But it does assume the division between object and subject ... — Wayfarer
... we survive death as individuals, but we return to our true nature, which is not human. — Sam26
Our identity is not in this avatar (so to speak) but is connected with our higher self — Sam26
And there certainly is such a stance as dogmatic scientism — Wayfarer
for physicalism, the laws of physics are both immutable and fundamental. — Wayfarer
At the beginning of time the laws of Nature were probably very different from what they are now. Thus, we should consider the laws of Nature as continually changing with the epoch, instead of as holding uniformly throughout space-time.
The only field which has not admitted any evolutionary question is physics. Here are the laws, we say,...but how did they get that way, in time?...So, it might turn out that they are not the same [laws] all the time and that there is a historical, evolutionary, question.
Sam's claim that:
... we survive death as individuals, but we return to our true nature, which is not human.
— Sam26
and:
Our identity is not in this avatar (so to speak) but is connected with our higher self
— Sam26
is that there is a self distinct from the body. Out of body experience is not the experience of a non-differentiated, generalized consciousness but the experience of an individual subject. — Fooloso4
To reject my argument, you have to reject that testimonial evidence is a valid form of knowing apart from science. — Sam26
To compare the testimonial evidence of abductions to the testimonial evidence of NDEs is a complete misunderstanding of good testimonial evidence.
— Sam26
Explain why you think "testimonial evidence of alien abductions" is not "good testimonial evidence". — 180 Proof
That is only a re-statement of beliefs that have been pretty well universal at one time or another throughout history. — Wayfarer
the division between object and subject — Wayfarer
principle of no-self (anatta) — Wayfarer
What if, from the very earliest stirrings of organic existence, organic life is the means by which consciousness painstakingly takes form? — Wayfarer
Sam mentions the idea of the body as a 'receiver' or 'transmitter' akin to a television. Why is that necessarily a daft idea? — Wayfarer
Consciousness is dependent on the existence of organisms. — Fooloso4
However, in light of modern scientific understanding of the nature of brains, and the sort of information processing that can occur in neural networks, it's unparsimonious. I.e. "I have no need of that hypothesis." — wonderer1
God, according to (the Stoics), "did not make the world as an artisan does his work, but it is by wholly penetrating all matter that He is the demiurge of the universe" (Galen, "De qual. incorp." in "Fr. Stoic.", ed. von Arnim, II, 6); He penetrates the world "as honey does the honeycomb" (Tertullian, "Adv. Hermogenem", 44), this God so intimately mingled with the world is fire or ignited air; inasmuch as He is the principle controlling the universe, He is called Logos; and inasmuch as He is the germ from which all else develops, He is called the seminal Logos (logos spermatikos). This Logos is at the same time a force and a law, an irresistible force which bears along the entire world and all creatures to a common end, an inevitable and holy law from which nothing can withdraw itself, and which every reasonable man should follow willingly (Cleanthus, "Hymn to Zeus" in "Fr. Stoic." I, 527-cf. 537). — New Advent Enclyclopedia
The point, however, is that for Sam there is a distinct, enduring, imperishable "higher self". Perhaps I am wrong, but this does not seem to square with your understanding of the:
principle of no-self (anatta)
— Wayfarer — Fooloso4
the division between object and subject
— Wayfarer — Fooloso4
But there is no theory of 'how brains generate consciousness'... — Wayfarer
But there is no theory of 'how brains generate consciousness' — Wayfarer
Throughout history, time after time, claims of the supernatural as the only viable "explanation" for a wide variety of phenomena have given way to natural, rational, demonstrable, transmissible scientific knowledge. — Fooloso4
Mind (or consciousness) is causal, a latent drive towards higher levels of intelligence and awareness which manifests as organic life. — Wayfarer
It's true that Buddhism doesn't teach in terms of 'higher self' but they don't deny the reality of rebirth. — Wayfarer
What I'm getting at there, is the division that arises in early modern science ... — Wayfarer
Cognitive science is a new interdisciplinary science. The fact that it has not yet developed a generally accepted theory hardly serves as evidence that it cannot or will not. — Fooloso4
What I'm getting at there, is the division that arises in early modern science ...
— Wayfarer
Some of us are quite familiar with this well rehearsed story, but it is not what is at issue in this thread. — Fooloso4
the fact that you don't have much of a working hypothesis yourself, seems like something that you might want to correct. — wonderer1
Mind (or consciousness) is causal, a latent drive towards higher levels of intelligence and awareness which manifests as organic life.
