When you're poking at an underlying commonality that must be shared equally by all viable methods?
But you're not doing this, Aridas. The simple truth is that we don't know the degree to which science and scientific method is affected by what's being discovered in neuroscience. We don't know because the neuroscience isn't sufficiently complete yet. That's why I'm saying a lot more scientific attention needs to be focussed on understanding more fully the process of neural representation in the brain.
That is not the same as saying that we know nothing or the same as saying that how it's already being addressed, philosophically, is wrong.
Sure. That's why I'm not taking this position.
As it stands, what you refer to appears to have been taken into account as much as can reasonably be done since around the time that the modern version of science/methodological naturalism began being used seriously.
Fiddlesticks! We didn't have the tech before so we just proceeded as though everything was OK. That's human nature, no problem. But the situation is changing. The reality of a problem is emerging.
A generalized "we don't know how much the scientific method is affected" is best considered to be useless and tossed in with the rest of the currently empty speculation that only prevents 100% certainty, rather than anything of real note.
But that is an honest appraisal of the situation. An issue is emerging. It needs to be recognised and then some intelligence can be brought to bear upon it.
The "that no one is seeing" is pretty much nothing other than a red herring at this point, it sounds like. Your version of "someone" has been worthless through and through. When it comes to predictively-coded, you've got quite a bit of backing up to do for it if you want to pass that claim off in any way that even could actually help your stance in any way. You can, of course, easily pass it off in ways that are entirely trivial compared to your claims, and would not at all affect whether it's reasonable to accept that observers, in the actual meaning of the term, exist.
I agree. I'm not trying to claim that predictive coding reduces the likely existence of an observer. I'm pointing out that, in the list of reasons why we urgently need more brain research, both of these stand out.
What we have is this...
* the need to create a neural basis for optical illusions
* the discovery of bayesian predictive coding
* the discovery that we can trigger locus-shifting experiences (such as oobes) by electrical stimulation to parts of the brain
These 3 reinforce the notion of non-veridical reality.
* the reality that an observer can't exist
This undermines the notion of objectivity being real.
I'm curious. What problems do you think that materialism actually solves for science? Other than just matching with the observed phenomena sufficiently well for there to be predictive value and thus providing a useful model for understanding reality within?
i think materialism creates a useful theoretical framework from which to develop an understanding of consciousness, along with plenty of other phenomena.
What's problematic is that some people are attracted to it because they feel it will reinforce an inherently commen-sensical view of reality. That it will provide them with a platform to from which to denounce other perspectives. To a degree it does do this. But the problem is that materialism, at its core, is far far more challenging a perspective to understand than anything else the human mind has ever conjured.