I just think I'm not understanding you. It seems like you're saying we have tables made out of wood and nails, but we can't make tables out of wood and nails. — Patterner
Sorry, I'm not trying to be difficult. There has to be a misunderstanding. Anything that exists and is the product of the laws of physics was constructed on the laws of physics. But you're saying they cannot be constructed on the laws of physics. — Patterner
Are you saying that thermodynamics is not reductionist — SolarWind
No one needs to explain all this in detail. Are you saying that thermodynamics is not reductionist because you can't predict the weather exactly one year in advance?
Reductionism is actually correct in principle. Suppose a pile of 271,828 atoms reacts differently than expected. Then you simply define a new rule for 271,828 atoms, and everything is reductionist again. — SolarWind
Chemical interactions are physical events. A biological entity is made up of a huge number of interacting physical events. It's all explainable by the lower-level principles of physics and chemistry. — Patterner
The ability to start from those laws and reconstruct the universe is a given, because it's what actually happened. — Patterner
what you were saying seems impossible. I can understand that it's possible that, if there were non-biological beings who had intelligence equal to or greater than human intelligence, they may well never postulate the principles of biology. I would imagine there are so many ways the principles of chemistry and physics can combine and interact that it's possible no one would ever stumble upon the ideas that we know as the principles of biology. But that's not the same as it being impossible in theory to come up with those principles. — Patterner
...the reductionist hypothesis does not by any means imply a “constructionist” one: The ability to reduce everything to simple fundamental laws does not imply the ability to start from those laws and reconstruct the universe...
...The constructionist hypothesis breaks down when confronted with the twin difficulties of scale and complexity. The behavior of large and complex aggregates of elementary particles, it turns out, is not to be understood in terms of a simple extrapolation of the properties of a few particles. Instead, at each level of complexity entirely new properties appear, and the understanding of the new behaviors requires research which I think is as fundamental in its nature as any other... — P.W. Anderson - More is Different
I already quoted from and linked Philip Anderson. — Srap Tasmaner
Andersen does not talk about strong emergence, or indeed any emergence - these terms gained traction later. — SophistiCat
These developments strongly suggest that reality can only be consistently regarded as a more complex affair, that the primary qualities simply characterize nature so far as she is subject to mathematical handling, while she just as really harbors the secondary and tertiary ones so far as she is a medley of orderly but irreducible qualities. How to construe a rational structure out of these various aspects of nature is the great difficulty of contemporary cosmology; that we have not yet satisfactorily solved it is evident if one considers the logical inadequacies in the theory of emergent evolution, which appears at present the most popular scheme for dealing with this problem. In this theory we either have to suppose fundamental discontinuities in nature such as permit no inference from qualities earlier existing to those later appearing, or else we have to regard the more complex qualities as somehow existing even before they would have been empirically observable, and co-operating in bringing about their material embodiment. — E.A. Burtt - The Metaphysics of Modern Science
I doubt that. I can roughly imagine how chemical interactions give rise to life, and much of this (DNA, RNA, neurotransmitters) has already been researched. — SolarWind
Oh, and I won't be responding to you again btw. You are on the 'not worth it' list. — Clarendon
This just ignores what I explicitly said I mean by weak emergence. — Clarendon
I don't know how you define life. It seems to me it's a bunch of physical processes. Metabolism. Respiration. Circulation. Immune systems. Reproduction. Growth. What aspect of life is not physical? What aspect can't be observed, measured, followed step-by-step? — Patterner
And what aspect of consciousness is physical, and can be observed, measured, followed step-by-step? How can we know that everything needed for the existence of consciousness is purely physical if no aspect of consciousness is? — Patterner
Wait – I think it might be a good idea to pick up a book about fishing or the behaviour of mussels next time. — javi2541997

Lament for Ignacio Sánchez Mejías and The Tamarit Divan by Federico García Lorca. — javi2541997
Do you think you can make something non-physical with only physical building materials? — Patterner
I don't quite think this is going to go anywhere. Take care. — AmadeusD
There is no problem in revisiting already discussed topic in the past, — Corvus
The point you must remember is that awareness is NOT the same thing as matter or brain itself.
