-I thought your goals were to communicate your scientific ignorance and the promotion our death denying ideology. Who knew you cared about me....lolEDIT: Part of the reason I created this thread is to give you a place to let off some steam without being off-topic, so you were less likely to be banned. — bert1
Once again, there is no consensus on the definition of the terms. Without such consensus the claim remains ambiguous. — Fooloso4
-I don't know under which rock you have been living but in science we have straight forward descriptions for any phenomenon. We may not be able to provide a theory or a single causal mechanism but that doesn't mean we don't agree with what we study and observe.when you make claims about these undefined terms. Giving a definition does not settle anything. — Fooloso4
He is far more specific of the details that enable the phenomenon. He and anyone agree on which phenomenon they are talking about.Despite a revival in the scientific study of consciousness over recent decades, the only real consensus so far is that there is still no consensus.
I have posted many times a specific scientific definition of the term. Try to keep up or don't waste my time.Claiming the one conceptually ambiguous concept is the author of another conceptually ambiguous concept gets us nowhere, and fast. — Fooloso4
Scientific frameworks describe specific phenomena. We stop because claims about "energy" make no sense.Why stop at a transition? — Gnomon
Nothing breathes fire, your brain "burns" those molecules allowing all its mechanisms to produce our mental states.What "breathes fire" into the brain? — Gnomon
I don't know what that means. Our consciousness is the author of our self.I do explicitly say in my post the self can be distinguished from consciousness. — bert1
Einstein's framework describes a relation in a way smaller scale.......may be onto something in his Energy is Matter is Mind extrapolation. — Gnomon
It means that people with existential anxieties will always find excuses to embrace a comforting idea able to separate their existence from their a biological body with an expiration date.Great! It goes on to say that most neuroscientists think the two are indivisible, but I'm not sure if they mean conceptually indivisible or physically indivisible. — bert1
"aren't always" is the key word. Obviously I am addressing those which are injecting intention or purpose in Nature.'Why' questions aren't always about teleology. — bert1
The problem is NOT just with your questions but your previous answers which allow me to guess your intention behind those questions.We're not going to be able to have a conversation if every time I ask "why such and such" you say I'm looking for a teleological (or even just evolutionary) explanation. — bert1
-Ok but you need to understand the fallacy of your question.....when you hold responsible of Science not being able to experience YOUR experience thus concluding it has nothing to say about the processes responsible for the phenomenon.. What I'm asking for in this thread is an explanation in terms of physical processes. Similar to the question I'd ask of a mechanic with my car "Why won't my car start?" — bert1
Chalmer's questions have the same problem with your statement.I'm looking for an answer in terms of the structure and function of the car. It's odd that you impute this intention to seek teleological answers to Chalmers as well. — bert1
Criticism:But you should be interested in what those who you rely on actually say. Or not. That's up to you. The problem is your repeated criticisms of others based on your misunderstanding of the sources you rely on. — Fooloso4
Yeap treat systematic knowledge as ordinary opinions is your thing, you made it clear.Thanks for your advice, but I prefer to think rather than follow the misguided idea that there are steps that are not even steps. — Fooloso4
That's not the criterion for pseudo philosophy....Dismissing what you have not read or have not understood as "Pseudo Philosophy" does harm to your credibility. — Fooloso4
Seriously.....you felt the need to add that? lol oh boy...sad.By the way, it is Paul Hoyningen-Huene not Paul Hoyningen. — Fooloso4
So you don't know the difference between Physics and Aristotle's Physika ...proud to be ignorant I guess.His use of the term science is not limited to physics as you have it in your chart, bur rather it applies to each topic in the chart and much more. — Fooloso4
Well you identified the problem in that "if". We have no way to carry any type or research without the ability to connect memory, reasoning, judgment, intelligence, heuristics etca which all come together during a conscious state.Perhaps we all know how subjective conscious states feel because we all have them. If you had no subjective conscious states you would not know how they feel no matter how much brain research you undertook (assuming that you would be able to carry out brain research without having subjective conscious states yourself). — Janus
I disagree on what I am confusing. — Benj96
