People who have dead nerves in certain places of their body cannot feel anything there. — Philosophim
People who have dead nerves in certain places of their body cannot feel anything there.
— Philosophim
What about phantom limb pain? — RogueAI
What sort of embodied cognition would you say you're defending? — frank
Yes, but it is oriented around a more 'expansive' understanding of what consciousness is. There is a long tradition of consciousness as an interior movie, an interior monologue, things going on "in the head." The whole layer of intelligence involved in the micro-coordination of our overt actions and behaviours is ignored by many people. — Pantagruel
Some proponents of embodied cognition would argue that the environment provides the body with all the stimulus necessary for navigation to food and shelter. So there's no need to assign inference to this navigation. — frank
Good point. Even 20% of people born without limbs have phantom limb syndrome. What this tells us is the brain actively fires looking for limbs to use. Makes sense since even babies use their limbs all the time. The locus of thought is from the mind to the limb, not from the limb to the mind. — Philosophim
It seems that if sensory input isn't coming in to the brain, the brain will create it's own hallucinatory input to compensate. People in sensory deprivation tanks hallucinate fairly quickly when deprived of external stimuli. What is the evolutionary benefit of this? — RogueAI
It seems that if sensory input isn't coming in to the brain, the brain will create it's own hallucinatory input to compensate. People in sensory deprivation tanks hallucinate fairly quickly when deprived of external stimuli. What is the evolutionary benefit of this? — RogueAI
We can see consciousness remains when the objects of consciousness change. I have a thought, then experience an emotion, then see a tree, then hear a song, then another thought. The contents change but consciousness remains. So, (for me, at least) it's easy to believe consciousness without content is possible. And, as TheMadMan points out, consciousness without content (i.e., pure consciousness) is a goal of meditation.Can you have consciousness without any content? — frank
Sensory deprivation tanks weren't part of the environment our ancestors were exposed to. There is no reason to think that there is an evolutionary benefit to how we respond, to an environment that played no role in the natural selection of our ancestors. — wonderer1
No conscious invertebrates? Don't they have to deal with lots of information flowing in? — RogueAI
The arthropod eye, on the other hand, has one of the best-studied examples of selective signal enhancement. It sharpens the signals related to visual edges and suppresses other visual signals, generating an outline sketch of the world.
between science and Mwrleau-Ponty, it is because the particular brand of naturalism that a science is in thrall to makes no room for Merleau-Ponty’s thinking. Varela, Thompson, Gallagher, Petitot and others claim phenomenology can be naturalized
once we transform and update our thinking about scientific naturalism so as to accommodate it. — Joshs
You could even say "it is obvious". A large --if not the largest-- part of consciousness depends on perception. And our perception depends on our senses.There's little reason to doubt that consciousness is influenced to some degree by the whole body. — frank
Right. Integrated Information Theory --it always helps if you give the full name-- is only a perspective. Which ignores the hard problem of consciousness.As a starting point, consider the features of consciousness identified by the IIT project. One of them is point of view, or intrinsic perspective. — frank
One does not have to take mind altering drugs to feel or be in a state of "disembodiment". One does not even need to be disembodied to feel and know that he is something more than his body and that his consciousness is only in part dependent on his body. One has only be aware of his body and that he is aware of himself and aware of being aware. One needs not take mind altering drugs or be in any kind of state of hallucination for that.even if a person experiences a state of disembodiment, as when under the influence of mind altering substances, there's still a sense of engaging the world from a point of view, so this would qualify as a kind of embodiment. — frank
Exactly. This is how humans differ from (other) animals: Humans can be aware of themselves and aware of being aware, as I said above.A challenge to going further and saying that consciousness is entirely arising from the whole body starts with observing one of the ways that humans differ from other animals. — frank
Exactly. Doesn't this alone create a problem to the perspective that consciousness arises from the body?If consciousness is strictly a bodily function, we'd have to explain how it is that the body doesn't adapt, but the mind does. — frank
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