Doesn't this imply that matter is capable of intentional action?
— Wayfarer
At a sufficient level of organization, yes. — Fooloso4
I said what I wanted to say in my article: One and the same reality must be the source of both the subject and predicate concepts for the judgement to be true. If one reality elicits <This rock> and a different reality elicits <hard>, the judgement (not concept) <This rock is hard> is unjustified.So you want to say something like that the source of the concept "the rock is hard" is not a predication but an identity? — Banno
Again, reading my article resolves this: "If we are aware of feeling a stone, we can abstract the concept <hard>. Then, being aware that the identical object elicits both <the stone> and <hard>, we link these concepts to judge <the stone is hard>, giving propositional knowledge." (p. 110) Clearly, the stone we are feeling is the source of the relevant concepts.Nor is it at all clear what the source of a concept might be. — Banno
I have taken none of these positions. I said, "the concept <apple> is not a thing, but an activity, viz. the actualization of an apple representation’s intelligibility." (p. 109). Surely, you will agree that we have neural representations and are aware of some of their contents.Concepts are sometimes erroneously conceived of as mental furniture, as things inside the mind to be pushed around, repositioned in different arrangements. Concepts are sometimes better understood as abilities than as abstract objects. There then need be no discreet concept of "hard" situated somewhere in the mind, or in the brain, but instead a propensity to certain outputs from a neural net, which includes the construction of certain sentences such as "this rock is hard" - along connectionist lines. — Banno
You seem to think that connectionism is an alternative to my analysis. It is not. I have no fundamental problem with connectionism. In fact, I invoked it to make one of my points (p. 99). What connectionism tells us, if true, is how representations are generated, instantiated and activated. It does not even attempt to explain how we become aware of the contents they encode -- how their intelligibility becomes actually known.Indeed, I'll offer connectionist models of representation as far superior to a regression to Aristotelian models. — Banno
His article argues that functionality can't be explained by examining the physiology of the CNS. Whether or not this is true has no bearing in whether a theory of consciousness is possible. — frank
The laws of physics are such descriptions. Still, if there were not some reality (the laws of nature) making matter behave that way, the descriptions would have no predictive value. Suppose I accurately described your behavior on a particular day. I could only use it to predict your future behavior if the description revealed some consistent dynamic -- perhaps a habit. So my ability to predict would not be based on having a description per se, (for most of it would not be repeated), but on the dynamic the description revealed. In the same way, without the assumption of universal laws of nature guiding the behavior of matter, theoretical physics would be inapplicable to new cases.Surely you know that some physicists hold that the laws are the descriptions of the behavior of matter. — Fooloso4
Yes. Yet, that is saying what is, not why it is. The idea of reductionism, which I am opposing, is that we can deduce consciousness by applying the laws of physics to the physical structure of human beings. I am saying that we could only do so if physics predicted intentional effects, and it does not.When I say physical I mean that consciousness is not given to or added on to beings that are conscious. They are physical beings that have developed the capacities of knowing, willing, hoping, etc. — Fooloso4
Let's put aside how matter comes to be organized (whether by itself, or by the laws of nature). We can agree that over time, more complex structures have evolved. Most people (including me) would agree that evolution is fully consistent with physics. I agree also that new capacities, such as nutrition, growth and reproduction, have resulted.I have but you rejected it. The theory is that matter is self-organizing. At higher levels of organization capacities that were not present at lower levels emerge. — Fooloso4
I'm failing to see what point you're trying to make. — frank
the term 'theory' is commonly used in such discussions in a looser sense. — Fooloso4
Recent years have seen a blossoming of theories about the biological and physical basis of consciousness. Good theories guide empirical research, allowing us to interpret data, develop new experimental techniques and expand our capacity to manipulate the phenomenon of interest. Indeed, it is only when couched in terms of a theory that empirical discoveries can ultimately deliver a satisfying understanding of a phenomenon. However, in the case of consciousness, it is unclear how current theories relate to each other, or whether they can be empirically distinguished. To clarify this complicated landscape, we review four prominent theoretical approaches to consciousness: higher-order theories, global workspace theories, re-entry and predictive processing theories and integrated information theory.
Still, if there were not some reality (the laws of nature) making matter behave that way — Dfpolis
Yet, that is saying what is, not why it is. — Dfpolis
So, there is no reason to think that they transcend the bounds of physics. — Dfpolis
I invite comments pro and con. — Dfpolis
I see two sources of difficulty: the post-Cartesian conceptual space, and the Fundamental Abstraction of natural science. — Dfpolis
Merleau-Ponty argues that we cannot understand how knowledge arises within nature unless we abandon the Cartesian view of nature as a machine composed of mutually external and indifferent parts.
If nature is a mechanism then it has no intrinsic meaning or unity. Thus nature could only be meaningful for a constituting consciousness that imposes a meaning on it by synthesizing its disconnected parts into an ideal whole. However, this amounts to denying that we can know nature at all. First, it means that nature can only be known from the outside, from a God’s-eye-view that could comprehend it as an object. But this is not our situation; we find ourselves born into a nature that is older than thought, and indeed gives rise to it—a nature that we can never encompass or transcend. “Nature is an enigmatic object, an object that is not entirely an object; it does not exactly stand before us. It is our soil, not that which faces us, but that which carries us.” It is precisely for this reason that we wish to naturalize epistemology—to understand how knowledge arises within nature. Second, if the only meaning we can find in nature is one that we ourselves put into it, then nature ceases to be an object of knowledge that transcends consciousness and becomes instead an idea within consciousness—a representation or mental construct. — Sense-Making and Symmetry-Breaking
The hard problem really boils down to "What is it like to be another conscious being?" — Philosophim
The hard problem really boils down to "What is it like to be another conscious being?"
