Still, it's pretty sloppy for Dennet to use the very psychological term "intuition" — Olivier5
I can see a contradiction. — Olivier5
A bird is a bird. Tautology. Nothing is being said in fact. — TheMadFool
Popper's 'World 3' 'contains the products of thought. This includes abstract objects such as scientific theories, stories, myths, tools, social institutions, and works of art.[2] World 3 is not to be conceived as a Platonic realm, because it is created by humans.') — Wayfarer
If it should become established that humans, ... don’t necessarily appeal to intuitions,... physically speaking, from proof of empirical brain mechanisms in which intuition is irrelevant, — Mww
...it [is] sloppy for anyone to use intuition as a psychological term; intuition remains philosophical — Mww
It is now known that neuroplasticity enables the brain to regain from a lot of damage by re-purposing. In those cases, the mind changes the brain - it's top-down causation. If physicalism were the case, this ought not to happen. — Wayfarer
There have been experiments where subjects have shown changes in brain matter simply by conducting thought experiments, such as imagining they're learning to play the piano (with no actual piano). So in those cases, and there are many, the mind shapes the brain. They are an example of top-down causation, which physicalism can't accomodate — Wayfarer
Ever heard of Wilder Penfield? — Wayfarer
What about, for instance, meaning. You can't get from 'the laws which govern molecules and energy' (i.e. physics, organic chemistry, etc) to 'the laws which govern semantics'. — Wayfarer
Ask it 'how are you?' If it can answer, it's not a zombie.
— Wayfarer
How about we ask it to enclose a space? If it cannot, it is a zombie. — Mww
You say "mind" as if it is something apart from the brain. That doesn't make any sense based on cellular biology. What evidence do you have that there is something separate from the brain? — Philosophim
Rational thinking and agency are formed by several neurons being simulated and communicating with one another. A light electric shock on the surface of the brain is not accessing the entire complexity of the brain. His conclusion makes sense with the knowledge of the 50's, but does not make sense today. — Philosophim
"To justify his [Eccles] hypotheses, it was necessary for Eccles to assume that contemporary physics could not detect, measure, or predict the supposed mental forces. — Philosophim
We know that there are certain parts of the brain that allow a person to grasp language. — Philosophim
Because, if it were a purely physical process, then intentionality would have no impact on it. In those experiments where a conscious mental activity causes changes to the brain structure, then the changes are brought about by a conscous act, not by a physical cause. If I tell you something that has physical consequences, that is different to my hitting you or giving you a physical substance. Intentionality is not a physical thing. — Wayfarer
It (Self-repair) is never observed in non-living matter. — Wayfarer
Go back to this post about the 'neural binding problem'. — Wayfarer
You're assuming that consciousness is not a physical process, therefore consciousness cannot be a physical process — Philosophim
Your brain takes those inputs and molds them into something it can interpret. — Philosophim
Life is a serious of complex chemical reactions that seeks to sustain its chemical reactions. ...Anything which seeks to sustain its own reaction by seeking out a replacement for what it is burned, is called life. But its all the same matter underneath — Philosophim
How placebos work is still not quite understood. — Philosophim
Even Chalmers is not claiming that consciousness is not separate from the physical. He understands that consciousness rises out of physical processes. — Philosophim
Chalmers characterizes his view as "naturalistic dualism": naturalistic because he believes mental states supervenes "naturally" on physical systems (such as brains); dualist because he believes mental states are ontologically distinct from and not reducible to physical systems. — Wikipedia
It is merely noting that it [maintaining unity of perception] is difficult to do so, and is in its infancy. — Philosophim
I do not understand your viewpoint. — Philosophim
The concept of Biosemiotics requires making a distinction between two categories, the material or physical world and the symbolic or semantic world. The problem is that there is no obvious way to connect the two categories. This is a classical philosophical problem on which there is no consensus even today. Biosemiotics recognizes that the philosophical matter-mind problem extends downward to the pattern recognition and control processes of the simplest living organisms where it can more easily be addressed as a scientific problem. In fact, how material structures serve as signals, instructions, and controls is inseparable from the problem of the origin and evolution of life. Biosemiotics was established as a necessary complement to the physical-chemical reductionist approach to life that cannot make this crucial categorical distinction necessary for describing semantic information. Matter as described by physics and chemistry has no intrinsic function or semantics. By contrast, biosemiotics recognizes that life begins with function and semantics.
Biosemiotics recognizes this matter-symbol problem at all levels of life from natural languages down to the DNA. Cartesian dualism was one classical attempt to address this problem, but while this ontological dualism makes a clear distinction between mind and matter, it consigns the relation between them to metaphysical obscurity. Largely because of our knowledge of the physical details of genetic control, symbol manipulation, and brain function these two categories today appear only as an epistemological necessity, but a necessity that still needs a coherent explanation. Even in the most detailed physical description of matter there is no hint of any function or meaning.
