I guess that nicely expresses denial of the association I proposed? — bongo fury
Well, my fascination is primarily with plain old "assertoric" speech acts, which may or may not coincide with production of declarative sentence tokens (utterances or inscriptions) but more generally amount to (as I see it) pointing of words (or pictures) at objects. As though we drew an arrow from one to the other. Which we generally don't, so we are talking here about a social skill which is in the practice of a mutually agreed pretence, and is of the highest order of complexity. — bongo fury
So, I'm unsure what "genuine semantics" is supposed to be referring to.
— creativesoul
One that doesn't amount, on closer inspection, to just another layer of syntax. Suppose we endow a thermostat with a sub-circuit containing a coloured light-bulb. This is genuine semantics for us, as users, but for the device itself, only more syntax. — bongo fury
Yes. I'm denying the characterization of consciousness as 'genuine semantics'. — creativesoul
Meaning is not equivalent to semantics. — creativesoul
Semantics involves thinking about (pre-existing)meaning. Prior to thinking about X, X must first somehow exist. — creativesoul
Consciousness is not existentially dependent upon such high order social skills. — creativesoul
Pre and/or non-linguistic meaningful thought/belief is not existentially dependent upon language, whereas both syntax and semantics are. — creativesoul
I put it to you that thought, belief, and meaning are part and parcel of all conscious experience. — creativesoul
Is language part and parcel of all cases of consciousness? I don't think so. — creativesoul
I am willing to hear an argument for consciousness being existentially dependent upon language use, and would agree as long as that claim/argument was properly quantified. Some consciousness is... Not all. — creativesoul
A blind person cannot see but can still comprehend what colors are - EM waves — Basko
If you understand what a quantity is, then you can create abstract symbols to represent - abstractly - those quantities, there you go ! You have what we can call numbers. — Basko
Semantics involves thinking about (pre-existing)meaning. Prior to thinking about X, X must first somehow exist.
— creativesoul
Prior to the chicken, the egg? — bongo fury
Semantics involves thinking about (pre-existing)meaning. Prior to thinking about X, X must first somehow exist.
— creativesoul
Prior to the chicken, the egg?
— bongo fury
:brow:
You'll have to do better than this. — creativesoul
Meaning is not equivalent to semantics.
— creativesoul
You've heard of the "theory of mind theory of mind"? I give you, here, a "theory of meaning theory of meaning". — bongo fury
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