Paul C. Anagnostopoulos
Nap, interrupted.
- Joined
- Aug 3, 2001
- Messages
- 19,141
This sounds impressive because you are using the word consciousness in a grandiose manner, as an umbrella term for thousands of mental processes. It is like using the term weather for the many processes that make up the state of the atmosphere. Doing so makes reduction seem hopelessly difficult and thus absurd. It makes it sound as if reduction could never get at what the weather is really like.Ian said:II: How can you be a reductive materialist? How on earth can you derive consciousness from this clock?
Materialist: Just because we cannot figure out how the clock works now, doesn't mean to say that it works by magic. Eventually we will figure out how it works.
II: Yes yes yes, I understand that we might be eventually be able to work out how the hands move and keep time, but what about the consciousness?
Materialist: The hands moving is consciousness.
II: Eh . .you mean that the hands produce consciousness. So it would just be a brute fact about reality that certain physical processes generate consciousness?
Materialist: No I don't mean that. The hands moving literally is consciousness. Once we have figured out how the hands move, then we have therefore reductively explained consciousness.
II: But this is absurd! Look, we can work out that a wheel moves another wheel etc, leading eventually to the movement of the hands, I agree about that. But how can you thereby claim you have shown that we can derive consciousness?? You've done no such thing man! How do we know the movement of the hands is accompanied by conscious experiences??
Materialist
You're begging the question by impliciting supposing consciousness is not literally the process of clock hand moving.
If we are going to understand consciousness, it is going to be one process at a time, carefully considering why such a process would evolve. If you still want to say "Well, we don't understand the overall grandiose feeling of consciousness," that's fine, but you should also say the same of the weather.
You could do your thesis a favor by explaining how consciousness actually does work and proposing experiments to test your theory. In particular, devise an experiment that can distinguish between naturalistic and idealistic models of consciousness.
~~ Paul