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Materialism - Devastator of Scientific Method! / Observer Delusion

But no one is seeing, Myriad. Neural representations are not seen by anyone.

No one claims that neural representations are seen. Objects are seen. A neural representation is part of the process of seeing an object.

No offense, but I think your admirable capacity for abstraction is running amuck.
 
Yes, the brain can and does learn to behave as though an actual observer exists, no problem. But no one is seeing, Myriad. Neural representations are not seen by anyone. Contrary to what Dan believes. Agreed? Whatever is in front of you now. No one is seeing that... agreed?


If the brain is seeing, the organism is seeing.

That is not "no one." It is an organism.

If no one were seeing your post (what is in front of me at the moment), no one could be responding.

"No Man is attacking me!" -- Polyphemus the Cyclops. (Polyphemus was mistaken, to his enormous detriment. You're making essentially the same mistake.)
 
And I'm saying that that is nonsense. My position would be that the sentence "The brain is programmed to behave as though life is happening to someone" is actually comprehensible to most people and means just what it says. Though I would agree that using the term consciousness or awareness in place of life is actually a better option to get things more clear.

There was no argument about it being comprehensible. The point was about how meaningful the point was.

What others have posted in the past is up to them. This is what I'm saying... No woo. No soul. No spirit. And absolutely no observing self.

Which takes us back to the questions, yet again, of what your definition of an "observing self" is, whether we should accept your definition, and whether it would actually have the implications you're claiming it has. So far, based on what you've said and described about the answer to the first one, the answer to the second and third seem to be very clearly "no."

Still, feel free to try to enlighten me about what you think are the actual criteria that generally makes something an "observing self" and why it supposedly cannot be the case under materialism, without invoking something like a soul or spirit.

Aridas,

Do you believe that someone is reading this post? That there is an observing self called Aridas that is doing the reading?

If you answer No, then all cool. What are we really discussing?

If you answer Yes, then hopefully you can get a glimpse of what materialism is up against here. Instinctual Blindness.

For all useful and meaningful versions of the words "someone," "observing self," and the like, the answer is clearly yes, despite your attempt to hand wave that away as "Instinctual Blindness." Why would we accept an utterly useless definition in the place of a useful one, when the utterly useless definition is only being pushed as one part of an attempt to add a thin veneer of validity to blatant fallacy?

Frankly, to be clear, an AI that could "understand" the data and meaning in the post would very certainly count as an observer and potentially also an observing self under materialism, with all the related implications.

No, that's not what I'm saying. I'm not denying the validity of any perceived phenomena. I'm pointing out that the observer does not actually fit into any category of conscious phenomena.

If we use Ned Block's terms, phenomenal consciousness and access consciousness, I'm saying that this observer does not exist in either. What exists is the sense that it exists. What exists is the belief that it exists. What exists is the behaviour as though it exists.

The observer is akin to an unexamined assumption.

For most purposes, social and survival purposes, this does not matter. Having the belief and behaviour of an observer, or an experiencer, are fine. Just believing and behaving a certain way can get the job done.

But when you try to establish the actual veracity of scientific method you need to take into account the actual absence of an observer. It means that objectivity does not actually exist. There are no actual subject-object boundaries because there is no actual subject.

No. More specifically, for your argument here to have any value, we would have to accept your implicit special pleading. There certainly are basic assumptions that people are required to make, yes. Such applies to everything related to our fundamentally subjective experiences, not just the scientific method. Any and all remarks about the scientific method, specifically, can only have any actual meaningfulness when one is already past that level. What you're doing here is nothing more than trying to misapply concepts by and while making empty assertions.

Well, this would all be just great and wonderful, bar at least 3 problems...

* an observing self cannot exist under monist materialism. You are thrown straight into dualism, at least property dualism.

Which begs the question of why you're bringing up materialism monism as somehow relevant in the first place?

