Why say the 'I' is never an object of cognition ? — plaque flag
that doesn't seem to support your argument. — Janus
From what he sees, therefore, he cannot judge whether what is happening in the brain he is observing is, or is not, the sort of event that he would call "mental" - Bertrand Russell. — Manuel
I think what bothered me most about this particular iteration of the conflict is it's blatant circularity. The evidence that there is a hard problem of consciousness is that it consists of mental processes which can't be studied by science because of... the hard problem of consciousness. Of course, as I noted, all these arguments come down to this same contradiction. — T Clark
Why is it that when our cognitive systems engage in visual and auditory information-processing, we have visual or auditory experience: the quality of deep blue, the sensation of middle C? How can we explain why there is something it is like to entertain a mental image, or to experience an emotion? It is widely agreed that experience arises from a physical basis, but we have no good explanation of why and how it so arises. — Chalmers, Facing up to...
To vastly oversimplify, chemistry doesn't make biology, it manifests as biology. — T Clark
Chemical reactions in non-living systems are not controlled by a message … There is nothing in the physico-chemical world that remotely resembles reactions being determined by a sequence and codes between sequences' (that is characteristic of organic processes such as mitosis and reproduction) — What is Information? Marcello Barbieri
The problem is semantic. What is this 'I' ? — plaque flag
But who will doubt that he lives, remembers, understands, wills, thinks, knows, and judges? For even if he doubts, he lives. If he doubts where his doubs come from, he remembers. If he doubts, he understands that he doubts. If he doubts, he wants to be certain. If he doubts, he thinks. If he doubts, he knows that he does not know. If he doubts, he judges that he ougth not rashly to give assent. So whoever acquires a doubt from any source ought not to doubt any of these things whose non-existence would mean that he could not entertain doubt about anything. — Augustine, On the Trinity 10.10.14
I don't understand where you are coming from because it seems incredulous to me that you don't recognize the difference in kind and not just degree between the sensation of red, or seeing an apple, versus the physiological correlates such as electromagnetic frequencies, optic anatomy, neural anatomy, and the like. — schopenhauer1
Is social science a "science" just because it uses data? Perhaps. But is there some aspects that make it different than say physics? — schopenhauer1
Remember that we are not seeing Republicans arrested for wearing their Make America Great Again hats or their Don’t Tread on Me bumper stickers, both fine examples of free speech. The key difference is this: Speech that leads to crime has never been protected from prosecution. Wearing a Second Amendment shirt is not a crime, but conspiring to commit murder is a crime, separate from the murder itself. Lying to masses of Americans that their right to vote was taken away and encouraging them to take it back by any means — as Trump is accused of doing — can, based on evidence beyond a reasonable doubt, constitute a crime.
To suggest that special counsel Jack Smith’s latest indictment on the Jan. 6 assault is just an attack on free speech, as some Republican partisans are claiming, is itself an attack on the rule of law. If a private citizen had organized the events on Jan. 6, there is little doubt that they would have been arrested and prosecuted. The Trump supporters who stormed the Capitol should not be held to a higher standard than the former president. If we decide that presidents should never be charged with crimes after they leave office for actions committed while in office, we are no longer a democracy. — No, fellow Republicans, the Justice Department is not biased against us
I think you continue to misunderstand where I am coming from. — Janus
I don't believe that story because even animals can see and respond to things they have never encountered — Janus
It's happened before as a result of global warming, and the conveyor is slowing as we speak.
— frank
Let's hope.