Awareness and consciousness is the word describing aspects, operations, states and functions of mind, not the physical matter. — Corvus
physical matter input cannot come out in any other form than physical matter. — Corvus
Because there is no explanation, from any side of the hundred-sided fence, that is more than speculation. — Patterner
You can study consciousness by science. But the problem is, you will not see or observe actual consciousness itself, no matter what you dissect and look into. It is not in the form of matter. — Corvus
I don't think being able to scientifically study various aspects of consciousness means we "understand how consciousness can be realized in physical neuronal activity." — Patterner
I have not heard how a part of the brain, or the physical activity taking place in it, has a felt experience if itself. Which I guess explains why I've never heard them called the "neural causes of consciousness." — Patterner
Just as studying the motion of galaxies might suggest the existence of what we call dark matter, it is not a study of dark matter. — Patterner
My point was consciousness is function and ability of the living biological agents, not something emerges from matter. Do you still disagree on the point? — Corvus
Which questions have been answered? Do you have any reading suggestions on this? — Patterner
"We do not understand how consciousness can be realized in physical neuronal activity" is an important thing. — Patterner
Are you saying intelligence and consciousness are the same thing? — Patterner
If energy truly had no mass-relevant properties, then E = mc2 would be false.
So your example presupposes the very principle you think it refutes. — Clarendon
the term was well defined — T Clark
I don't believe that consciousness is something which can be defined clearly. — Corvus
'problems' of consciousness only arise if you assume that physical things are what ultimately exist, such that consciousness has to be found a home in that picture — Clarendon
Consciousness means that you are awake, and able to see things around you, and respond to others in rational linguistic manner in interpersonal communication. You are also able to do things for you in order to keep your well being eating drinking good food, and sleeping at right times caring for your own health, your family folks and friends. — Corvus
But you can't get weight from that which has none. — Clarendon
Matter, which has mass, is created out of energy, which has no mass, — T Clark
E = mc2 is not a case of something coming from nothing. Energy has mass equivalence. Mass is not conjured out of an absence of all relevant properties. — Clarendon
Sure. But if you think where the meaning of consciousness comes from, it is just a word describing awareness of biological being. It has little to do with subatomic particles. Stretching the meaning of the word that far sounds like seeing a rainbow and saying - there must be a divine being up there somewhere doing some painting. — Corvus
Consciousness means that you are awake, and able to see things around you, and respond to others in rational linguistic manner in interpersonal communication. You are also able to do things for you in order to keep your well being eating drinking good food, and sleeping at right times caring for your own health, your family folks and friends. — Corvus
you cannot generate a property of a given kind from ingredients that wholly lack that kind. — Clarendon
The person who thinks consciousness can strongly emerge from physical entities that do not already possess it is insisting that consciousness just pops into being out of nothing - that really does seem like magic and we would not accept such a proposal in other contexts. — Clarendon
But you can't get weight from that which has none. — Clarendon
In other words, one cannot get a 'kind' from that which does not possess it - for that would be to get out what was in no sense there in the originals — Clarendon
Similarly then, you aren't going to be able to make a conscious object out of objects that are not already conscious (or at least disposed to be). For that would be alchemy. Call it 'strong emergence' if one wants - but that's just a label for what is in fact something coming from nothing. Thus, as our brains are made out of atoms, then either atoms have consciousness (or are disposed to) or brains simply can't have consciousness. — Clarendon
Yet if one constant in the universe was off by the tiniest margin then the universe would be unstable. — kindred
By unstable I mean the universe would simply collapse after only existing for a brief amount of time. — kindred
Yet if one constant in the universe was off by the tiniest margin then the universe would be unstable. — kindred
The way I see it there are two explanations, the naturalistic one and the divine one. And the fact that life emerged into this lifeless universe enforces my view of the latter. — kindred
It does not represent order but a rule. And it there’s rules there gotta be a rule maker right ? — kindred
