If consciousness is physical and if we are conscious then anything that is physically identical to us is conscious and anything that isn’t conscious is physically different. — Michael
So, physically identical except in respect of its lacking consciousness, possibly physical?
Or, physically identical but different non-physically, in respect of its lacking consciousness, presumed non-physical? — bongo fury
We can conceive of something that is physically identical to us not having consciousness, therefore it is metaphysically possible for something physically identical to us to not have consciousness — Michael
I'd just say Chalmers has bad epistemic hygiene. Inflationism might be handy for making weak arguments appear strong, but I'm not seeing a good reason to take it seriously based on what the SEP says. — wonderer1
And it's navigating the world and doing its job effectively, and it's doing all this without knowing anything??? How does that work, exactly?
— RogueAI
External stimuli such as light and sound stimulate its sense receptors, these signals are sent to the brain which then responds by sending signals to the muscles causing it to move in the manner appropriate to navigate the stimulus. — Michael
I think he's right, but that's because I'm a panpstychist. I suspect all causation is, at bottom, psychological. That avoids overdetermination. — bert1
The p-zombie argument is an argument against physicalism. If you're a panpsychist then the p-zombie argument is irrelevant. You already accept the conclusion that the mind is non-physical. — Michael
The p-zombie argument is an argument against physicalism. If you're a panpsychist then the p-zombie argument is irrelevant. You already accept the conclusion t — Michael
You seem to think that certain bodily behaviours can only be caused by subjective consciousness. Why is that? — Michael
Physical determinism. — Michael
This argument seems to depend on consciousness having zero benefit or purpose. It would never have been selected for since it brings zero benefit. The argument makes somewhat more sense if one is in denial of evolution of course.The argument is that:
1. A p-zombie is physically identical to us but has no consciousness
2. P-zombies are not a metaphysical impossibility
3. Therefore consciousness, if it exists, is non-physical
4. Therefore either physicalism is false or nothing is conscious
5. We are conscious
6. Therefore physicalism is false — Michael
This also begs the conclusion.We can conceive of something that is physically identical to us not having consciousness — Michael
How do you know that this isn't a description about how you work? I mean if it was, then by definition you would not know it, so I guess I am asking how you would report that you know that this isn't a description of how you work.External stimuli such as light and sound stimulate its sense receptors, these signals are sent to the brain which then responds by sending signals to the muscles causing it to move in the manner appropriate to navigate the stimulus. — Michael
How do you know that you have this sort of free will? Given many definitions of free will (that your choices are not the result of physical causes), I agree with your argument above. But then this zombie has no idea why anyone would benefit from that sort of free will. It sounds like a curse.P-zombies have no free will. Everything they do is a physical effect of prior physical causes. — Michael
By your definition it cannot be. You've made that very clear.I think they're impossible too. — flannel jesus
Impossible because conscious experience is physical ... — Michael
Only because the language forbids using half those words for what the zombie is doing. It very much claims 'heartfelt', 'meaningful', etc, but they're apparently all lies. The zombies doesn't know that they're lies.I wouldn't say impossible, but it's ludicrous to think there would be a couple of p-zombies carrying on, what to us would appear to be a deeply personal heartfelt conversation, while in fact their conversation is simply meaningless noises they are making for no reason. — wonderer1
Lines 1 and 5 beg the conclusion, making the argument fallacious. — noAxioms
We can conceive of something that is physically identical to us not having consciousness — Michael
This also begs the conclusion. — noAxioms
A begging definition then.Line 1 is just a definition. — Michael
Step 1 defines consciousness to be supernatural — noAxioms
It doesn't define what it is, but it blatantly defines it to be something not physical. You've not refuted this in any way.Step 1 doesn't define consciousness. — Michael
No different than before. This is the same statement, stating right up front that consciousness is non-physical.Here's a different argument:
1. A p-zombie is physically identical to us but has no consciousness
3 doesn't follow from the prior statement. 1 asserts that consciousness exists, so 3 cannot say 'if it exists'. 3 should read 'consciousness exists, and is not physical'. It follows directly from 1 and line 2 is superfluous.2. P-zombies are a metaphysical impossibility
3. Therefore consciousness, if it exists, is physical
It isn't. 3 directly contradicts 1, regardless of the actual nature of consciousness.The argument is valid.
It doesn't define what it is, but it blatantly defines it to be something not physical. — noAxioms
OK, we're at an impasse. I did see the argument, and it begs, and you don't see that. We can both just repeat our stances forever.No it doesn't. See my other argument in that post: — Michael
This is yet again a begging argument. The whole purpose of the argument is to somehow determine how many sides a triangle has, which means we need to start from an agnostic position of not knowing. You don't do that. Step 2 says that Foos are impossible, which you cannot demonstrate unless you beg that triangles have something other than 4 sides.1. A foo is a four-sided triangle
2. Foos are a metaphysical impossibility
3. Therefore triangles, if they exist, do not have four sides — Michael
So I can conceive of a universe that is physically identical to ours, except momentum being conserved isn't the result of supernatural intervention. A rock, in the absence of an external force acting on it, could continue at its velocity indefinitely without help from the supernatural entity carrying it, or however that works. Therefore it is metaphysically possible for something physically identical to us to not require the magic, therefore momentum isn't physical.We can conceive of something that is physically identical to us not having consciousness, therefore it is metaphysically possible for something physically identical to us to not have consciousness, therefore consciousness isn't physical. — Michael
And yet there are people who pretty much live like zombies, at least some of their time. Not people in a coma, but people who mindlessly peruse Facebook and such.
— baker
Those people are not physically identical to us, and so aren't relevant to Michael's argument. — wonderer1
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