The problem also poses an apparent paradox: All signs, symbols, and codes, all languages including formal mathematics are embodied as material physical structures and therefore must obey all the inexorable laws of physics. At the same time, the symbol vehicles like the bases in DNA, voltages representing bits in a computer, the text on this page, and the neuron firings in the brain do not appear to be limited by, or clearly related to, the very laws they must obey. Even the mathematical symbols that express these inexorable physical laws seem to be entirely free of these same laws. — Howard Pattee
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
↪Andrew M
"So if that philosophical distinction is rejected, both in whole and in part, then what are we left with? I think ordinary language serves us just fine here."
Perhaps the point, the whole point of this world is to be a vehicle for experience. — Punshhh
Hence the mistake of pan-psychism is one of extension: it's not all matter that is infused with some amount of 'consciousness'; but all life. Biology should be taken seriously by philosophers.Matter as described by physics and chemistry has no intrinsic function or semantics. By contrast, biosemiotics recognizes that life begins with function and semantics. — Howard Pattee
But there just is no fact of the matter whether a word or picture is pointed at one thing or another. No physical bolt of energy flows from pointer to pointee(s). So the whole social game is one of pretence.
— bongo fury
Unless you're a biosemiotician? :chin: — bongo fury
Today, no biologist would dream of supposing that it was quite all right to appeal to some innocent concept of lan vital. — QQ
it's not all matter that is infused with some amount of 'consciousness'; but all life. — Olivier5
And you're simply assuming the opposite. And, what is 'physical', anyway? What does it mean? — Wayfarer
My point, exactly. Can't be fit into the bottom-up scenario. — Wayfarer
Have you ever heard Karl Popper's expresssion 'the promissory notes of materialism'? This refers to the tendency to say in just such cases, 'hey, science hasn't figured it out yet, but we will! It's just a matter of time!' — Wayfarer
— Wikipedia (For Chalmers) — Wayfarer
A nonreductive theory of consciousness will consist in a number of psychophysical principles, principles connecting the properties of physical processes to the properties of experience. We can think of these principles as encapsulating the way in which experience arises from the physical. — Philosophim
— Howard Pattee — Wayfarer
In other words, because semantic and semiotic laws can't be derived from physical laws. — Wayfarer
At some point, several models in, the ventral stream reaches a region which models objects and it will feed forward to areas associated with the object 'car'. Meanwhile, the dorsal stream has been merrily progressing away on the question of how to interact with this hidden state, without the blindest idea what it is. — Isaac
Point 1 the recognition that it's a car is part of your conscious experience of the hidden state. — Isaac
There can be no quale of a car because modelling it as 'car' is part of the response, quite some way in, in fact. — Isaac
The dorsal signal doesn't even know it's a car before it's deciding what to do with it — Isaac
Point 2 the models which determine the suppression of forward acting neural signals are themselves informed and updated by signals from other areas of the brain. So no more than a few steps in and whatever hidden states we might like to think started the whole 'car' cascade of signals have been utterly swamped with signals unrelated to that event trying to push them toward the most expected model. — Isaac
Either way, the private, accessible to introspection, but inaccessible to third party, qualia of 'red' is an absolute non-starter neurologically. — Isaac
We always 'experience' events post hoc, never in real time. The experience is a constructed story told later (sometimes much later). — Isaac
Yes, seeing someone do something is different to doing it yourself. However yours and my view is not 'a view from nowhere', and neither is Alice's experience radically private or subjective. As human beings, we can use the same language to describe Alice's activity as she can. — Andrew M
The really hard problem of consciousness is the problem of experience. When we think and perceive, there is a whir of information-processing, but there is also a subjective aspect. As Nagel (1974) has put it, there is something it is like to be a conscious organism. This subjective aspect is experience. When we see, for example, we experience visual sensations: the felt quality of redness, the experience of dark and light, the quality of depth in a visual field. Other experiences go along with perception in different modalities: the sound of a clarinet, the smell of mothballs. Then there are bodily sensations, from pains to orgasms; mental images that are conjured up internally; the felt quality of emotion, and the experience of a stream of conscious thought. What unites all of these states is that there is something it is like to be in them. All of them are states of experience. — David Chalmers
I'm taking what we know, which is that the physical brain produces consciousness. — Philosophim
There is no longer any definite conception of "body". Rather, 'the material world' is whatever we discover it to be, with whatever properties it must be assumed to have for the purposes of explanatory theory. Any intelligible theory that offers genuine explanations and that can be assimilated to the core notions of physics becomes part of the theory of the material world, part of our account of body. If we have such a theory in some domain, we seek to assimilate it to the core notions of physics, perhaps modifying these notions as we carry out this enterprise. — Noam Chomsky
On the one hand, we may define "the physical" as whatever is currently explained by our best physical theories, e.g., quantum mechanics, general relativity. Though many would find this definition unsatisfactory, some would accept that we have at least a general understanding of the physical based on these theories, and can use them to assess what is physical and what is not. And therein lies the rub, as a worked-out explanation of mentality currently lies outside the scope of such theories.