* various researchers have pointed out just how the brain creates a sense of personal self via illusion - see Dennett and Blackmore particularly

And? What, exactly, do you think that consciousness is considered by materialists? Something with a distinct physical form of its own, a particular kind of emergent property from a whole lot of rather complex processes, or something else?

* the construction of this sense of an observer can be subjectively witnessed. So your position becomes rather like that of a small child insisting that rabbits can materialise out of thin air, because he's attending a magic show. Once you can spot that the magician has a rabbit up his sleeve, the magic is over.

This... is just you repeating an empty assertion, yet again. Repeating it without actually backing it up meaningfully isn't going to help your case.

Matter can and does produce thoughts. They're not being experienced by anyone.

Again, this is just you continuing to assert that something that fits the definition of the word "person" is not a "person" on the basis of... "because I said so." You could, of course, try to back it up by redefining "experiencing" here to something rather irrelevant to your purposes here, but you're not likely to convince anyone to agree with you about the implications you want it to have.


The Observer is the brain's internalised reflection of God.

In assigning inside and outside so it created a watcher on the outside and a watcher on the inside.

Scientists have largely dealt with the watcher on the outside. But they must still bow and scrape daily to the idea of a watcher on the inside, for fear their travails might lose all meaning...

You should probably do a little introspection when you look back at this post, Nick227. This kind of post is generally a huge red flag when it comes to evaluating how trustworthy the poster is and will generally do far more to convince people that you shouldn't be trusted at all than it will convince them that you actually understand what you're talking about.

Commenting on something noticed is a form of observation.

A potential result of observation, rather than observation itself. Evidence that observation occurred, yes, the observation itself, not so much.

Either way, that's enough of this, for now.
 
No, as far as I can tell, Nick is claiming that the observer, if such there is, MUST be external to the human physiology as a separate entity..


But then he needs to explain why these distinct, external observers are so conveniently attached to only one, distinct human being.

It's like trying to argue that one's left arm is not actually part of the body that it's attached to. It's... well... crazy.
 
What you seem to be saying is that:

A true scientist must not have any metacognitive skills. You are also boasting about your lack of metacognitive skills.

All self examination is futile because it involves modeling the observer, which in this case is oneself. Second guessing oneself is futile because to change ones conclusions requires a model of ones own consciousness.

If the observer is an illusion, then all observation is an illusion. Every scientific field must avoid protocols on how data is collected. Experimental protocol is misleading because to develop a protocol requires an examination of the observer.
NIST scientists should be ignored if not fired. Metrology is unscientific because it analyzes the process of observation. Calibrating an instrument is unscientific because it involves modeling the observer. Every sensory experience has to be accepted as a data because to do otherwise involves modeling the observer.

Engineers don't need standards because setting standards requires the examination of the observer. A real science relies on what works rather than the quality of the observation. One can never evaluate the significance of an observation because to do so involves analyzing the observer.

What should we call this observer free science? I have an opinion! Call it 'Solipsism for Dummies'!



I don't particularly want to get into a deeper discussion with Nick, nor spend time trying to understand what he's actually trying to claim, because I'm pretty sure from previous experience that it will be a tiresome and frivolous waste of time. But in your above explanation - what is meant by the term "modelling the observer"?

If as a scientist (as I once was), in what way am I "modelling an observer" when I make any measurements, observations, calculations, deductions, proposed ideas & explanations etc?

Is the complaint merely supposed to be that any human "observer" is restricted by their human animal nature, i.e. restricted by their capacity for educated, intelligent or accurate analytical thoughts, and/or restricted by human limits of sensory perception, e.g. by the limits of human vision or hearing, and/or restricted by generations of human "conditioning" through which humans preferentially "observe" (see or detect) only certain things that they wish to see or prefer to see, and where they are conditioned by human evolution and/or social factors to neglect or fail to "observe" many important features of anything/everything, such that the end result of all the persons efforts becomes a futile misunderstanding and misrepresentation of some quite different reality that is supposed to exist beyond what any of them can ever detect, see or "observe"?