That's an other topic. Intelligence is a property of the brain,but our ability to be consciously aware of our experiences isn't affected when our intelligence is impaired The same is true for memory, symbolic language, reason, pattern/face recognition, heuristics in general etc.For me there is no confusion; the brain is basically the product of evolutionarily compounded/refined intelligence.. — Benj96
first definition I found: "Intelligence is the ability to learn from experience and to adapt to, shape, and select environments."Consciousness involves this ability to be intelligent but in the context that it refers to how it is applied to the beholder/self. — Benj96
You understand something limited and specific by that term.In simple terms then consciousness is intelligences awareness of self - it's specific appearance, definition and this it's limitations. Ie humanness. Human consciousness is the awareness of what it feels like to be Human (limited in ability but unlimited in imagination/creativity). — Benj96
You need to educate your self on what we know, how we know it and how our Technical applications verify our current knowledge.And this is something that is still poorly understood and subject to substantial revision. — Fooloso4
If the ultimate nature of matter is mental, doesn't that blow neuroscience out of the water? Isn't the whole point of neuroscience based on the assumption that mind and consciousness are produced by a physical brain? — RogueAI
I will grant you that there is a prima facia case that a simulated or mechanical brain should be conscious.. — RogueAI
I find this question really good and challenging!!!!My question is: how would we scientifically go from there? How would science "nail down" the question of whether X is conscious or not? What tests could we perform, that would give us conclusive proof of consciousness (or lack thereof) — RogueAI
This is a really good point. I hadn't thought of it in this way before. — T Clark
That others may share your opinions does not mean that they are more than opinions. Neuroscience is in its infancy. Our understanding of what matter is and what it is capable of continues to develop. — Fooloso4
But I don't see a principle by which sensory inputs and processing units couldn't be created by people, in a non-biological creation. Again, I don't think it's plausible, but I don't think it's impossible either. — Manuel
-That is not panpsychism though. Matter is capable for many things under specific conditions but we don't go around talking about i.e. Pancombustism, or Panflatulencism or Panphotosynthesism.As for panpsychism, the reason I don't think some formulation can't be ruled out, is that there is obviously something about matter that when so-combined, leads to experience. Granted, it's in brains that such combinations arise. But even so, if matter did not contain the possibility of consciousness as a potential, then experience couldn't happen even in brains. — Manuel
You are confusing different properties of mind with Consciousness. Consciousness, according to Neuroscience is the third basic mental property.I think consciousness is awareness/intelligence from the point of view of ones individual identity — Benj96
And subjective experience is necessary for that? How do organisms without nervous systems survive? Are all living nervous systems conscious? — Marchesk
I find this kind if thinking really insulting. Neuroscientists are clever enough people, their intellectual capabilities should not be in question. — Isaac
Well if nature is fundamentally physical — Marchesk
This is why I opened my post by saying "it depends on the definition".Why should we accept that definition for machine consciousness? It's not the same thing as qualia. You just created an arbitrary definition and assigned it to 'consciousness'. It doesn't answer the question of whether a machine can have qualia. — Marchesk
Ok you jump from the underlying ontology of matter...to reality. From a intrinsic feature of the cosmos to an abstract concept . Reality is an observer dependent term which is defined by our ability to interact and verify with things in existence. A fundamental nature of reality will never change our descriptions and narratives on how reality interacts with us and vice versa.We don't even really know what 'matter' is. Could be quantum fields or vibrating 10 dimensional strings. Or maybe everything in physics is a kind of analogy, limited by human cognition and technology. Maybe we can't get at what reality fundamentally is. — Marchesk
Instead of using the term Brain (material structure) Manuel used the word "matter"....and the conversation rolled down the hill reaching "quantum levels" rendering the conversation irrelevant to the biological property of consciousness.think there are historical reasons that lead us to conclude that consciousness is a property of matter. But it also depends on what you think matter (or more broadly "the physical) encompasses. — Manuel
You make my point for me. — Wayfarer