On the other hand, if we say that some future, "ideal" physics is what is meant, then the claim is rather empty, for we have no idea of what this means. The "ideal" physics may even come to define what we think of as mental as part of the physical world. In effect, physicalism by this second account becomes the circular claim that all phenomena are explicable in terms of physics because physics properly defined is whatever explains all phenomena. — Wikipedia, Hempel's Dilemma
They're [biosemioticianas] are just saying the current conceptual model of physics is not adequate to describe the physical process of life. — Philosophim
When you alter the brain, you alter the mind. We're still figuring out to the science what exactly that entails. — Philosophim
'm talking about the brain processing and parts of that being consciousness. Consciousness works within the brain. It is not above it, or below it. Its like molecules of water reacting to the wind. Waves form. Molecules are part of the water. — Philosophim
I have asked you a few times now, "If the mind is not physical, what is it?" I have already said what physical is, but I'll say it again. Matter and energy. Einstein confirmed that they are the same thing, just expressed in different forms. — Philosophim
If consciousness is not the brains inner workings, what is it? Give me facts, evidence, a viable theory. If you can't, saying, "Well I just doubt it," is not a rational argument. — Philosophim
The term "Idealism" came into vogue roughly during the time of Kant (though it was used earlier by others, such as Leibniz) to label one of two trends that had emerged in reaction to Cartesian philosophy. Descartes had argued that there were two basic yet separate substances in the universe: Extension (the material world of things in space) and Thought (the world of mind and ideas).
Subsequently opposing camps took one or the other substance as their metaphysical foundation, treating it as the primary substance while reducing the remaining substance to derivative status. Materialists argued that only matter was ultimately real, so that thought and consciousness derived from physical entities (chemistry, brain states, etc.). — Dan Lusthaus
Cartesian anxiety referring to the notion that, since René Descartes posited his influential form of body-mind dualism, Western civilization has suffered from a longing for ontological certainty, or feeling that scientific methods, and especially the study of the world as a thing separate from ourselves, should be able to lead us to a firm and unchanging knowledge of ourselves and the world around us. The term is named after Descartes because of his well-known emphasis on "mind" as different from "body", "self" as different from "other".
1. Provide an evidence-based model that shows consciousness as necessarily existing apart from the brain. One that does not, and cannot, reduce down to the physical reality of the brain. — Philosophim
"...Any intelligible theory that offers genuine explanations and that can be assimilated to the core notions of physics becomes part of the theory of the material world, part of our account of body. If we have such a theory in some domain, we seek to assimilate it to the core notions of physics, perhaps modifying these notions as we carry out this enterprise."
[~Noam Chomsky)
Physicalism, such as the kind you naturally assume, is the default philosophy of the culture we live in; 'presumptive materialism', — Wayfarer
Interesting point. The dominant trend does not appear to consider itself as an ideology (despite that is exactly what it is), somehow it regards itself as incontrovertible and self evident. It is very dogmatic, bordering on what I consider religious belief. Of course most advocates for the physicalist ideology do not seem willing to go all the way, rather holding onto metaphysical ideas without properly assimilating them into the materialist framework. When, with genuine philosophical vigor, one honestly examines physicalism for what it is, it definitely loses its luster. — Merkwurdichliebe
But isnt Chomskys point that physicalism, due to its history of subsuming whatever we came to accept as real (in a bodily sense), has lost its original meaning? It's the few flat earthers among us that feel the need to get dogmatic about anything. — frank
don't think he was saying that it has lost its original meaning, — Merkwurdichliebe
It assimilates or eliminates though it's own methodology, there is no dialectical compromise, everything is to be made physical, first and last, and anything that we can reasonably fit in between is fair game. — Merkwurdichliebe
due to its [physicalism's] history of subsuming whatever we came to accept as real (in a bodily sense), has lost its original meaning? — frank
It's not the Red Army, its just a useful category. — frank
He has said that, though, that Physicalism 1.0 died with the acceptance of electromagnetism. — frank
You are saying, that he said, in so many words: physicalism, in proving itself, ate itself alive. But I don't see materialist backing down, what gives? — Merkwurdichliebe
It's not the Red Army, its just a useful category.
— frank
Lol. It is from the materialists I've dealt with. But it is a useful category, I give you that — Merkwurdichliebe
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