Because brains are just lumps of biological matter with electrical and chemical activity. Just looking at it isn't going to tell us what any of it's doing any more than looking at a microprocessor is going to tell us what software is on it. — Isaac
The amount of resistance that some eliminative materialists put up to the rather obvious idea that they themselves exist as 'minds', and their their incapacity to understand the contradiction in their stance indicate that something more sinister than a mere blind spot is at play: eliminative materialism is a self-denying and life-demeaning ideology. What started as a blind spot has evolved into denial. — Olivier5
Look, everyone, get this: you can't explain consciousness, because consciousness is the source of any and all explanation. Get over it, and find something else to discuss. — Wayfarer
Just why and account of just what is materialism "self-denying and life-demeaning"? And then what's the alternative exactly? — Janus
Those are the two questions that critics of materialism never seem to be able to answer. — Janus
We can explain many aspects of consciousness, using our consciousnesses to examine and experiment. — Daemon
It seems very plausible that conscious experience is a development of unconscious reflexes, and we can explain the processes involved in those. So maybe the explanation of consciousness is, when you put all those processes together in a certain way, you get consciousness. — Daemon
The point is, here, 'consciousness' is not some abstract whatever about which specialists in white coats have privileged and exclusive access. It is also what we are, our fundamental nature. — Wayfarer
I think if you think that, then you don't understand the point of the hard question! — Wayfarer
The problem of consciousness, Chalmers argues, is really two problems: the easy problems and the hard problem. The easy problems may include how sensory systems work, how such data is processed in the brain, how that data influences behaviour or verbal reports, the neural basis of thought and emotion, and so on. The hard problem is the problem of why and how are those processes accompanied by experience? — Wikipedia
That would be interesting. How would we characterize consciousness in that case? — Marchesk
Errr... ummm... ahhh... maybe something like what I've been doing? — creativesoul
Here's a thought, something to kick around.
What if Dennett is right that qualia are incoherent, but wrong about reductionism? — Banno
Ok. Explain it then. What's it like to see red? — creativesoul
You cannot explain it because there is no it... — creativesoul
Too bad the paper hinges upon it. — creativesoul
Plain and simple. — creativesoul
There is a conscious visual experience with red in it. — Marchesk
The paper hinges on the possibility that bats have kinds of conscious experiences we don't. If not bats, then almost certainly dolphins. — Marchesk
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