The "parts" and "wholes" are comparisons of views, or a comparison of measuring scales, like comparing millimeters to light-years and nano-seconds to centuries. Each of these measurements "make up" the larger scales, but those smaller measurements just aren't useful on such large scales, and vice versa. So I would reject your use of "fundamental" and instead say that there are certain scales that are useful, depending on what purpose we are trying to achieve. — Harry Hindu
I think you misunderstood. Brains are not molecular-sized objects. Neurons are. And neurons are made up of atoms, which are made up of quarks. A brain is a part of an organism. Organisms are part of a social group or species, etc. Between which layer does consciousness lie, and how do you explain the causal relationship between the upper and lower (underpinning) layers? — Harry Hindu
You said before that I am my brain, but now you say that I am merely one part of my brain. — Harry Hindu
You seem to be equating a mind as something different from the physical brain. It is not. No mind can exist without a brain. I was pointing out that you noted whether we examine something from a distance or close, its functionally the same thing. Thus brain and mind are the same.Unfortunately, I don't see the contradiction. — Harry Hindu
Are choices "physical"? — Harry Hindu
So how does the first person proposition "I Dennet feel no consciousness" translate into the bold generality that "Nobody can feel consciousness." ??? — Olivier5
...the very idea of conscious experience itself is, like I said elsewhere, basic and fundamental. — Mr Bee
As is so often the case with philosophical jargon, it is easier to give examples than to give a definition of the term. Look at a glass of milk at sunset; the way it looks to you--the particular, personal, subjective visual quality of the glass of milk is the quale of your visual experience at the moment. The way the milk tastes to you then is another, gustatory quale, and how it sounds to you as you swallow is an auditory quale; These various "properties of conscious experience" are prime examples of qualia. Nothing, it seems, could you know more intimately than your own qualia...
I'd like to think that most everyone here would agree that conscious experience existed in it's entirety prior to our ever having coined the terms. An idea of something that already existed in it's entirety prior to our awareness of it is not rightly called "basic" or "fundamental". — creativesoul
There is more than one idea of conscious experience, and some of them are mutually exclusive and/or negations of one another; they are incommensurate with one another. They cannot all be basic and fundamental. — creativesoul
I'd like to think that most everyone here would agree that conscious experience existed in it's entirety prior to our ever having coined the terms. An idea of something that already existed in it's entirety prior to our awareness of it is not rightly called "basic" or "fundamental".
— creativesoul
Why is that?... — Mr Bee
Are all ideas/notions/conceptions of conscious experience basic and fundamental? — creativesoul
Given the many different ways one can define "experience", no. — Mr Bee
The question is whether the things our ideas are referring to can't be irreducible if they pre-exist humanity — Mr Bee
All things that exist in their entirety prior to our awareness of them are irreducible in terms of their basic elemental constituency — creativesoul
"On the face of it, the study of human consciousness involves phenomena that seem to occupy something rather like another dimension: the private, subjective, ‘first-person’ dimension. Everybody agrees that this is where we start."
The phrase beginning ‘on the face of it...‘ is Daniel Dennett’s own statement of where the argument starts. So you’re saying you don’t agree with Dennett in that respect? — Wayfarer
I think there is only one world (or dimension) but thinking of it in Cartesian terms, whether as 'first-person' or as 'third-person', is a mistake. The latter can be characterized as a 'view from nowhere', which I think is untenable. — Andrew M
But, nevertheless, there is a valid distinction to be made between the first- and third-person perspective. In other words, me seeing Alice kick the ball is completely different to me kicking it. Of course, to you, then both me and Alice are third parties, but the point remains. — Wayfarer
I have defended the hypothesis that there is a straightforward, conservative extension of objective science that handsomely covers the ground [of subjective experience]. — Daniel Dennett
This leads to an infinite regress. You never end up getting at any fundamental understanding if it is always a step lower than your present understanding. Fundamental understanding would be fleeting and unattainable. This leaves us with simply understanding, and some understanding is only useful in a particular domain. Any distinction between fundamental and non-fundamental understanding is incoherent.We may be in agreement here, and differ only in semantics. Atomic theory is fundamental to the understanding of molecules. Quantum theory is fundamental to the study of atoms. What is fundamental is what is the directly prior set of rules and causality that arise to the current focus of study. What is fundamental to consciousness is the functioning of the brain. — Philosophim
What exactly do you mean by "arises from the brain"?I hope the prior explanation answers this as well. Consciousness arises from the brain. No where else. You do not need to be around other people to be conscious. The causal explanation is also the same as you mentioned. Atoms cause molecules by their interaction. Molecules cause neuronal cells by their interaction. Neuronal cells cause a brain. And certain parts of the brain cause consciousness. This is straight forward science. — Philosophim
Sight and sound are part of consciousness, not part of brains. Neurons are part of brains. Brains and their neurons are what are seen, so what would it mean for the sight of a brain to be in the brain?Yes, so prior I was speaking in general terms. As in, mind/brain. The brain is composed of several different functioning sections that serve the body in different way. Sight is located in a different area then sound for example. Higher level thought is in the Neo Cortex, while the most primitive of bodily functions are handled by the brain stem. That is why a person can still breath even though they are in a coma.
Technically, consciousness would be the same. Certain areas of the brain create consciousness, while others do not. — Philosophim
Then I need an explanation of what you mean by "the brain causes the mind", or "the mind arises from the brain". Some causal events create new entities that are not the same as what caused them. Your mother and father caused you, but you are a separate entity from them both. This is what I was talking about the distinction between temporal causation and spatial causation.You seem to be equating a mind as something different from the physical brain. It is not. No mind can exist without a brain. I was pointing out that you noted whether we examine something from a distance or close, its functionally the same thing. Thus brain and mind are the same. — Philosophim
Then what does it mean to be "physical"? If everything were "physical" then "physical" seems like a useless term.Absolutely. Everything is physical Harry. What is there that is not physical? Do you think that when an ant makes a choice, it is not physical? When a cell chooses to eat another that there is some extra universal essence at play? A dog has a consciousness right? Mice, lizards, etc. We are made up of cells, which are molecules, and atoms. So is every living creature. Its all matter and energy.
Finally, your consciousness is physical. You can prove it right now. Stand up and walk somewhere. Look back. Is your consciousness where you just were? Or is it where you are now? It resides up there with you. You have to feed it and take care of it, or it grows weak, becomes confused, and dies. Make sure to use it well before its expiration date. — Philosophim
This doesn't mean experienced reality is only subjective — Wayfarer
the objective world has only an apparent reality as part of this cognitive process (as per Kant). — Wayfarer
Or is he, as his philosophy suggests, simply another noisy chimp? — Wayfarer
Dennett's philosophy contains an innate contradiction — Wayfarer
This leads to an infinite regress. You never end up getting at any fundamental understanding if it is always a step lower than your present understanding. Fundamental understanding would be fleeting and unattainable. This leaves us with simply understanding, and some understanding is only useful in a particular domain. Any distinction between fundamental and non-fundamental understanding is incoherent. — Harry Hindu
What exactly do you mean by "arises from the brain"?
What exactly do you mean by "caused by their interaction?
Is it a temporal or spatial change that you are talking about? In other words, does the change occur over time, or over space? — Harry Hindu
Brains and their neurons are what are seen, so what would it mean for the sight of a brain to be in the brain? — Harry Hindu
Then what does it mean to be "physical"? If everything were "physical" then "physical" seems like a useless term. — Harry Hindu
How do p-zombies define "intuition", by the way? — Olivier5
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