annnnoid
Banned
- Joined
- Jan 1, 2010
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- 1,703
Nonpareil is absolutely correct. Zero evidence for consciousness outside the brain (or more generally, outside computers) has ever been presented.
Zero.
Lots of claims. Lots of claims that evidence has been presented.
Zero evidence.
It is also, of course, impossible. But the fact that it simply doesn't happen is more significant. Things thought to be impossible that happen anyway lead use to scientific breakthroughs. Things thought to be possible that don't happen are discoveries in waiting. Things thought to be impossible that don't happen.... Are impossible and don't happen.
There’s lots of evidence. It simply can’t be scientifically adjudicated. Just like the vast majority of what goes on inside your head cannot be scientifically adjudicated. Like I said…neither side has the empirical advantage. They can’t establish that it is valid, and you can’t establish that it isn’t….
…any more than it can be scientifically established what you dreamed last night
…or why you like chocolate chip cookies
…or whether or not you love your wife
…or how you feel when you ride a roller coaster
….etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc. etc.
Dude keep your extra chromosome out of this conversation, this is how we qualified detection
The inability to detect it doesn't matter so much as whether there is informational changes. Your concerns about the parrot are completely irrelevant. The fact that the image was barely recognizable is of no consequence to the fact that they were able to determine brain activity to an image. Trying to disassociate brain activity from experience is no longer a valid line of thought. Brain activity is physical and its participating in sensation. Deal with it. This little "believer" stuff you're prattling is nonsensical.
And I love how you're the one who loves to say that we have no definition of consciousness but you say you've provided (positive?) evidence that there is a mind outside the head.
That was how YOU qualified detection.
Quite apart from whatever nuanced discussion of information may have been occurring…Belz claimed that science has the ability to adjudicate every single variety and nuance of subjective experience.
Perhaps someone should advise the semantically challenged Belz that when he wants to claim that science has the ability to do something…he should use the words:
‘Science currently has the ability to do XYZ.’
….which, to just about any English speaking human being…is identical to:
“Science can do XYZ.’
…or are you one of those human beings who would interpret the second sentence to mean “sometime in the next thousand years science will be able to do XYZ”…?
…but, of course, that’s just me.
If you want to have a discussion about what, precisely, neural scanning is or is not capable of you will find yourself quite surprised at just how many of these folks fall by the wayside.
Nobody has been suggesting brain activity is disassociated from experience. That we can produce a stupidly unintelligible neural scan and associate it with some variety of external behavior is very old news (like I said…the same thing appeared years ago).
Not to mention that the mere capacity to relate specific neural activity to specific external activity is…at best…mundane. To begin with…any one of the trillions of creatures swarming this planet processes visual activity. It is hardly representative of highest order primate identity (‘us’ being the only thing we know of in possession of that which we call consciousness). Secondly…all that indicates is that somewhere in the physiology of the brain visual processing is translated into some manner of coherent neural activity (that can then be translated back into some vague representation of what is being processed). The relevant point is how does that specific neural activity relate to the conscious experience of the individual in question. Merely asserting that ‘neural activity IS consciousness’ (which is what invariably happens here) is as worthless as the words it is written with.
As has been quite clearly established…given the fact that nobody has any idea of the specific relationship between consciousness and the brain…and the fact that modularity of mind is anything but resolved…we’ll just have to conclude that the question of what that blurry image actually represents will also remain unresolved.
Unless of course you, or anyone else here, wants to answer those questions I’ve dropped innumerable times now. So far, everyone has avoided them like the plague.
The issue is the moronic claims that are consistently being made about a) the current capabilities of neural scanning b) the potential capabilities of neural scanning (“we can generate neural scans of parrots that look like month-old road kill now so just imagine what we’ll be able to do in the future”…wow…bare assertions or bust!) and c) what is actually understood about how the brain produces consciousness.
The other issue is what actually does constitute human behavior / consciousness and to what degree neural scanning can adjudicate these phenomenon.
Pixy (and his groupies)…constantly claims that mind is what the brain does. Behavior. But Pixy carefully avoids ever presenting a comprehensive list of what he actually means by the word ‘behavior.’ A minor oversight no doubt. Sometime in the next thousand years, in principle, it will appear.
As Larry quite accurately pointed out…these threads are riddled with nonsense and woo… and this time it’s all coming from the skeptics. Thus…true believers.
…and precisely where did I indicate that I had positive (definitive) evidence of consciousness outside the brain? If you take the time to read what I wrote…and take the time to think on it for more than three seconds…you will realize that definitive scientific adjudication is NOT a prerequisite for something to qualify as evidence.
Why that is indisputably the case should be obvious to anyone with any more than a fraction of a brain.
Let's see you dance to your own tune, here: Present ONE such pieces of evidence. ONE that survives even a cursory examination.
None shall be forthcoming.
All you have to do is look ( http://www.near-death.com/notable.html ). You can claim all you want that none of the examples listed on that page (and there are thousands of others) can be substantiated. But that is not what I said….was it. The simple fact is, they can’t prove they happened, and you can’t prove they didn’t.
You can whine till the cows come home that this or that rank stupidity explains what happened…but until you can directly adjudicate subjective experience ( and despite your idiotic claims of magical machines…no-one is anywhere close to achieving this capability) neither you nor anyone can even begin to establish that these claims are false.
…and, since perception and the abstract mind are, by default, the primary ontological reality (because these are the only things we actually experience)…claims of personal experience take precedence over any claims to the contrary barring explicit evidence of their duplicity.
IOW…it’s not even up to them to prove they happened…it’s up to you to prove they didn’t. And since you can’t even begin to do that…the claims stand.
This is self-contradictory nonsense. If a hypothesis cannot be scientifically evaluated, then, by definition, there can never be any evidence for it.
And, as has already been mentioned, this also means that, by definition, it is wrong.
It would obviously be a waste of time pointing out just how incoherent this statement is. Presumably you are, as usual, arguing something to the effect that science is the only valid approach to establishing the evidentiary quality of information. That science is the only valid epistemology (just like Pixy…just like Belz…just like tsig…what a surprise).
As I pointed out above…scientific adjudication is NOT a prerequisite for something to qualify as evidence.
…if you are actually silly enough to argue that this is false…then explain what specific varieties of science you referenced every moment since you awoke this morning.
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