Is that the sort of claim that is being made?

Because any claim like that needs actual material tangible evidence. Not merely the "evidence" of anyone's philosophical musings about what sort of ideas they can dream up in their head for anything.
 
No one claims that neural representations are seen.

Actually Dan is claiming that.

Objects are seen. A neural representation is part of the process of seeing an object.

Great. So what are the other parts, Paul? Which parts of this process are not neural representation? And how do they transform processing into an observer?

No offence, Paul. But I think you're trying to introduce a gap where no gap exists under materialism. A gap you can hide an observer in!
 
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Great. So what are the other parts, Paul? Which parts of this process are not neural representation?


The formation of an image on the retina, and the reactions of optical receptor molecules to light, for starters.
 
But then he needs to explain why these distinct, external observers are so conveniently attached to only one, distinct human being.

It's like trying to argue that one's left arm is not actually part of the body that it's attached to. It's... well... crazy.

There's evidence the arm exists. No one has yet presented one shred of evidence that an observer exists. It's an unexamined assumption.

Scientists believe in an observer, regardless of the lack of evidence, in the same way fundamentalists believe in God.
 
Let's go back to a question you asked earlier in the thread:

If our brains developed a sense of an observer existing, through evolutionary bias, then what does scientific method look like without this add-on ?


What difference would there be between the scientific method practised by beings with consciousness and the scientific method practiced by non-conscious beings?
 
Various researchers have pointed out just how the brain creates a sense of personal self via illusion - see Dennett and Blackmore particularly


Where is the physical evidence for this?

The construction of this sense of an observer can be subjectively witnessed.


Where is the physical evidence for this?

You have repeated, ad nauseam, that these are two of the points that form the basis of your position. A third is that there is no physical evidence for the existence of an observer (a position that is trivially easy to refute).

….so…where is the physical evidence for your two points?

What is strange is that you are obviously intelligent enough to understand the necessity of consistency, yet you flagrantly ignore this condition, and not only do you ignore it, but you criticize everyone else for what you perceive as this very error.

There's evidence the arm exists. No one has yet presented one shred of evidence that an observer exists. It's an unexamined assumption.

Scientists believe in an observer, regardless of the lack of evidence, in the same way fundamentalists believe in God.


There is vast amounts of evidence for an ‘observer’. At last count they numbered something like 7 billion.

What is amusing is that your criteria for dismissing what you call an ‘observer’ also just as effectively eradicates your own points. You are essentially insisting that because ‘who-we-are’ is a phenomenon that is not, currently, amenable to empirical evaluation… it simply does not exist.

JFYI…neither your conclusions nor the process by which they are achieved (by you, Dennet, Blackmore, or anyone else) are amenable to empirical evaluation either. They are, IOW, metaphysics. They have no ‘physical’ phenomenology. Thus, by your own metric, they can be just as summarily dismissed.
 
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The brain is processing, Myriad.

You are just trying to reverse engineer an observer by dubious use of language.


Seeing is processing. Seeing is computation. Starting with the lens of the eye, which performs the computation of positionally sorting incident photons based on their vector of incidence, but that's just the beginning of a much larger cascade of further neural processing of the image.

Evolution engineers observers, because observers gain survival advantages by observing.

Observers are organisms, not spooks or spirits or memeplexes. "That lion sees me" is information worth paying attention to. "A memeplex in that lion's brain creates the illusion, which is perceived by the lion's self despite that self not existing, that the lion has a self who sees me" is useless nonsense.
 
There is experience but no one experiences.

Therefore with homeopathy, there are experienced homeopaths but patients don't experience any healing.

It all ties together!
 
What is meant here by "you"? Is there such thing?



