What would a physicalist explanation of mind look like? — Agent Smith
What would a physicalist explanation of mind look like? — Agent Smith
Physicalism settled the matter definitively: diseases are caused by microbial invasion of the body. Evidence poured in from all the research labs in the world via microscopes. — Agent Smith
If I were a medical scientist back before microscopes were invented, I could have, with luck and imagination, hypothesized a purely physical explanation for diseases/illnesses thus: there exists disease/illness-causing agents that are too small for the eyes to see. In other words, before I actually discover the physical nature of sickness, I can construct a hypothesis of their physical nature. IE I have a picture of, I have an idea of, how illnesses could be physical. — Agent Smith
What would a physicalist explanation of mind look like? — Agent Smith
Mind in that sense is an emergent property that arises from the interaction of the behaviors of neurons and other elements of the nervous system and other bodily systems. — T Clark
What would a physicalist explanation of mind look like? — Agent Smith
This assumes that mind resides outside the neurons, like temperature resides outside particles. — EugeneW
Emergence is not a fundamental. Interaction is an epiphenomenon. — EugeneW
We physicalists need to introduce a new ingredient with explanatory power. Let's call that ingredient X. Then what is X? Is it matter? No. Is it interaction. No. Is it X? Yes! But X alone won't do. We need an Y too. Then what is Y? Is it matter? No. Is it interaction? No. Is it Y? Yes! — EugeneW
Since you referred to "Causation" several times, I'll propose a causal explanation for the Brain Function we know as "Mind" or "Consciousness". According to the definitions below, Causation is not a physical object or substance, but an external force acting on something, whether Matter or Mind. That "influence" is a causal relationship, and in Physics is usually called "Energy". Yet, energy per se is not a material object with physical properties, hence is known only by its effects on matter. So, it can't be distinguished from "Spirit" or "Ghost", except by noting who uses those terms. Spiritualists speak of "spiritual energy", while Materialists avoid any implications of an intentional Cause.What would a physicalist explanation of mind look like? — Agent Smith
What would a physicalist explanation of mind look like? — Agent Smith
It would just look like what modern neuroscience tells us it does. Current research suggests, and I mean all of it suggests, that consciousness is produced via the operation of 80 billion neurons across all of the sophisticated structures of the human brain, with a particular emphasis on the operations of the dorsolateral prefrontal, orbitofrontal, and medial prefrontal cortices. This network conducts operations in symphony with the main-brain and emotional processessing networks, which generally have pathways to the rest of the brain, to produce metacognitive functions such as:
"the ability to anticipate the consequencesof behavior, self-awareness, the temporality of behavior (i.e., understanding andusing time concepts), controlling cognition (metacognition), working memory,abstraction, problem solving, and similar complex intellectual processes." — Garrett Travers
When I talk about mind, I talk about thoughts, emotions, knowledge, imagination, perception.... Just because I can pinpoint the locations in the brain that light up when I do those things, that doesn't mean they're the same thing. — T Clark
That's precisely what it would indicate. That doesn't mean that thoughts 'aren't' something else, technically speaking. But, what exactly is on offer to describe what we think thoughts 'are,' technically speaking? If we know the brain gives rise to them, and we know executive function includes memory retrieval, pattern-recognition, and conceptual abstractions from recurrent data feedback loops, then it stands to reason that what we 'think' are thoughts, conceptually, are actually just neural computations that are being recognized and stored in memory, patterns, and recurrent analysis. Which would be 100% consistent with all known data on the subject. What's your postulate? — Garrett Travers
talking about neurological phenomena as an explanation for mental processes is just as futile than talking about psychological phenomena — T Clark
To get to the real answer, technically speaking, we should be talking about quantum mechanics and particle physics. — T Clark
Brain function is just as illusory as mental function. — T Clark
No, if you read my post, you'll notice that my specific assertion was that brain functions are mental functions and psychological phenomena. There's no difference. — Garrett Travers
No, we shouldn't. We should be talking about the systems that produce these phenomena at the macroscopic level where they exist and abide by the laws of classical and relative mechanics. QM doesn't have a single place here in this conversation. And using quanta to derail discussions of science is not an approach that I'll be entertaining. — Garrett Travers
As I indicate, I disagree. — T Clark
You've misunderstood my argument. Don't worry about it. I don't think we have anything else to discuss. — T Clark
That's the physical description. It doesn't explain consciousness. It can describe the physical epiphenomena though. — EugeneW
Not according to the evidence — Garrett Travers
miss a key ingredient. — EugeneW
Appears to me that "consciousness" is merely a term, long in use, to describe — Garrett Travers
A description of the material epiphenomenon at most. — EugeneW
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