Of course it is your brain is processing the data from your eyes. But it's still a cat, and it's still just a line. Thinking that the cat is no more than a bit of data processing misses its place in the artist's creation, the web page's design, the post I just presented and the argument about emergence.
Indeed, thinking of it as nothing more than your brain processing the data from your eyes is exactly the error that this thread is about. — Banno
As I've noted, this conditions a lot of what you write. Hence, 'the blind spot'. — Wayfarer
Hence the mind-created world. — Wayfarer
This is why I'm skeptical to the notion that we are never going to be able to map this or explain it. Because its a problem of computational power. — Christoffer
. And pointing out that our perception is the source of how we believe reality to be isn't a revolutionary argument, it is true for those people who doesn't dwell on these things but that doesn't mean it is true for those who do, and it ignores the facts and operations that we use to control reality around us, facts that relate to what is actually there outside of our perception and which can be theorized, understood and controlled without us ever perceptually witnessing them. — Christoffer
there is no need for me to deny that the Universe is real independently of your mind or mine, or of any specific, individual mind. Put another way, it isempirically true that the Universe exists independently of any particular mind. But what we know of its existence is inextricably bound by and to the mind we have, and so, in that sense, reality is not straightforwardly objective. It is not solely constituted by objects and their relations. Reality has an inextricably mental aspect, which itself is never revealed in empirical analysis. Whatever experience we have or knowledge we possess, it always occurs to a subject — a subject which only ever appears as us, as subject, not to us, as object. — Wayfarer
. We extend beyond our limitations and we can also not know what limitations can be overcome with future technology. — Christoffer
It exists in the past. Physicalism states that only physical things exist. My the past exists in minds. Therefore, it must actually exist, as an actual physical thing (that it has passed, i suppose is no matter to the principle - either could be argued by whomeveer held the view) — AmadeusD
Just what the physics profession thinks is the state of physical matter. I think quantum physics says matter exists in a somewhat fuzzy present 'moment'. — Mark Nyquist
facts that relate to what is actually there outside of our perception — Christoffer
the more knowledge one has of the physical laws of reality, the theories and how they play together, the more conceptually vivid it becomes and in such abstract ways that they do not reflect mere perceptually defined concepts. — Christoffer
If, by 'laws of reality' you mean 'natural law' or 'scientific law', are these themselves physical? — Wayfarer
There's the difference between a house and a home, perhaps, to rub the point in.
Emergence, if it is to help us here, has to be akin to "seeing as", as Wittgenstein set out. So once again I find myself thinking of the duck-rabbit. Here it is enjoying the sun.
The duck emerges from the rabbit? — Banno
Where do you stand on the possibility of consciousness emerging from collections of pipes, vales, water, etc.? Even I would grant that it's logically possible. But suppose we have an infallible consciousness meter, and (bear with me) someone has created a planet-sized system of valves, pipes, pumps, water, etc. that is functionally equivalent to a working brain. I would give astronomical odds that when we point the consciousness meter at the plumbing, it's not going to register anything. What kind of odds would you give? — RogueAI
Wouldn't it be more accurate to say memories of the past exist in minds? — RogueAI
This is related to what I pointed out Kastrup showing ignorance about with his claim that the relationship between fluid flowrate and pressure is the same as the relationship between voltage and current expressed by Ohms law. — wonderer1
What's the catch there? I don't really understand the correlation, so I can't pick out the problem. — AmadeusD
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