ETA: Also, Nick, I should let you know that you're doing a classical behavior that a lot of posters do here, where they start opening threads where they're basically repeating the same philosophy. You don't need to do that. It would be better if instead of opening thread after thread to try to convince us of your personal philosophy, that you rather try to explain it better, and also, that you try to pay attention to the points that people are raising toward you, because as every typical poster obsessively trying to convince everyone of their point of view, it seems you're filtering everything that's being told to you, through your personal lens. And that is not very scientific.
Not to mention that we have a number of quacks here who do exactly that. We refer to them kindly as chew-toys!!!!! Don't be a chew-toy!!!!!
 
QUOTE=Myriad;11059382]There is experience but no one experiences.

Therefore with homeopathy, there are experienced homeopaths but patients don't experience any healing.

It all ties together![/QUOTE]

How does one establish we are an observer or there is an observer?

The thought "I am experiencing" or "I am Larry" or "I am separate from this experience of this cup of coffee" or "I am walking with my dog and my dog sees me" these thoughts are not the observer - these thoughts do not establish an observer, these thoughts are just other thoughts in the mind, these are thoughts in the mind with a content of being an observer.

"I am a self", "I am an observer" - these are not the observer - these are thoughts. Can you locate and establish a self / observer independent of content?
 
QUOTE=Myriad;11059382]There is experience but no one experiences.

Therefore with homeopathy, there are experienced homeopaths but patients don't experience any healing.

It all ties together!

How does one establish we are an observer or there is an observer?

The thought "I am experiencing" or "I am Larry" or "I am separate from this experience of this cup of coffee" or "I am walking with my dog and my dog sees me" these thoughts are not the observer - these thoughts do not establish an observer, these thoughts are just other thoughts in the mind, these are thoughts in the mind with a content of being an observer.

"I am a self", "I am an observer" - these are not the observer - these are thoughts. Can you locate and establish a self / observer independent of content?

If your own experience of being an observer doesn't convince you then I don't think words will do it.
 
You know, every now and then someone like Nick will come to this forum and open a thread proposing a new "breakthrough" of knowledge that should, in theory, change how we do science. Coincidentally (or not), it always revolves around the topic of materialism and/or consciousness, which is known to be very appealing to people who love to philosophize and play with the endless possibilities of semantics.

The problem is that all your theories and concepts are meaningless if you cannot give us one simple, concise every-day-life example of how your theory would apply in the real world.

So I'm not gonna bother going any further down this taxonomic rabbit hole. Instead, Nick, I would like you to give us one simple example of how we could apply your new discovery in the real, practical world we live in.
 
How does one establish we are an observer or there is an observer?

The thought "I am experiencing" or "I am Larry" or "I am separate from this experience of this cup of coffee" or "I am walking with my dog and my dog sees me" these thoughts are not the observer - these thoughts do not establish an observer, these thoughts are just other thoughts in the mind, these are thoughts in the mind with a content of being an observer.

"I am a self", "I am an observer" - these are not the observer - these are thoughts. Can you locate and establish a self / observer independent of content?


The meaning of ‘I am’ can exist independently of thought. Not that there is any way to empirically represent ‘thought’ anyway. There are innumerable examples of meditative practices that endeavor to dispense with what they call ‘thought’. Some variety of identity remains, thus identity is not dependent on thought. Again, this is not an established empirical conclusion, but neither are any of Nick227’s claims…though that does not seem to stop him from using them as such when it suits his purpose.

Essentially we always return to the ineffable reality of being. We exist as whatever an observer / experiencer is (thus confirming that there is such a thing). Nick227 seems to be arguing that since science cannot empirically represent ‘I’ then ‘I’ does not exist. A rather peculiar brand of logic which, if consistently applied, would significantly disrupt just about everything…including science.
 
If your own experience of being an observer doesn't convince you then I don't think words will do it.

I did not suggest one could not, or that I could not - - - just that if one equates the thought or feeling "I am an observer" or "the dog sees me" as the observer - that would be a mistake. The observer is not a thought or feeling. Locating and establishing the observer is not so straight-forward.
 

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