Nonpareil
The Terrible Trivium
…where…specifically, explicitly, and definitelyhas any of this been established???
…oh yeah…I forgot.
N O W H E R E!
We've been over this already. Read the thread before spouting nonsense.
…where…specifically, explicitly, and definitelyhas any of this been established???
…oh yeah…I forgot.
N O W H E R E!
…where…specifically, explicitly, and definitely…has any of this been established???
…oh yeah…I forgot.
N O W H E R E!
We don’t even ‘KNOW’ what consciousness even is (prove me wrong).
…once again…the epileptic on the nest of fire hands…hands a waving…hands a waving…hands a waving!
…but good for you. Once again you’re confirming your rightful status as high priest of the true believers.
Congratulations.
…where…specifically, explicitly, and definitely…has any of this been established???
…oh yeah…I forgot.
N O W H E R E!
We don’t even ‘KNOW’ what consciousness even is (prove me wrong). …once again…the epileptic on the nest of fire hands…hands a waving…hands a waving…hands a waving!
…but good for you. Once again you’re confirming your rightful status as high priest of the true believers.
Congratulations.
It's a valid philosophical position that happens to be wrong.
There's this thing called science.…where…specifically, explicitly, and definitely…has any of this been established???
Oh, and consciousness is self-referential information processing.
And information is?
Indeed it does.Wiki needs an edit.
See: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Information_theory#Quantities_of_informationAnd information is?
It already wasn't. Hard Problem Consciousness is only tenable at all if there is no plausible physical model of consciousness. Even if the model turns out not to match what happens in the brain, the mere existence of such a model falsifies HPC, because HPC asserts no such model can exist.As an aside, Tononi/Koch investigate consciousness using information integration theory. As I said before, if the physiology matches the model then the hard problem of consciousness is no longer tenable.
It already wasn't. Hard Problem Consciousness is only tenable at all if there is no plausible physical model of consciousness. Even if the model turns out not to match what happens in the brain, the mere existence of such a model falsifies HPC, because HPC asserts no such model can exist.
So Dennett and Hofstadter knocked that one on the head back in the 80s. Which does not detract anything from the work of Koch and Tononi and other researchers, of course, just that we already had everything we needed to reject HPC.
So we need to check? The fact is we don't need to check to believe materialism is true. We assume Pluto has a back side and it doesn't concern us because there's no problem before us that it addresses.
Edit: If you're really interested, a good place to start is Shannon's classic paper, A Mathematical Theory of Communication. That single paper essentially gave birth to the modern age of computers and communication.
Turing gave us software, but Shannon gave us hardware.Communications, maybe. But I think the credit for computers belongs to Alan Turing's paper On Computable Numbers, with an Application to the Entscheidungsproblem" which was published more than a decade earlier.
This is a rather narrow interpretation of idealism. Anyway, you are mistaken, it would be an idealist universe in which the level of concretisation of the manifestation of events would be equivalent to that which we currently observe as matter. It is a fallacy to assert that anything in an idealist universe would be any different to the way it is currently experienced.No it's not. There is absolutely no reason for there to be anything material under idealism in the first place. There is absolutely no reason to expect material things to behave consistently if they do exist.
That's just another excuse, and raises the same problem: Idealism can be whatever you like, which means that there's no reason for it to be anything at all.This is a rather narrow interpretation of idealism.
In other words, an infinite sequence of excuses for why your idealist reality is actually a materialist one.Anyway, you are mistaken, it would be an idealist universe in which the level of concretisation of the manifestation of events would be equivalent to that which we currently observe as matter.
The world is what it is. The scenario doesn't change reality. The world is material, so materialism is true and idealism is false.As I have already pointed out, our world is identical under either scenario.
Sure I can. I just did.Unfortunately your entire argument is rendered impotent. You cannot address it without dealing with the philosophical caveats.
I would suggest that using the word consciousness is too vague a concept and is treading too far on the materialist side, which may result in most of the sniping. Far better to use the word being, a being, a being is a living entity. This entity may have a mind, it may have some consciousness, but these are merely mechanisms exploited by the being, not to be confused with the being itself.Then why the crap are people supposing it under idealism? If we don't know what consciousness is as a formal matter (while some infer it as an epiphenomen from physical processes, iirc Tononi/Koch have argued that the integration of physical processing can measure consciousness as they qualify it) why are we so cavalier to suppose it? Just because we all agree we experience something which we call consciousness, no matter how much physics, interaction, and information that is observed?
When we have plenty of empirical data to suggest that our experiences are influenced physically we could just say "well that's just those experiences, that's not what consciousness is". Seems to me that consciousness can be as wishy-washy as we want it to. And that has nothing to do with materialism or idealism, though idealism needs a "mind" for reality.
It seems that consciousness, or the mind, is a schmoo term. It means everything you need it to mean when you want it to (using the "royal 'you'", not referring specifically to you Annnnnoid)