— Wayfarer
This is an assertion not a theory is the sense in which you fault science for lacking. — Fooloso4
... consciousness as the first-person ground of experience is not an objective phenomenon — Wayfarer
It has a considerable bearing on the issue. — Wayfarer
It is assumed as a matter of course that if they're not objectively demonstrable, then they can only have a subjective reality. — Wayfarer
I'm not providing a theory about that, only pointing out an alternative. — Wayfarer
Existence itself is absolutely presupposed, and therefore requires no justification; also, it's self-contradictory to assume that 'IS possibly is not'. Existence "just is" the hinge on which all existing swings. Your inversion, Sam, assumes an unwarranted 'dualism' that is both incoherent and unparsimonious. Spinozism had refuted 'Cartesian duality' over three centuries ago.and Berkeley's 'subjective idealism' is clearly question-begging (see Kant's critique).Existence swings on the hinge of consciousness. It requires no justification. It just is. It’s the presuppositional axiom of existence. — Sam26
This :sparkle: "core mind, core consciousness" :sparkle: reminds me very much of the sage woo--woo of an ancient Jedi Master:I do believe we are individuals that are part of the core mind, i.e., we are individuals that are connected with the core ... The core consciousness is constantly creating experiences for the innumerable conscious beings that are associated with the core mind ... the essence of who we are cannot be harmed ....
In sum: "NDEs" = temporary FORCE GHOSTS. :sweat:For my ally is the Force, and a powerful ally it is. Life creates it, makes it grow. Its energy surrounds us and binds us. Luminous beings are we, not this crude matter. You must feel the Force around you; here, between you, me, the tree, the rock, everywhere, yes.
*
Deceive you, eyes can. In the Force, very different each of you is.
*
Death is a natural part of life, rejoice for those around you who transform into the Force.
*
Twilight is upon me, and soon night must fall. that is the way of things. The way of the Force. — Sayings of Yoda
In a very important sense consciousness is the hinge of existence (to use Wittgensteinian language). Existence swings on the hinge of consciousness. It requires no justification. It just is. — Sam26
...are just very basic kinds of beliefs within our forms of life. — Sam26
Naturalism is the view that all that exists is the natural world that is perceived with, but exists independently of, our senses or tools which extend them. — Lee Smolin
My counterargument is that they’re confusing correlation with causation. I would say that it’s settled science that there’s a correlation between the brain and consciousness, but not causation just as there’s a correlation between what we hear from a radio and the radio itself. We know that the sound isn’t generated by the radio even though we can make many correlations between the sound and the radio. — Sam26
Of course, on my side of the argument, I can’t point to anything like an electromagnetic wave that would cause consciousness, so I look at other kinds of evidence, viz., testimonial evidence. — Sam26
They’re self-sealing in that all testimonial evidence is rejected out of hand. No amount of counterevidence (testimonial evidence) can be enough to counter their definition of consciousness, viz., that consciousness is a brain function. — Sam26
They can keep repeating the mantra that the brain causes consciousness but that doesn’t make it so. Correlation doesn’t mean causation. — Sam26
Can you be any more condescending? I'll refrain from saying what I want and leave it at that. — Sam26
:100: :up:Testimonial evidence only explains a subjective interpretation of a situation. And people's subjective interpretation of things is no indication of its truth as an objective reality, only the truth in that is what people feel. There are plenty of people who feel there is a God, but is that objectively true? No. — Philosophim
The monks are standing on the leg of their own metaphysical theory, aren't they?Tibetan monks might have their politico-cultural reasons for objecting to the Chinese government choosing the next Dalai Lama, but do they really have a metaphysical leg to stand on? — sime
Mystical-like states of consciousness may arise through means such as psychedelic substances, but may also occur unexpectedly during near-death experiences (NDEs). So far, research studies comparing experiences induced by serotonergic psychedelics and NDEs, along with their enduring effects, have employed between-subject designs, limiting direct comparisons. We present results from an online survey exploring the phenomenology, attribution of reality, psychological insights, and enduring effects of NDEs and psychedelic experiences (PEs) in individuals who have experienced both at some point during their lifetime. We used frequentist and Bayesian analyses to determine significant differences and overlaps (evidence for null hypotheses) between the two. Thirty-one adults reported having experienced both an NDE (i.e., NDE-C scale total score ≥27/80) and a PE (intake of LSD, psilocybin/mushrooms, ayahuasca, DMT or mescaline). Results revealed areas of overlap between both experiences for phenomenology, attribution of reality, psychological insights, and enduring effects. A finer-grained analysis of the phenomenology revealed significant overlap in mystical-like effects, while low-level phenomena (sensory effects) were significantly different, with NDEs displaying higher scores of disembodiment and PEs higher scores of visual imagery. This suggests psychedelics as a useful model for studying mystical-like effects induced by NDEs, while highlighting distinctions in sensory experiences. — Martial, Charlotte & Carhart-Harris, Robin & Timmermann, Christopher. (2024). Within-subject comparison of near-death and psychedelic experiences: acute and enduring effects. Neuroscience of Consciousness
it's unparsimonious — wonderer1
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