There's no possible characterization of consciousness. It is utterly primitive to us as information-processing creatures. — Apustimelogist
I think fundamental ontology is likely impossible to comprehend and the next step is a computational or informational explanation of why that is and for how that hard problem arises in intelligent machines like us in the first place.
If you assume it is primitive then you have solved the hard problem. — FrancisRay
If it is primitive consciousness doesn't arise. What would arise is intentional 'subject/object consciousness,f you assume anything is primitive, you can answer the same "how" question. How does consciousness arise? — flannel jesus
Life is a different issue.It's primitive. How does life work? It's primitive (see Vital Force, an idea which lost favour when scientists were able to build up a picture of life working via electro chemical processes).
Why do you think this? It allows us to construct a fundamental theory. This is the answer given by Perennial philosophy, for which no hard problems arise. Rather than giving up this is the only way forward.Some things are primitive, of course, and it may be that consciousness is, but it feels more like a non answer to me than an answer. It feels like giving up.
Maybe it's fundamental, but probably, I think, we just don't have the answer yet, and the idea that it's primitive will start disappearing when we have a picture of the mechanisms involved, like life itself.
unnecessarily pessimistic — FrancisRay
This would be a hopeless approach for for the reasons you give. A fundamental theory must look beyond computation and intellection. — FrancisRay
But if you think human beings are are intelligent machines or one of Chalmers' zombies then I'm afraid you're stuck with the hard problem for all eternity. This assumption renders the problem impossible. . — FrancisRay
There is already an amount of research around replicating microorganism behavior with a combination of logic gates - which is the fundamental computational mechanism in electronics. Example nice read:
https://arstechnica.com/science/2010/12/building-logic-gates-with-bacterial-colonies/ — Generic Snowflake
To me, too. I'm just stating the case for the other side, and asking how it works.Behavior is explained by the physical.
— Patterner
Is it though? I do things because of the way I feel, it seems to me. — bert1
This is the gist of subjective experience, correct?How can a collection of mindless, thoughtless, emotionless particles come together and yield inner sensations of color or sound, of elation or wonder, of confusion or surprise? — Brian Green
I don't see it as pessimistic at all or that anything is lost. What does a solution to the hard problem look like? I don't think there is a good one I can think of which doesn't imply some sort of dualism which I fundamentally disagree with. — Apustimelogist
I am not suggesting looking for a fundamental ontology based on computation but an explanation for why knowing about fundamental ontologies are out of reach.
I think the explanation is actually already there, it just has to be articulated and demonstrated. Like you said, experiences are primitive.
We know experiences are related to the functional architecture of our brains. We can transfer or demonstrate the concept of this kind of primitiveness into the architectures and functional repertoires of A.I. We use A.I. to demonstrate the limits of what kinds of information is transferable from the environment, what kinds of concepts are created and what information they don't or can't include, and then see what kind of metacognitive consequences this has. Does a. A.I. come up with primitive phenomenal concepts on a purely functional basis that it cannot explain, similarly to our hard problem? This is a totally plausible research program even if it may not be possible right at this moment.
Not sure what you mean here but functionally, yes we are just intelligent machines. We are just brains.
I'm suggesting such knowledge is not out of reach. To show that it is out of reach would require ignoring all the people who claim to have such knowledge, or proving they do not. . . — FrancisRay
Ah. I didn't say this and would argue against it. You're conflating consciousness and experience, but I;m suggesting that the former is prior to the latter. — FrancisRay
Bear in mind that experience-experiencer is a duality that must be reduced in order to overcome dualism. . . — FrancisRay
There are no primitive concepts or experiences. This was shown by Kant. — FrancisRay
For a solution one would have to assume a state or level of consciousness free of all concepts and prior to information. — FrancisRay
and information theory requires an information space, and the space comes before the information. . — FrancisRay
If you believe this you will never have a fundamental theory and will will have to live with the 'hard' problem. forever. I wonder what leads you to believe this when it is just a speculation. If you believe this then much of what I'm saying will make no sense to you. I would advise against making such assumptions, or indeed any assumptions at all. , . — FrancisRay
Have you examined the suggestions of the Buddha, Lao Tzu and the Upanishads? Afaik there is no other explanation for consciousness that works. .Who actually has a suggestion though? — Apustimelogist
When I say experience is primitive, I just mean in a kind of epistemic sense - experiences are immediately apparent and intuitive to us and they don't have an explicit characterization... I just see blue, I cannot tell you what it is/
My whole experience (tentatively I would say consciousness) is just a stream of these things. They cannot be reduced further... they are the bottom and foundation for everything I know and perceive. That is to say nothing about reality but just that experiences are the primitive, irreducible foundation of what I know and perceive.
Not sure what you mean by experience-experiencer duality beyond conventional dualism. I am not sure what "experiencer" means.
Again, my notion of primitiveness just relates to the immediate, irreducible apprehension of experiences after which there is nothing more basic epistemically.
I don't think you can have consciousness free of information nor do I understand why you think this is required for a solution.
I don't think there is priority here. If there is information, it exists on an information space; n information space is defined by the information in it. One doesnt come before the other
I don't see what your alternative suggestion could possibly be if you don't believe dualism is true. Regardless of what you think the fundamental reality is, the evidence is overwhelming about how consciousness relates to or can be characterized in terms of brains in a functional sense (I hope you understand what I mean when I say functionally). What is your alternative characterization?
I am starting to think you haven't understood anything I have said at all. Its hard to believe now that you could have said my previous post was perceptive and a good summary if you really understood it. Neither have I been trying to think about some fundamental theory that resolves the hard problem. My initial post said that I didn't think the so called hard problem could be solved at all.
Take the simplest of computational networks - two states going through a logic gate, producing a new state. — Generic Snowflake
My whole experience (tentatively I would say consciousness) is just a stream of these things. They cannot be reduced further... they are the bottom and foundation for everything I know and perceive. — Apustimelogist
Yes, its computing solutions for equations of motion in physics. — Apustimelogist
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