— Quixodian
What? It would be beyond catastrophic if it happened again. — frank
I think all the evidence points to the fact that the only world we share is the publicly accessible empirical world. — Janus
It's happened before as a result of global warming, and the conveyor is slowing as we speak. — frank
That would send the climate into a deep cold spell. — frank
Again to quote Cassirer (sorry but it is what I'm currently reading): We experience ourselves as having an influence...[an] essential, constitutive aspect in all our "consciousness of reality." — Pantagruel
Man is that part of reality in which and through which the cosmic process has become conscious and has begun to comprehend itself. His supreme task is to increase that conscious comprehension and to apply it as fully as possible to guide the course of events. In other words, his role is to discover his destiny as an agent of the evolutionary process, in order to fulfill it more adequately. — Julian Huxley, Evolution and Meaning
there are prescientific ways of thinking and seeing and being that science occludes. Questions and problems of life that science does not address. — Fooloso4
Aristotle probably had nothing like the modern concept of Electrons or Galaxies, but he saw a need to distinguish Potential existence from Actual being. — Gnomon
indirect realism says those same brains and eyes are mere appearance. — plaque flag
Is it impossible for a brain to be trained to run two personalities? — plaque flag
1. Subjectivity is the being of the world from/for a certain perspective. — plaque flag
2. The world is only given perspectively. — plaque flag
(from another thread)existence itself implies and requires a perspective. Things don't exist from no point of view, they exist within a context, and the mind provides that context. But we don't notice that, because we're looking from it, not at it. — Quixodian
3. All entities exist interdependently in the same semantic-inferential-causal nexus. — plaque flag
Dualists seem to want to create an extra world for every sentient creature, but then they go on to reason about entities that exist in this extra world, proving that this extra world is just a little glovebox in our world. — plaque flag
In Consciousness Explained, I described a method, heterophenomenology, which was explicitly designed to be 'the neutral path leading from objective physical science and its insistence on the third-person point of view, to a method of phenomenological description that can (in principle) do justice to the most private and ineffable subjective experiences, while never abandoning the methodological principles of science. — Daniel Dennett, The Fantasy of First-Person Science
I'm afraid this is trivially true. — plaque flag
Or must I be infallibly omniscient for it to count ? — plaque flag
The fundamental condition of existence is alterity.
— Quixodian
It is a classic theme. Derrida tried to make difference god.
Is Reality is a self-differentiating self-perceiving self-thinking godstuff ? Maybe kinda sorta ? — plaque flag
They perform the experiment, then cluster around the computer screen to read the result - they all agree they see the same thing. The experiment is replicated numerous times, with the same result. How is this "dependence" upon a particular "embodied" scientist? — jgill
Are you saying there is a hard problem of biology too? — T Clark
The idea that life evolved naturally on the primitive Earth suggests that the first cells came into being by spontaneous chemical reactions, and this is equivalent to saying that there is no fundamental divide between life and matter. This is the chemical paradigm, a view that is very popular today and that is often considered in agreement with the Darwinian paradigm, but this is not the case. The reason is that natural selection, the cornerstone of Darwinian evolution, does not exist in inanimate matter. In the 1950s and 1960s, furthermore, molecular biology uncovered two fundamental components of life—biological information and the genetic code—that are totally absent in the inorganic world, which means that information is present only in living systems, that chemistry alone is not enough and that a deep divide does exist between life and matter. — Marcello Barbieri, What is Information?
The physical sciences can describe organisms… as parts of the objective spatio-temporal order – [their] structure and behavior in space and time – but they cannot describe the subjective experiences of such organisms or how the world appears to their different particular points of view. There can be a purely physical description of the neurophysiological processes that give rise to an experience, and also of the physical behavior that is typically associated with it, but such a description, however complete, will leave out the subjective essence of the experience – how it is from the point of view of its subject — without which it would not be a conscious experience at all. — Thomas Nagel
they (idealists) still have the problem of explaining what empirical criteria can be used to determine what is or isn't conscious. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Thought is at least correlated with that physical phenomenon, so it's not like you can completely disconnect it. — schopenhauer1
Are we pieces of matter that learned to think? Or ideas that learned to enrobe themselves in matter? Is one of those options inherently less improbable than the other? — Pantagruel
At an abstract level, organisms adapt to different types of information in their environments, producing forms that are specialized in various ways to interact with that information. — Pantagruel
The whole monism/dualism question leads to a category error. Is everything derived from physical matter? Assuming yes, — Mark Nyquist
At an abstract level, organisms adapt to different types of information in their environments, producing forms that are specialized in various ways to interact with that information. — Pantagruel
