What do you think the self is? How would you define it? — Andrew4Handel
The self is the overarching temporally extended narrative construct of a necessarily embodied and social consciousness which turns the animal acting in an environment into a subject. It is that through which the individual recognizes that it is one of many, i.e., an individual in a society of individuals, which are also selves. The self is that which recognizes itself as a self in a world of selves.* — Jamal
I don’t think it’s “immaterial”, but I don’t think it’s all about the brain, though having a brain is no doubt helpful. — Jamal
“...there is no real person whose embodiment plays no role in meaning, whose meaning is purely objective and defined by the external world, and whose language can fit the external world with no significant role played by mind, brain, or body. Because our conceptual systems grow out of our bodies, meaning is grounded in and through our bodies. Because a vast range of our concepts are metaphorical, meaning is not entirely literal and the classical correspondence theory of truth is false.”
― George Lakoff, Philosophy in the Flesh: The Embodied Mind and its Challenge to Western Thought
:up:The self is the overarching temporally extended narrative construct of a necessarily embodied and social consciousness which turns the animal acting in an environment into a subject. It is that through which the individual recognizes that it is one of many, i.e., an individual in a society of individuals, which are also selves. The self is that which recognizes itself as a self in a world of selves.* — Jamal
That works.So ultimately I’m telling a story that calls attention to (but does not explain) the difference between animal agency and selfhood, but which emphasizes the importance of the environment for both.
I don’t think it’s “immaterial”, but I don’t think it’s all about the brain, though having a brain is no doubt helpful. — Jamal
I don’t think it’s “immaterial”, — Jamal
What do you think the self is? How would you define it? — Andrew4Handel
The self is the overarching temporally extended narrative construct of a necessarily embodied and social consciousness which turns the animal acting in an environment into a subject. — Jamal
It is that through which the individual recognizes that it is one of many, i.e., an individual in a society of individuals, which are also selves. The self is that which recognizes itself as a self in a world of selves.* — Jamal
are based on the mistake of thinking that because I undergo or initiate various changes, there must be a changeless essence. Theseus' ship is in the same boat. I am different from the boat because change is of the essence, as your emphasis on story shows.The experiencer or perceiver. In one sense it seems to be immaterial but it could be something associated with the brain. — Andrew4Handel
It is immaterial in the sense it is not correlated with anything physical — Andrew4Handel
What seem important is to have a unified locus of perception/awareness that keeps us aware of a continuity between all these internal things and unifies our incoming data from the external world. — Andrew4Handel
But, a further quibble, my narrative is not constructed. It is lived. Afterwards, narratives may be constructed. — Ludwig V
Individuals do not recognize themselves. They learn to be themselves in interaction with other selves. There is no process of recognizing others as selves, or rather that skill is an integral part of learning to be a self. — Ludwig V
my narrative is not constructed. It is lived. Afterwards, narratives may be constructed. — Ludwig V
It is immaterial in the sense it is not correlated with anything physical and in the sense it is not objectively visible or in a one to one relationship with any particular brain state. — Andrew4Handel
Is lived experience not itself a process of continual construction or construal, even prior to the creation of narratives? — Joshs
If recognizing others as selves is an integral part of learning to be a self, then isn’t it going too far to say that individuals do not recognize themselves? — Jamal
But crucially, I wouldn’t say that this irreducibility entails immateriality. — Jamal
In Cognitive science, there are two types of "Self". — Nickolasgaspar
Everything responsible for this mental concept is a product of brain function interacting with the environment....hence its Material. — Nickolasgaspar
Properties of matter are responsible for a computer calculation.That is true for our mental properties. They are a product of the material world.I wouldn't say that the calculation performed by a computer was material, even though it is the result of a physical process. Indeed, it seems to me to be rather misleading. — Ludwig V
That is a description of an observable phenomenon. The quality of helpfulness follows.Well, if that is helpful to cognitive science, it would be churlish to quibble. — Ludwig V
I wouldn't say that the calculation performed by a computer was material, even though it is the result of a physical process. Indeed, it seems to me to be rather misleading. — Ludwig V
That is a description of an observable phenomenon. The quality of helpfulness follows. — Nickolasgaspar
I think the application of "material" or "immaterial" in an imagined absolute sense to computations is a category error. It's like saying, for example, "the tree is or isn't spiritual". — Janus
_correct.The observable phenomenon is the brain activity and its apparent connection to what we consciously do at the conscious level. — Ludwig V
Unconscious self is a label of an observable phenomena.(organisms acting unconsciously to preserve their well being and survival).The description "unconscious self" is a decision about how it is appropriate to consider the phenomenon. — Ludwig V
-I didn't provide any justification. I only presented in bullet points the two different types of "Self". The justification of the above classifications can be found in Cognitive Science literature and in Moocs available to anyone who is interested in knowing and talking about the properties of the Mind.so it needs more justification than it is getting here. — Ludwig V
-More appropriate than our current scientific epistemology ? I will be skeptical on that.Other descriptions may be more appropriate. — Ludwig V
_I don't really understand what your point is and how this is relevant to our Scientific Epistemology of the brain...Care to elaborate?. I would prefer to say that the various calculations take place, without committing to the idea that anybody is doing them. — Ludwig V
_I don't really understand what your point is and how this is relevant to our Scientific Epistemology of the brain...Care to elaborate? — Nickolasgaspar
First one its the Unconscious Self (Unconscious Self awareness — Nickolasgaspar
Can you cite a paper on this. — Andrew4Handel
-No, someone can be consciously or unconsciously aware of something and react unconsciously to that stimuli. Its one thing to be aware of your and your environment and an other to direct your conscious attention to a a stimuli and reflect on it i.e. Many people drive to and from work without being able to recollect taking conscious decisions on how to get to their destiny.Awareness is opposed to the unconscious. — Andrew4Handel
OBjects are not Selves. The term self is an abstract concept humans use to refer to their mental existence.I would say that all objects are selves in the sense of possessing a coherent unified identity that can be preserved. — Andrew4Handel
I think how we come to be aware of a particular body is a fundamental question and I think the self issue is more about inhabiting a particular body and consciousness than a selection of traits and preferences. — Andrew4Handel
There's a Wikipedia entry on proprioception if you want a quick initial briefing on it. Google will turn up lots of other material. I haven't seen a philosophical piece on this yet — Ludwig V
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