The pairing of neurons and content seems intuitive enough to me — Mark Nyquist
Yes, words sometimes fail. I'm trying to think of analogies that fit the relation. I could say my hand holds or grasps a physical object but how do I say my neurons 'fill in the blank' a non-physical?[/url]
I've suggested "implements." Or perhaps even instantiates. Five apples instantiate an instance of the abstract number 5. And as I said, emergentists would say that consciousness is an emergent property of the brain. I don't know what the reverse-direction verb is. The brain emergentizes consciousness.
— Mark Nyquist
Would the word 'pair' or 'paired with' be more neutral? — Mark Nyquist
The important thing is to start thinking about the relation. Neurons have the capability to manipulate non-physicals — Mark Nyquist
and non-physicals cannot exist without being 'fill in the blank' by neurons. — Mark Nyquist
I would think of a hydrogen atom as fundamental and the DNA molecule as emergent. Anything following the DNA molecule would also be emergent such as brains and the ability to process information (using the neuron contained non-physical definition). — Mark Nyquist
I did get looking at neuron tables for various species and that's interesting if you want to correlate number of total neurons to capabilities. Interesting, a honey bee has 960,000 neurons and can do things like find food and get back to it's hive without direct visual input. — Mark Nyquist
So without using the word contained, let's just show it this way,
[neurons,(a non-physical)] as an irreducible unit — Mark Nyquist
and do something useful with it - model time perception:
[neurons,(the past)]; physically exists in the present
[neurons,(the present)]; physically exists in the present
[neurons,(the future)]; physically exists in the present — Mark Nyquist
This model shows how time perception is always in the physical present but lets us perceive a past, present and future. — Mark Nyquist
As far as the time perception model goes I could restate it in sentence form.
The past is an idea held by present neurons.
The present is an idea held by present neurons.
The future is an idea held by present neurons. — Mark Nyquist
My use of the semi colon was to add clarification. And in common terms a normal average Joe would understand it and there wouldn't be an issue. — Mark Nyquist
So I'm getting you don't like models that use anything non-physical. — Mark Nyquist
And do you have a model or definition of information in any form you wish? — Mark Nyquist
I like the word instantiated but it's not a joe schmoe word. p/quote]
It's a computer programming buzzword. You create a specific instance out of an abstract thing. But I use it more generally, as in saying for example that five apples instantiate the number 5. The number 5 is a mathematical abstraction, and 5 apples is an instantiation of the concept in the physical world.
So mind or non-physical is an abstraction, and neurons instantiate it in the physical world. That's my chain of thinking, for what it's worth.
— Mark Nyquist
The subject of strong AI is possibly an exact analogy in containing non-physicals.
The form would be [computational electronics,(an instantiated non-physical)],
compared with [neurons, (an instantiated non-physical)]. — Mark Nyquist
I will try to write neurons instead of neuron; I meant neuron plural and you read neuron singular. It could be I have my own grammar on some of this and need to clean it up a bit. — Mark Nyquist
So if something seems off keep after me. — Mark Nyquist
A guess, for humans, performing simple tasks, could involve tens of millions of neurons.
Something about Claude Shannon you may not know is he did not like the father of information (theory) title. — Mark Nyquist
His work was with signals, transmission rates, error rates and high level math for sure but the result was to implement on physical systems. Looking it up would be better than from my memory. — Mark Nyquist
So my version of information is basically the mind stores and processes information and everything external is just physical matter. Communication works by coding (or encoding) and decoding matter in various forms — Mark Nyquist
Also brains and the ability to process non physicals would have been emergent at some point in history and evolved from simple to complex. — Mark Nyquist
I actually did draw the Venn diagram you described on a cheap graphics program. The basic question I would ask is have some of our neurons evolved the ability to instantiate non-physicals. I would answer yes in the extreme but others might say not at all-a physical impossibility. — Mark Nyquist
Sorry I don't think this link works. Something about posting an image to the web that I'm missing and have never needed to do it before and it takes time to figure out. — Mark Nyquist
I did some Venn diagrams on a drawing program but haven't worked out how to post it here. — Mark Nyquist
If one is a physicalist, then mind is ultimately explainable in terms of physics. I'm a pile of atoms and I have plenty of qualia and a rich internal life, so atoms must be capable of doing that. If one denies that, then one is forced to accept some kind of dualism. I think both alternatives are equally untenable. — fishfry
neurons, mostly cerebral cortex, possibly some more, do have the capability to instantiate non-physicals. — Mark Nyquist
Then of course there is the argument that physicalism is itself a form of dualism. — Joshs
Physicalism doesn't go far enough in exploring what non-physicals are or in what form they exist. I could be wrong, maybe you know some references. I'm always looking and I don't find much on it. — Mark Nyquist
The part I'd most like to discuss is treating information in this two part form which is the only way I can see to give information a physical existence. And the problem with treating information as a singular, non physical form would be that it's physically non existent, an impossibility. — Mark Nyquist
Then of course there is the argument that physicalism is itself a form of dualism.
— Joshs
How so? I thought physicalism is the belief that everything, including mind and all non-physical phenomena such as qualia, can be explained via physical phenomena and without recourse to any non-physical mechanisms. — fishfry
The point of the list was to show a universal principal or mechanism at work. — Mark Nyquist
...information defined as a neuron(s) instantiated non-physical is a viable theory — Mark Nyquist
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