Sorry, I'm not answering your questions until you've answered mine.
What do you take issue with in the above scenario? — ZzzoneiroCosm
So at T1 brain-state X is unconscious to you. At T2, T3, T4 and T5, brain-state Y is conscious to you. You note the similarities between T1, T2, T3, T4 and T5 and hypothesize that brain-state X may be similiar to brainstate Y, the central distinction being, possibly, that at T1 you were unconscious of the nature of brainstate X. — ZzzoneiroCosm
There is certainly a brain-state at T1.
I'm calling it brain-state X.
What would you like to call it? — ZzzoneiroCosm
Analogical argumentation is inherently imprecise. — ZzzoneiroCosm
You note the similarities between T1, T2, T3, T4 and T5 and hypothesize that brain-state X may be similiar to brainstate Y, — ZzzoneiroCosm
Generally, yes. — ZzzoneiroCosm
It's different because car alarms aren't minds. It's not a precise or useful analogy. — ZzzoneiroCosm
I might substitute "conscious" for "present". — ZzzoneiroCosm
At T2, T3, T4 and T5 I behaved in such and such a way in light of thought-pattern X. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Explain what you take issue with in this scenario: — ZzzoneiroCosm
There's plenty of evidence vis-a-vis the continuity of personality. — ZzzoneiroCosm
...the process of internalizing the norms and ideologies of society. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Well its not completely arbitrary, again I'm not a religious person although I can quote what John wrote in the opening of his gospel "In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God" so there is merit in the sense that it offers an explanation for believers of the gospel, that the idea of the world came before the world. — staticphoton
however chemical properties are not explicable in terms of the laws of physics. — Pantagruel
That's a dogmatic assertion that you can't possibly defend (except with more dogma). — ZzzoneiroCosm
Is this your belief or is this the absolute truth of the situation? — ZzzoneiroCosm
It's a well-known phenomenon and as clear as it needs to be. It even has its own wikipedia page — ZzzoneiroCosm
From this statement it appears you don't accept that a person can engage in self-examination to learn more about his past behavior. — ZzzoneiroCosm
You don't believe that brain states cause behavior? — ZzzoneiroCosm
the concept that first there was an idea and then there was a universe is not without merit. — staticphoton
How is that the brain generates the private subjective world of the self and then for what purpose? it seems logically impossible that nerve signals can generate a subjective observer while at the same time enabling that self to have its own distinct powers. It appears to be a useless appendage. — lorenzo sleakes
Max Tegmark has made an interesting attempt at modeling the "Ultimate Ensemble theory of everything" (ToE):
... whose only postulate is that "all structures that exist mathematically exist also physically". This simple theory, with no free parameters at all, suggests that in those structures complex enough to contain self-aware substructures (SASs), these SASs will subjectively perceive themselves as existing in a physically "real" world. This idea is formalized as the mathematical universe hypothesis,[16] described in his book "Our Mathematical Universe". — alcontali
to me, everything in the world is an idea that has been created. Even an apple tree, seems tome, to be an idea that has been created from a thought. — sydell
You're on Chrome extension ignore now. Harry Hindu, if you're capable, answer the question. — Baden
Society, at whatever level, is involved in forming the identity of individual humans? Yes or no? — Baden
What do you disagree with re 1) — Baden
Let's suppose you decide to be unkind to X. You're conscious of no special criteria underpinning your decision to be unkind. You're curious about this and devote long, painstaking hours to self-examination. After a period of introspection you realize Y is why you made the decision to be unkind. — ZzzoneiroCosm
A certain brain-state was present at the time I made my decision to be unkind. I was at that time unaware of the relationship of this brain-state to the decision to be unkind. After long hours of self-examination, I discovered brain-state-Y to be present at the moment of my decision to be unkind. At the moment I made the decision to be unkind I believed there was no special criteria, but through introspection I've learned that brain-state-Y underpinned my decision to be unkind. — ZzzoneiroCosm
You may think you have no set criteria for practicing kindness but in fact there is a particular concatenation and mechanism of neurons and other unspecified brainstuffs that determine when you will and when you will not practice kindness. — ZzzoneiroCosm
That's an extreme variety of physicalism. I suppose if you hold the image of a tree in your mind you make the attempt via the intellect to reduce this tree-thought to something physical. But, of course, the tree-thought itself is nonphysical. (I suppose you disagree.)
The tree-thought exists and the brain state giving rise to the tree-thought exists. One is psychological and one is physical. (I suppose you disagree.)
To reduce the mind to physicality is to fatally limit your scope of exploration. It's a dogmatism and hence fatally limiting. — ZzzoneiroCosm
What I call "unconscious mental content" you call "brain states with the potential to create mental content." You leap from the psychological to the physical to avoid using a phrase that rings nonsensical to you. I prefer to describe the mind without referencing the physical. — ZzzoneiroCosm
You reduce this sort of memory to a brain state. You're no longer describing the mind. — ZzzoneiroCosm
In fact, all I have to do to explode your definition of mental content is add - memories. — ZzzoneiroCosm
You claim it isn't mental content. So I have to ask: Is it nonmental content?
If it's nonmental content, what specific kind of nonmental content is it? — ZzzoneiroCosm
I've already agreed the memory in question takes a different form in its conscious and unconscious states. — ZzzoneiroCosm
Your definition of mental content is esoteric — ZzzoneiroCosm