How does the physical matter of neurons instantiate the non-physical content of future perception? — Mww
if time perception is (or is not) observable evidence that our brains actually use instantiated non-physicals? — Mark Nyquist
I've looked epiphenomenalism and I don't like it. — Mark Nyquist
It's a form of dualism were the physical brain supports an immaterial mind that has no output capabilities. — Mark Nyquist
Dualism might have some general solution to time perception in the form of mind but I don't see any specific mechanism. — Mark Nyquist
What I'd meant to say is this:subjective time = cyclical changes in homeostasis:
• subjective "past" (baseline) = long-term / autobiographical memory
• subjective "present" (distress) = short-term narrative / working memory
• subjective "future" (prospects for baseline vs distress) = segments of autobiographical memory selected by working memory for improvising alternative narratives (i.e. hypotheticals, forecasts)
Thing is, though, we do not perceive time, but only perceive one occurrence in relation to another, and that relation is what we call “time”. — Mww
In a stimulus-free situation we still experience time. This may be explained by internal changes in the brain...... — god must be atheist
Unless we can find some physics stuff that equivocally ties time to some not purely theoretical, but real phenomenon, we are at liberty to say also that time does not exist, — god must be atheist
In general, if you think your brain has mental content, you need a philosophy that accounts for this and it needs to recognize content has both input and output capabilities. — Mark Nyquist
The brain/mind can be subdivided into 3 parts:
1. Memory [the past]
2. Executive functions [the present]
3. Imagination [the future] — TheMadFool
Can I point out there might be something more universal here with mental capabilities than all the things we give names to. — Mark Nyquist
Can I point out there might be something more universal here with mental capabilities than all the things we give names to — Mark Nyquist
Really? "Not much" in the way of studies on REM sleep, visualization (readiness activation), post traumatic stress disorder, suicidal / sexual / religious ideating, schizophrenic / psychoactive hallucinating, vision processing, affective expectation / prediction, etc? :chin:Sadly, there's not much neuroscience done on imagination — TheMadFool
I don't think you guys are still talking about how we perceive time. — god must be atheist
Really? "Not much" in the way of studies on REM sleep, visualization (readiness activation), post traumatic stress disorder, suicidal / sexual / religious ideating, schizophrenic / psychoactive hallucinating, vision processing, affective expectation / prediction, etc? :chin: — 180 Proof
Would changing the words to [neurons, (mental content)] be more understandable? — Mark Nyquist
It's just normally we wouldn't note the neurons being present, but to do rigorous philosophy, we should. — Mark Nyquist
our mental process does have full input/output capabilities and this model accounts for those capabilities. — Mark Nyquist
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