As the thread creator, I grant you the freedom to talk about whatever you'd like to talk about here. But for me, what is interesting is NOT to shoot down concepts like clay pigeons... I see no point in that. I am more interested in talking about reality, e.g. the objectivity and effectiveness of colours, as well as their beauty. You or Dennett can tell me till atheist kingdom come that I'm using improper concepts, it means nothing to me until you are able to provide better concepts, i.e. an alternative. Concepts are tools, not gods. Unless you can give me a better set of tools, I'm going to use the ones I have.I think this conversation is on the wrong thread, but briefly - there's a substantial difference between "something objective and operational about colours as we perceive them" and claiming there's such a thing as the subjective experience of 'blueness'. — Isaac
"Physical" does not really work here. The body and brain are biological. Life is already far more than just "physical". It's about information. Your body is made of information, and that's why it can die. — Olivier5
True, but to the materialist it is all essentially physical. If I say 'I am experiencing red' what do I mean by "I"? It seems to me that a good definition of the 'I' would help things a lot. It is not possible to reconstruct the I from physical systems, information, and experiences so what is it that is having these experiences?I don't think so. Life is much more than physics. — Olivier5
To the naïve, self-denying materialists, yes. Which is why they fail.True, but to the materialist it is all essentially physical. — EnPassant
I am reading Phenomenology of Perception by Merleau-Ponty and liking his perspective on this question. What I am temporarily left with is that our perception of our own perception (what he calls transcendental or reflexive perception) will always remain imperfect, partial, because when we reflect on our own perception, when we are theorizing our perception, we are not the one who is perceiving anymore, we take a step back from him. This creates a distance, an alienation with our "being at the world", our "being perceiving".If I say 'I am experiencing red' what do I mean by "I"? It seems to me that a good definition of the 'I' would help things a lot. It is not possible to reconstruct the I from physical systems, information, and experiences so what is it that is having these experiences?
"If the body is a physical context, then can't we extend this reasoning further and argue that the pain is not really in the brain either, but in the mind? — EnPassant
If we are locating things in the body can't it also be argued that neuroscience is locating/contextualizing experience in a physical context in the brain but the real conscious experience is outside the physical context altogether? — EnPassant
Indeed, can physical matter, no matter how complex, have experiences? — EnPassant
When facts fail, only emotion will prevail. — Philosophim
Emotions are not a bad thing. They are just another way to think, in fact. — Olivier5
What I am temporarily left with is that our perception of our own perception (what he calls transcendental or reflexive perception) will always remain imperfect, partial, because when we reflect on our own perception, when we are theorizing our perception, we are not the one who is perceiving anymore, we take a step back from him. — Olivier5
No, because the mind is the processing brain. — Philosophim
Further, the pain signal is transmitted to the nerve as well, so its not merely localized in the brain. — Philosophim
The articles I've linked and the arguments I've been given clearly show that consciousness happens within the physical context of the brain. — Philosophim
We know that there are certain parts of the brain that allow a person to grasp language. Animals and insects which lack these aspects of the brain are unable to communicate using language.
https://www.headway.org.uk/about-brain-injury/individuals/effects-of-brain-injury/communication-problems/language-impairment-aphasia/
Aphasia is the term for when a person has brain damage that limits their ability to communicate. — Philosophim
Rationality is a means to an end, though, and the end, the goal, is always emotional. Even the love of wisdom is a form of love.rationality needs to be ultimately controlling the wheel. — Philosophim
No, because the mind is the processing brain.
— Philosophim
That has yet to be established. — EnPassant
The question is; how closely does subjective experience resemble the objective reality that is the source of that experience? — EnPassant
But that does not mean the physical context is consciousness. — EnPassant
I asked Wayfarer, and he was unable to provide any evidence of consciousness existing apart from the brain. — Philosophim
Current mainstream opinion in psychology, neuroscience, and philosophy of mind holds that all aspects of human mind and consciousness are generated by physical processes occurring in brains. Views of this sort have dominated recent scholarly publication. The present volume, however, demonstrates empirically that this reductive materialism is not only incomplete but false. The authors systematically marshal evidence for a variety of psychological phenomena that are extremely difficult, and in some cases clearly impossible, to account for in conventional physicalist terms. Topics addressed include phenomena of extreme psychophysical influence, memory, psychological automatisms and secondary personality, near-death experiences and allied phenomena, genius-level creativity, and 'mystical' states of consciousness both spontaneous and drug-induced. The authors further show that these rogue phenomena are more readily accommodated by an alternative 'transmission' or 'filter' theory of mind/brain relations advanced over a century ago by a largely forgotten genius, F. W. H. Myers, and developed further by his friend and colleague William James. This theory, moreover, ratifies the commonsense conception of human beings as causally effective conscious agents, and is fully compatible with leading-edge physics and neuroscience. The book should command the attention of all open-minded persons concerned with the still-unsolved mysteries of the mind.
The citations I've linked have clearly shown that damage to the brain can affect the consciousness of people's ability to see color, their core personality, and ability to comprehend language. — Philosophim
No, it has clearly been established. — Philosophim
A meterstick is a notched tool that helps us divide physical space. Physical space does not have an underlying grid of meters that we can't see or exist in some other dimension. — Philosophim
https://flatrock.org.nz/topics/science/is_the_brain_really_necessary.htm1. Evidence of consciousness existing in a human being with a completely dead brain.
2. Consciousness existing apart from the localized part of your head. For example, having your body walk away while your consciousness stays right here.
