That includes the stipulation that GCS theory is right. If it is then I can. But, I'm saying that there is an observer. I'm saying that this can be defined and explained.
OK, great. Please go for it.
ps what's gcs theory please?
That includes the stipulation that GCS theory is right. If it is then I can. But, I'm saying that there is an observer. I'm saying that this can be defined and explained.
Watching two philosophers discuss consciousness is like watching two interior decorators who have never picked up a hammer discuss how to build a house. If philosophy alone could have answered the question then it would have a millennium ago. You don't seem to be aware that consciousness is much more complex than you are describing.
Not being seen by 'anyone': What did you expect to find? If you agree that brains hosts minds, and the rest are details, what are you looking for, precisely? In reality, no less? This still smacks of homunculus hunting, while debating veridical perception, a fun topic in... philosophy.
The sense we have of observation occurring: Obviously it takes self-awareness to have a sense of this kind, a sort of meta-observation allowed by the sense of self.
How long does it take two philosophers to change a tire? Forever, since they can't agree on what 'flatness' means.
With a statement that flat, you imply more of yourself than you show. There is some due diligence missing.
How many materialists does it take to find an observer?
None. Real materialists don't waste their time with obviously futile tasks!
As I've repeatedly said to Nonpareil, who did finally concur, redescribing observation as a system property
is valid but does not account for how things appear to be, in this instance.
This is important when we consider monism and science.
So, what does this tell you about distance and measurement?
Or consider this process of neural representation, which we're both leaning towards...
First thing the brain does with it - give it ownership. It's my visual field. A priori? Nope. Adaptive advantage.
Next thing it does with it... break it up into me and not me. The body - me. Other stuff - not me. A priori? Nope. Adaptive advantage.
After that... this locus business described above. Very handy to have a constant seeming locus. A priori. Nope.
After that... inside and outside. These thoughts are inside. That visual field is outside. A priori? Nope. Adaptive advantage.
Now, it is certainly the case that simply because none of this is a priori does not mean implicitly that it's not veridical. But it sure doesn't look too good.
No observer, no point of observation even.
But, oh for sure, none of this poses any problem for good old science! Yeah right!
Well, possibly! Though I can at least spell comprehension! I understood that you were saying that reality can't be affected by what we know. I apologise if I misinterpreted.
You're saying that reality can't be affected by what we know? So, if a child believes that pulling a rabbit out of a hat is real, then it's true that animals can materialise out of thin air?
Let's take a look at something and you can explain it to me.
Your visual field right now is assembled to infer a locus, a point of observation, a few inches back from the eyes. Would you agree?
Do you think this perspective is a priori, that's to say, innate? That would seem reasonable, as it's unlikely it's ever shifted whilst you've been alive. What do you figure?
Because actually it's just this way because that perspective is the most favoured for survival. Take a dissociative anaesthetic, or apply electrical stimulation to a certain part of the brain, and the locus will shift. On the ceiling, beside the wardrobe, in that corner where we never hoover, all over the place. So, it's clear, the brain is just assembling the visual field a certain way because that's how it evolved to behave.
So, what does this tell you about distance and measurement?
Or consider this process of neural representation, which we're both leaning towards...
First thing the brain does with it - give it ownership. It's my visual field. A priori? Nope. Adaptive advantage.
Next thing it does with it... break it up into me and not me. The body - me. Other stuff - not me. A priori? Nope. Adaptive advantage.
Your visual field right now is assembled to infer a locus, a point of observation, a few inches back from the eyes. Would you agree?
Do you think this perspective is a priori, that's to say, innate? That would seem reasonable, as it's unlikely it's ever shifted whilst you've been alive. What do you figure?
Because actually it's just this way because that perspective is the most favoured for survival. Take a dissociative anaesthetic, or apply electrical stimulation to a certain part of the brain, and the locus will shift. On the ceiling, beside the wardrobe, in that corner where we never hoover, all over the place. So, it's clear, the brain is just assembling the visual field a certain way because that's how it evolved to behave.
We can, through various manipulations, make the brain imagine a different locus, and also imaginary objects, but it does not enable us to actually perceive any actual thing we can't see from from the normal perspective.
Nothing at all, except that pure visual assessment is error-prone. That is the reason we invented yard-sticks and such.
Wrong. It is a priori (pending your presentation of evidence to the contrary, of course). I can only see my visual field, not yours, and vice versa.