— Philosophim
this doesn't seem quite correct. — jgill
Consciousness is neither the contents we being aware of information apprehend, nor the resulting qualia, but being aware of information.
one can hardly anthropomorphize humans
Many argue that intentional being is too different from physical being to be reduced to it – a position performatively affirmed by eliminative materialists
Thus, natural science begins with a Fundamental Abstraction
It is as absurd to reject replicable introspection because its token is private, as to reject Galileo’s observations because he made them in solitude.
For [Aristotle], form and ‘matter’ (ὕλη) are not things, but the foundations for two modes of conceptualization.
First, the laws of nature are not "outside." They are intrinsic -- coextensive with what they control. Second, the existence of alternate opinions is not an argument against a view. The question is what is required to explain the facts of experience. Third, the question is: why do "things behave in an orderly way"? Surely, it is neither a coincidence nor because we describe them as doing so. Rather, it is because something makes them do so. The name given to that something is "the laws of nature."Well, that is one opinion. Law of nature are not some outside force that acts on nature. Surely you are aware that not all physicists hold to your concept of laws. It is because things behave in an orderly way that formulating laws is possible. — Fooloso4
Because nature has an intentional, law-like aspect.Why do you think it is? — Fooloso4
It depends on how you define physics. That is the point of the article. As long as you limit physics by the fundamental abstraction, it cannot explain the facts that abstraction prescinds from.Perhaps consciousness does not transcend the bounds of physics either, only our current understanding of physics. — Fooloso4
Thank you. I wanted to connect all the points I made because they build one upon another. The reviewers had no problem with that, accepting the paper in 12 days.First, this paper needs more focus. About half way through I forgot what you were even trying to show. You jump from this idea, to that idea from this philosopher, to over here, and I don't see a lot of commonality between them. You could probably cut your paper by quite a bit and still get to the point that you want. — Philosophim
No, I am a theoretical physicist by training, a generalist by work experience, and a philosopher by inclination. I am aware of the boldness of my claim. For that reason I needed to I needed to start from the ground and build up, dealing with logically successive topics.First, are you a neuroscientist? This is an incredibly bold claim — Philosophim
I neither expect nor assume that they do. I do assume that they will not abandon the view that the brain represents and processes data. The need for representation and processing was seen by Aristotle, and the fact that the brain is the data processing organ was established by Galen. So, it is unlikely that further discoveries will change this fundamental fact after all this time.A neuroscientist will tell you, "We don't yet understand everything about the brain yet." — Philosophim
There is no such evidence. There is lots of evidence that the contents of awareness depend on physical processing, but contents are not our awareness of contents (which is what subjective, not medical, consciousness is).There is more than enough evidence that consciousness results from a physical basis. — Philosophim
I suggest you re-read the section of the paper in which I quote Chalmers on the Hard Problem. There is no problem of what it is like to be a bat, because problems are about understanding experience, not about having experiences we cannot have.The hard problem really boils down to "What is it like to be another conscious being?" — Philosophim
This is a different problem -- that of "immortality of the soul." It is one that natural science does not have the means to resolve. I do agree, however, that rational thought requires the physical representation of data.Does that mean that we don't need physical medium for consciousness to exist? No, we do. — Philosophim
You do not understand what the Hard Problem is. Chalmers said, "The really hard problem of consciousness is the problem of experience. When we think and perceive, there is a whir of information-processing, but there is also a subjective aspect." This is not a problem about the experience of others, but of subjectivity per se. To be a subject is to be one pole in the subject-object relation we call "knowing" -- the pole that is aware of the object's intelligibility.The hard problem reflects the failure in our ability to experience what it is like to be another conscious being. — Philosophim
The point that contextualizes my definition is that "emergence" is ill-defined. You quote one definition, but there are others. I say what I mean by "emergence" to avoid confusion in what follows. We are all allowed to define our technical terms as we wish.This is not what emergence means. — Philosophim
This is equivocating on "consciousness". There is medical consciousness, which is a state of responsiveness, and this is seen, in an analogous way, in plants. That kind of consciousness need not entail subjectivity -- the awareness of the stimuli to which we are responding. You made the point earlier. We cannot know what it is like to be a bat or a plant, or even if it s "like" anything, instead of something purely mechanical -- devoid of an experiential aspect.And yet we find plants react to the world in a way that we consider to be conscious. — Philosophim
This non-fact is non-evidence.Almost certainly AI will inevitably, if not somewhere already, be labeled as conscious. — Philosophim
Thank you.To start, it's very well written. Clear and thorough. I don't think I've read a better one here on the forum. — T Clark
Exactly. Nothing in the proposed paradigm places any restriction on scientific work. I only seek to re-contextualize it.This indicates the problems with the scientific study of consciousness are philosophical, logical, not scientific. — T Clark
As you pointed out, I am not disputing any science. So, I saw no need to say more than what the studies conclude.You make a quick arm-wave to current cognitive scientific study of consciousness without showing you have given them a fair hearing. — T Clark
It is my term. I define it. I think it is a fair description of a general, but not universal, view. If you think it is not, please say why.You talk about a Standard Model of neurophysiology which, as far as I can tell, is a concept you came up with yourself. — T Clark
I look forward to your comments.I've read most of the article. As I too am generally critical of physicalism and reductionism, then I'm onside with your general approach ('the enemy of the enemy is my friend ;-) ) - although there are a few specific points with which I will take issue, when I've spent a bit more time digesting it. — Wayfarer
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