Both bitter and sweet, obviously...For a start, the coffee would undoubtedly signal one response to maybe' sweetness' in one part of the olfactory system, and another to maybe 'sourness' in the occipital system in response to say labelling (the label 'Bitter Coffee' for example). so which one would be 'the way it tasted to me''? — Isaac
Consciousness is just the tendency to be able to report on mental activity and it's caused by the neurons which produce language, movement and other awareness-mediated responses being stimulated by the neurons constituting the processing of sensory inputs to which that awareness relates.
You said "Reporting on mental activity isn't even a necessary condition for consciousness, let alone a sufficient one."
To make such a claim requires (as far as I can tell) an empirical data-set which includes people being conscious but without any reporting activity going on.
In order to acquire that data-set you'd need a measure of consciousness so that you can tell the people with no reporting activity are nonetheless conscious. I just wanted to get clear what that measure is you're using, otherwise I can't have any real understanding of what you're saying.
I don't really know what 'first-person subjective experience' is in this context.
You're conflating being conscious with reports of consciousness. They're not the same thing. Not even remotely — RogueAI
That claim is self-evident. — RogueAI
Lame — RogueAI
You're conflating being conscious with reports of consciousness. They're not the same thing. Not even remotely
:lol: I probably shouldnt either. — frank
There's no argument or evidence that is going to get me to think, 'Hmmm...maybe I don't have qualia after all..." — RogueAI
OK, let's start with this one. I said:
" You're conflating being conscious with reports of consciousness. They're not the same thing. Not even remotely"
Do you think reports of consciousness are the same thing as consciousness itself? That's absurd. What more needs to be said against that? Obviously, you can be conscious without reporting about it. Do you disagree with this?
is wrong, isn't it? There's more to consciousness than "just the tendency to be able to report on mental activity".Consciousness is just the tendency to be able to report on mental activity
Dennett has his own schematic for sensory processing in the brain. Are you familiar with it? What's your assessment of it? — frank
You're conflating being conscious with reports of consciousness. They're not the same thing. Not even remotely. — RogueAI
Are you ever conscious when you're not doing any reporting activity? — RogueAI
I think he means that a person must be able to report or have access to a report, not that they're only conscious when they are reporting. — frank
I said 'reports of mental activity', not 'reports of consciousness'.
I guess I'll take you both at your word that you're not prepared to discuss it seriously and leave it at that. I wish you would've saved us some time and not engaged. — fdrake
no matter what arguments they give or evidence they show, you're not going to conclude you're unconscious. That would be absurd. Do you agree? Or could you be persuaded into thinking you're a zombie? No, you couldn't! You know you're conscious. How can you not know that? This is why these discussions are frustrating. You know you're not a zombie. You know nothing anyone can say to you will convince you you're a zombie. — RogueAI
OK, you're conflating mental activity with reports of mental activity. The point is the same: consciousness/mental activity is different than reports of same. — RogueAI
That is logically equivalent to: you are not conscious when you are not doing reporting activities. Is that the claim you're making? — RogueAI
I guess I'll take you both at your word that you're not prepared to discuss it seriously and leave it at that. I wish you would've saved us some time and not engaged.
— fdrake
In what field other than the whole consciousness/qualia field is this...
no matter what arguments they give or evidence they show, you're not going to conclude you're unconscious. That would be absurd. Do you agree? Or could you be persuaded into thinking you're a zombie? No, you couldn't! You know you're conscious. How can you not know that? This is why these discussions are frustrating. You know you're not a zombie. You know nothing anyone can say to you will convince you you're a zombie.
— RogueAI
...considered an argument?
There's something I find so odd about all this. The counter-arguments to any questioning of what's going on is "but we know X, you can't deny it", and yet it's apparently the 'hard' problem? We both unquestionably know it and simultaneously find it the hardest problem in philosophy. Is God messing with us?
I don't see how. Are you suggesting that logging to working memory is not a 'mental activity'?
That is logically equivalent to: you are not conscious when you are not doing reporting activities. Is that the claim you're making?
— RogueAI
Yes. That's right. You have read my explaination of what I mean by 'reporting activities'?
Isaac, do you believe it's possible you're not really conscious right now, as you're reading this? Do you think you can be talked into the belief "I am not conscious right now"? If no, then I guess what I was saying about Searle makes sense, doesn't it? — RogueAI
Of course you have an explanation of reporting activities. Reporting activities can't possibly mean reporting activities. We're talking about "reporting activities". I'll pass on that rabbit hole. — RogueAI
Sorry everyone. 'Reporting' means logging to working memory. I should have made that clear.
On second thoughts, though, less sorry because I don't think I've written anything so stupid as to warrant an assumption that I'd mean something like "we're only conscious when we're talking". A little charity (or inquiry) might help, in addition to me being more clear about my terms. — Isaac
Versed would inhibit memory formation — frank
It just seems that you're defining consciousness as "when you're conscious." — frank
Versed? The generic is midazolam. — frank
...a Bayesian inference model (which is my preferred model). — Isaac
The reason why we feel like we're living some story is because we're constantly scenario-planning and to do that we have to integrate our current environment into the 'the story so far...' section of the film. — Isaac
The point is that there's no reason to think that 'identifying the object' is an event in any singular manner. — Isaac
Another fascinating (to me) aside, but I must stop getting sidetracked. Have a look at this paper, if you fancy, it's really interesting. — Isaac
I could almost get behind that but would have to add that consciousness may not be the kind of thing that has the kind of properties we're talking about. Consciousness seems to be a set of processes, story building... — Isaac
Kenosha Kid. It looks like fdrake has already said what I just answered to you - I should really read the whole thread before replying. — Isaac
Brains doing statistical analysis?
Isn't it rather that what neural networks learn using feedback, Bayesian models use feedback, and hence neural networks can be described in Bayesian terms?
That is, the architecture of the brain is connectionist rather than Bayesian.
I'm not disagreeing with you, but rather asking for clarification. — Banno
When speaking of objects and properties of awareness, I would expect a lower order to have something in common with other animals. My chihuahua can see what's before her, recognise other dogs, and let the poor bastards have it like the walking fiery female Latino cliche she is. Frogs are pretty adept at recognising flies and firing their insane tongues flyward. We're presumably not accusing all animals of compulsive narrative-building, although I agree that does describe humans well. — Kenosha Kid
My feeling is that there is some crossed wires about what we're talking about. For instance, I did not intend to suggest any particular structure for conscious or unconscious processes, nor that consciousness is some intended terminus for unconscious processes, but these appear to have come across as vital to my point for both yourself and fdrake, so mea culpa. — Kenosha Kid
As far as I can see atm there are unconscious processes, whatever their structure, that act on sensory input, and we have consciousness of the results of those actions, whatever the structure of consciousness. The unintended implications that e.g. there is some teleological submission process, or some terminus at consciousness, or some implied specific structure to consciousness, aren't really what my argument is about. It is simply that we are conscious of results of unconscious processing. — Kenosha Kid
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