Why can't you see a mind when you look at a brain, like you can see walking when looking at legs? — Harry Hindu
When I look at your brain I see a grey, squishy mass. Is your mind a grey, squishy mass? Are you saying the entirety of your experience of the world is just various quiverings of a grey squishy mass?You can, just not with your naked eye. Brain scans etc with instruments of science. — DingoJones
"Technological scientific means" is a meaningless statement. — Xtrix
Why should aspects of human behavior be "non-physical"? That's hardly an obvious point, and in fact is what's being discussed here. — Xtrix
So "empirical observation of ourselves" isn't science? Then what is science? — Xtrix
So here again we have another idea you simply take for granted, assuming by simply declaring something "scientific" we will all nod our heads in agreement, and that will settle the question of what's physical. — Xtrix
Sure. Anytime you attempt to integrate your observations into an consistent explanation of reality, you're doing science.When I observe that I have mind or two legs or two arms am I doing science?? That makes me a scientist? — dimosthenis9
So "empirical observation of ourselves" isn't science? Then what is science?
— Xtrix
When I observe that I have mind or two legs or two arms am I doing science?? That makes me a scientist? — dimosthenis9
You question every single word and we don't have even a base to start discussing. — dimosthenis9
Now you put into question the definition of "science" — dimosthenis9
There are common definitions of what some things mean(like science, physical etc), even if some of them aren't perfect and of course some might change at the future(as the 17th century example you gave) still they are more than enough as people to understand each other and discuss about it. — dimosthenis9
I really see no use in playing such definition game. — dimosthenis9
Sorry but I can't consider that science. — dimosthenis9
If the "physical" is "what science observes and identifies," then I ask: "What is science?" This shouldn't be surprising. What it is is uncomfortable -- at least for you. — Xtrix
Yet you don't seem to have much appreciation for the long history of the philosophy of science. — Xtrix
When I look at your brain I see a grey, squishy mass. Is your mind a grey, squishy mass? Are you saying the entirety of your experience of the world is just various quiverings of a grey squishy mass? — Harry Hindu
How do programmers write programs that they can't see? — Harry Hindu
you can see if you have the right software. You can't do this with your mind. — Harry Hindu
Science, among others, is what provide us proofs as to categorize what we observe to "matter". — dimosthenis9
We can say it’s anything made up of particles, energy fluctuations, substance. Then nature consists of matter and forces. This is the common view. — Xtrix
Best to at least review these ideas before continuing. Otherwise you’re simply talking nonsense. — Xtrix
So exactly which of these common view criteria mind meets as to consider it as "matter"?? — dimosthenis9
Yeah whatever. — dimosthenis9
If you want to be taken seriously on here, then doing a minimal amount of reading is essential. Otherwise you sound ignorant — which you do — Xtrix
You regard a philosophical problem mind/brain as useless cause we don't hold the absolute truth of definitions. — dimosthenis9
But I forgot, according to you, we can't define science either. — dimosthenis9
So it is a meaningless question that disturbs philosophy and science all these centuries?And even nowadays.
— dimosthenis9
Yes. — Xtrix
You regard a philosophical problem mind/brain as useless cause we don't hold the absolute truth of definitions.
— dimosthenis9
No. — Xtrix
Now you put into question the definition of "science"
— dimosthenis9
Indeed, since you invoked "science" to define what's physical — Xtrix
But I forgot, according to you, we can't define science either.
— dimosthenis9
That’s not what I said. — Xtrix
Sorry I couldn't resist. — dimosthenis9
So it is a meaningless question that disturbs philosophy and science all these centuries?And even nowadays.
— dimosthenis9
Yes.
— Xtrix
You regard a philosophical problem mind/brain as useless cause we don't hold the absolute truth of definitions.
— dimosthenis9
No.
— Xtrix — dimosthenis9
Now you put into question the definition of "science"
— dimosthenis9
Indeed, since you invoked "science" to define what's physical
— Xtrix
But I forgot, according to you, we can't define science either.
— dimosthenis9
That’s not what I said.
— Xtrix — dimosthenis9
And yes, that was my last response. — dimosthenis9
What is it that you're looking for that you say you can't see? You'll need to define "computer program" because now it seems that you're just moving goalposts. Also, explain what a "computer program" is independent of someone observing it and then what it looks like when someone looks at it and how they would know that is what they are looking at.I didn’t say you can’t see code. I said you can’t see code by simply looking at a computer. You can bust open the motherboard and look at it all you want (like looking at a brain) and you won’t see what’s happening in there. — khaled
That's the point I'm trying to make - what is a "feeling" when looking at it through software or a brain scan as opposed to experiencing it? Why is there a difference at all? Why is there an experience of a feeling in the first-person and also a coinciding experience of neural activity in the third-person? Which perspective is of the feeling as it actually is? In other words, which perspective has more direct access, or knowledge, to the "feeling" and why?With the right software I can see what you’re feeling generally well. Whether it’s fear, anger, etc. Brain scans exist. They don’t show everything, but they are showing more and more. — khaled
define "computer program" — Harry Hindu
explain what a "computer program" is independent of someone observing it — Harry Hindu
what it looks like when someone looks at it — Harry Hindu
What is it that you're looking for that you say you can't see? — Harry Hindu
how they would know that is what they are looking at. — Harry Hindu
what is a "feeling" when looking at it through software or a brain scan as opposed to experiencing it? Why is there a difference at all? — Harry Hindu
I didn’t say you can’t see code. I said you can’t see code by simply looking at a computer. You can bust open the motherboard and look at it all you want (like looking at a brain) and you won’t see what’s happening in there. — khaled
Wouldn't you see a set of particular switching operations? — RogueAI
Try it. Open up the motherboard and tell me what the first 10 switching operations for the Windows Kernel is.
Of course, there are devices that can detect binary code. You can't do so with your eyes however. Similar to how you can't see feelings when looking at a brain without the use of special tools. — khaled
If you can see them, yes I think. — khaled
You couldn't reverse engineer a mental state by observing brain states. — RogueAI
Is the person with brain states "seeing red" really seeing red, or does red to them look blue to everyone else? — RogueAI
Why would it look different? — khaled
If I clone you do you think there is a chance that “red” to the clone will look different from “red” to you?
I'm 100% sure that you see the same graphical design and colors used for this forum. My black and white are the same as yours — Goldyluck
Details, and emotional and epistemic load, might be different though. — Goldyluck
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