Are you in any real doubt which part of the world you encompass? That keyboard in front of you ... is it part of you or not? How do you think you can find out?
You still haven't explained why matter/materiel cannot give rise to an observer.
It's not redescribing. To be observation in the first place, it must be a system behavior/property of some kind. There's no valid way around that. The exact nature is up for dispute, sure. Not that it's a system behavior/property, though, which makes this particular claim of yours worthless, from the start, before getting to how it was actually being used.
Fully accounting for how things appear to be is a completely different beast, though not one that you've made much of a meaningful and defensible point about yet.
Seriously, if you actually want to poke at science, an overwhelmingly.........
That what we observe about them is observed and is, indeed, not always interpreted in the same way by the processor. The only potential implications related to such that might have an impact on science, given the actual nature of science, are those that lead to models that are effectively equivalent to solipsism, though, and you've repeatedly made it clear that you don't want to venture there.
God, not solipsism again! Semantic games, solipsism, semantic games, solipsism - it's like discussing something scary with a Sinclair ZX. It just goes into this defensive program, trotting out terms that have not a shred of significance, apparently in the belief that they will make the scary possibility go away.
Aridas, please explain me this.... how can the argument for no observer be solipsist?
(Go on, Aridas, tell me this question is a semantic word game! I dare you!)
Not quite correct. The brain has evolved to do this because it fits reality. We can, through various manipulations, make the brain imagine a different locus, and also imaginary objects, but it does not enable us to actually perceive any actual thing we can't see from from the normal perspective.
So how's your exploration going so far?I'm exploring potential huge fallacies in our means of deriving scientific understanding of our world.
The term "observation" is coming originally from the pseudo-dualistic perspective that the brain generates - there seems to be a locus of attention, there seems to be someone looking from within.
Personally, I think it's not useful to use terms that have arisen in this way, because you can end up "explaining away" phenomena, as opposed to accounting for them, something that does regularly happen in this field.
Well, I am trying to. But I find it not easy with skeptics. They seem hard-wired to try and defend a common-sense viewpoint. That's how it appears to me, that for them something tangible is threatened in this reality that there is no observer.
For me, I can happily accept observation as a system property. I can happily accept the observer as the brain, in this context. It's not problematic. And I can also see that this does not cover so much ground in explaining the phenomenon of the observer, or point of observation, as it appears.
It's not about poking at science. I'm exploring potential huge fallacies in our means of deriving scientific understanding of our world.
Did you see that movie The Big Short? I feel like that character Christian Bale plays here. Morgan Grenfell and Lehman Brothers think their position is completely unassailable - that it's just untouchable. But he can see the huge weakness at the heart of their market.
God, not solipsism again! Semantic games, solipsism, semantic games, solipsism - it's like discussing something scary with a Sinclair ZX. It just goes into this defensive program, trotting out terms that have not a shred of significance, apparently in the belief that they will make the scary possibility go away.
Aridas, please explain me this.... how can the argument for no observer be solipsist?
(Go on, Aridas, tell me this question is a semantic word game! I dare you!)
It is, but for a slightly different reason.
Solipsism is the belief that only one's own mind exists. You go a step further and say that no mind exists. That thoughts themselves don't exist. It's like some weird extreme version of nihilism. Not only does life not matter, it's not even real.
And I simply sit here, observing your attempt to obscure your redefinition of observe into some impossible thing.
ps what's gcs theory please?
Good point. But as far as I'm aware that is not the case. Olaf Blanke famously induced and studied OOBEs, and people saw parts of their bodies that would not be visible with the normal locus. I admit I don't know whether he, or various other scientists who've been involved in this area, tested to see if the dissociated perspective was genuinely perceived, or rather mentally fabricated from the body schema or whatever.
Well, if the actual locus can shift, then perspective would be seen to be non-veridical. So, what we've been measuring with our yardsticks would not really be coherent, rather an anomaly of the evolution of neural representation.
But there is no actual psychological self. There is not actually anything the word "my" applies to. It's a useful illusion.
Yes, as far as we know, the brain creates the representation. The representation is the result of brain activity. Nevertheless it is useful to understand that assigning it ownership is just construction.
I'm just pointing out the facts of the matter. Many things that we take for granted about our visual field and other neural representations simply cannot be demonstrated to be a priori. They are being constructed by the brain to appear as they do, because there has been an adaptive advantage in them appearing this way.