3. Evidence of serious brain damage/chemical changes/proper functionality without the slightest change in personality or character. — Philosophim
The brain constructs a way of interpreting the world. Successful brains are able to interpret the world in such a way, that the actual contradict this interpretation as little as possible. Brains that aren't so good interpret reality in such a way that actual reality keeps contradicting their interpretation of reality. Its like a meter stick. — Philosophim
Of course but that is because the interface/brain has been damaged. If a camera is damaged you can not see through it but that does not mean the camera sees. The body is an interface between the mind and the world. If the interface is damaged then of course information cannot reach the mind. But the mind is also conscious independently of the body. For example, it can think and it can say 'I think therefore I am'. The mind's knowledge is not restricted to the five senses. — EnPassant
What has been established is that there is a physical analogue of the mind's interaction with the world via the brain. — EnPassant
If you replace the meter stick with geometry you'll get very close. Geo-metry means 'earth measuring'. — EnPassant
There is no evidence that the brain is conscious. What does exist is a materialistic dogma that insists there is no difference between the brain analogue and the mind. It is simply dogma. — EnPassant
Actually, the human mind is capable of far outstripping the requirements for 'successfully interpreting the world'. Any animal must do that if it is to survive. But h. sapiens has gone far beyond what can be rationalised solely in terms of the requirements for survival. You don't need to be able to weigh and measure the Universe just to get by. — Wayfarer
But I don't see this act of self knowledge as another self. It is just the self looking at itself. Self awareness. — EnPassant
The question that I will keep asking, and no one has offered anything is, "If the mind is not produced from the brain, what is it?" Without evidence, all your saying is, "It could be something else". — Philosophim
Provide some evidence of a mind existing apart from the brain — Philosophim
The Greeks invented geometry to measure the physical world. Their calculations are congruent with the actual world which is why they were able to create their famous architectural pieces. This means that geometry and deduction about the world is very similar, if not identical, to the objective world. So, to a large extent, we are conscious of what is actually there.Would you mind clarifying what you meant by this? — Philosophim
I can put the same question to you; what evidence is there that the brain is conscious? — EnPassant
So why can't someone offer an alternative theory? — EnPassant
Provide some evidence of a mind existing apart from the brain
— Philosophim
It doesn't work like that. — EnPassant
The Greeks invented geometry to measure the physical world. Their calculations are congruent with the actual world which is why they were able to create their famous architectural pieces. This means that geometry and deduction about the world is very similar, if not identical, to the objective world. So, to a large extent, we are conscious of what is actually there. — EnPassant
You absolutely may offer an alternative theory, but it must have evidence to compete with another theory that has evidence. — Philosophim
I'm very open to hylomorphism, but the Aristotelian 'hyle' is nothing like the modern conception of matter. — Wayfarer
Secondly, hylomorphic dualism still implies a duality, insofar as 'the rational soul' is the principle within the human which is in principle immortal. That is highly developed in various forms of Thomistic philosophy, and so is still largely accepted by many Catholics, however for very obvious reasons is completely incompatible with Dennett's Darwinian materialism. And it's still dualism! — Wayfarer
Hylemorphic dualism is the approach to the mind-body problem taken by Aquinas and the Thomist tradition more generally. (The label may have been coined by David Oderberg... — Edward Feser
So, Aristotle claims, “It’s clear that the soul is not separable from the body – or that certain parts of it, if it naturally has parts, are not separable from the body” (De Anima ii 1, 413a3–5).
...
His hylomorphism, then, embraces neither reductive materialism nor Platonic dualism. Instead, it seeks to steer a middle course between these alternatives by pointing out, implicitly, and rightly, that these are not exhaustive options. — Hylomorphic Soul-Body Relations: Materialism, Dualism, Sui Generis? - Aristotle’s Psychology - SEP
The philosopher Peter Hacker argues that the hard problem is misguided in that it asks how consciousness can emerge from matter, whereas in fact sentience emerges from the evolution of living organisms.
— Wikipedia
It just re-states the problem in other terms, it doesn't solve it. — Wayfarer
What I am saying is that the theory that brain = mind is a default position, a theory, not a proven fact. — EnPassant
Evidence can be data, physical facts or convincing argument. But in your world view - if I understand you correctly - only physical facts are admissible as evidence. — EnPassant
Strawson for example, seems to be asking for answers to the hard problem. Dennett keeps reaching for easier ones in response. — schopenhauer1
Strawson is responding to Dennett, not vice versa. — Kenosha Kid
But what is Dennett's response to the hard problem, if not to retreat to easier ones? — schopenhauer1
What is your point here? That anyone who researches anything to do with mind must answer one question and nothing else? That's not how research works. You cannot dismiss the work of, say, all physicists who do not have a Theory of Everything. — Kenosha Kid
The hard problem of consciousness is the problem of explaining why and how we have qualia[note 1] or phenomenal experiences. That is to say, why do we have personal, first-person experiences, often described as experiences that feel "like something." In comparison, we assume there are no such experiences for inanimate things like, for instance, a thermostat, toaster, computer or, theoretically, a sophisticated form of artificial intelligence.[2] The philosopher David Chalmers, who introduced the term "hard problem of consciousness,"[3] contrasts this with the "easy problems" of explaining the physical systems that give us and other animals the ability to discriminate, integrate information, report mental states, focus attention, and so forth.[4] Easy problems are (relatively) easy because all that is required for their solution is to specify a mechanism that can perform the function.[4] That is, even though we have yet to solve most of the easy problems (our understanding of the brain is still preliminary), these questions can probably eventually be understood by relying entirely on standard scientific methods.[4] Chalmers claims that even once we have solved such problems about the brain and experience, the hard problem will "persist even when the performance of all the relevant functions is explained".[4] — Wikipedia article on the Hard Problem of Conscioiusness
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