No. I did not, and do not, declare the order is designed. — Patterner
Again, I did not, and do not, acknowledge design. — Patterner
No, I did not, and do not, describe cosmic mind. — Patterner
Yes. The order pre-existed the life that arose within it. — Patterner
What I mean is, will thinking that objects 'possess an inherent attribute that can be labeled "number"' lead to a dead end? Will thinking it is not an attribute of objects, but of the universe's order, that we are recognizing lead to a dead end? After all, we might approach things differently, depending on which we take as our starting point. — Patterner
Do you believe a brain confined to a vat will eventually start counting? — ucarr
Certainly not. I don't believe a human could come to any intelligence or consciousness under those circumstances. I believe sensory input is essential. — Patterner
Perhaps cosmologists know the answer? They're always trying to figure out the math as close to the BB as possible, but they don't think it works within x billionths of a seconds? Something weird like that.You have raised the central question: Where is the starting point of order? — ucarr
We grew within the universe, which has consistent principles, and are made of the universe's materials, which are subject to those principles. Is there a reason to think an intelligence that developed in such a way would not be able to recognize these principles?A second, central question: How did number and order pre-dating humans get internalized within the human understanding? — ucarr
What is the relationship between numbers and order? To what degree can you have one without three other? To what degree are they not the same thing?A third, central question: does the biconditional operator in logic link number with order? If N = number and O = order finds true expression as n ⟺ o, then finding the start of one entails finding the start of the other. — ucarr
You're on your own with the topic of design.Now we come to the hotly controversial topic of design and its location within the cosmic history.
If it’s possible to pinpoint the advent of design within the phenomenal universe, where in the timeline of events does it lie? — ucarr
We grew within the universe, which has consistent principles, and are made of the universe's materials, which are subject to those principles. Is there a reason to think an intelligence that developed in such a way would not be able to recognize these principles? — Patterner
What is the relationship between numbers and order? To what degree can you have one without three other? To what degree are they not the same thing? — Patterner
I’m trying to understand exactly what this problem is about. From my understanding, the biggest mystery is that we currently don’t have nearly enough knowledge in neuroscience to explain why some neural networks lead to conscious experience and others don’t.
But what if we did have that knowledge, would it solve the problem then?
Imagine we found some sort of wave that certain neural networks create, that is related to consciousness: whenever we observe this specific wave, conscious experiences comes along as well. Would that solve the hard problem of consciousness or would it still leave philosophers wondering how exactly that wave represents the conscious experience?
If the problem remains, then we have the same problem with a lot of other things like time, space,… However we try to rationalize it, no one can explain time and space, it’s just there in everything we know, there are building blocks of our world. The only way we can picture a world without time is if we imagine that time would stop. But that thought itself includes time. And it's the same with consciousness: consciousness is there whenever we think about it, any explanation would be self referencing.
So my question is: is the root of the hard problem self reference or is it our critical lack of knowledge in that domain? — Skalidris
So my question is: is the root of the hard problem self reference or is it our critical lack of knowledge in that domain? — Skalidris
Your wave example doesn't help. It wouldn't explain why the wave is associated with some particular experie ces in the same way that current descriptions of vidual cortex activity cannot tell us what experiences we are having. — Apustimelogist
It's supposedly "hard" because we don't yet have a place in the physical sciences for the idea of phenomenal consciousness. — frank
I've never heard anyone say that, who wasn't rather naive about what is going on in the physical sciences. See the link I posted above. It is certainly informative about ways my phenomenal consciousness differs from that of others. — wonderer1
The truly hard problem of consciousness is that we can never objectively test what it is like to be conscious from the subjects view point. Think of it like this, "What is it like to be a rock?" We understand the atomic make up and composition of the rock. But what it is it like to BE the rock AS the rock? — Philosophim
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. As Nagel (1974) has put it, there is something it is like to be a conscious organism. This subjective aspect is experience. When we see, for example, we experience visual sensations: the felt quality of redness, the experience of dark and light, the quality of depth in a visual field. Other experiences go along with perception in different modalities: the sound of a clarinet, the smell of mothballs. Then there are bodily sensations, from pains to orgasms; mental images that are conjured up internally; the felt quality of emotion, and the experience of a stream of conscious thought. What unites all of these states is that there is something it is like to be in them. All of them are states of experience.
My understanding of the hard problem of consciousness is that it is a problem for a physicalist. Why is it a problem? Because the physicalist has not forwarded a physical account of why any physical system is conscious. Even if, as you suggest, some waveform of energy is responsible for consciousness, a natural question arises: why does that energy produce consciousness, while some other energy does not produce consciousness?
But what it is it like to BE the rock AS the rock?
— Philosophim
I think this demonstrates a failure to grasp the point at issue. — Wayfarer
A rock does not show any behavior of being conscious, and we do not believe a rock can have the experience of a rock, but we cannot know that either. — Philosophim
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