You give us all this crap, yet you will not admit that there may be something it is like to be a computer. Pfffft.
O...M...G!
You give us all this crap, yet you will not admit that there may be something it is like to be a computer. Pfffft.
What do you mean by "naturally" split? Allow me to argue that this split is completely unnatural.Paul,
Another way of explaining it.
Language is naturally split into subjective things and objective things, into mental and physical.
Agreed.If we allow this dualistic language when defining our terms for the purposes of these arguments then, as we have seen, this leads to logical problems.
John B. Watson attempted this, and it fails. If you are attempting to call modern behaviorists "eliminativists", though, then you are misusing the word. Note that eliminativists are tacitly speaking of a dualistic world, part of which they ignore. This is folly, of course.There are two strategies currently being employed to get out of the logical problem. The first strategy is eliminativism, which effectively chops off the subjective half of language, and all the terms which naturally belong in that half. This works logically, but involves the outright denial of the existence of mind and claims half our language is excess to requirements.
"The" second strategy? "A" second strategy, perhaps, and perhaps not even that. There are other options.The second strategy is to tell a fancy story about how "minds ARE brain processes" and hope nobody notices that the the "ARE" doesn't actually mean anything at all.
But you are still phrasing it in the terms used by dualists. You are just bending over backwards to deny that you are doing so.So the problem with the second strategy is we have an unexplained and apparent inexplicable "IS". Now - think back to my system. What's in it? We don't have any mind or matter.
The very assertion that their IS is meaningless implies that you are still seeing some dualistic difference between brain stuff and mind stuff. Otherwise, why do you find their IS problematic, while your IS solves everything? (for the record, my own view is that the "minds ARE brain processes" statement is simply a poor phrasing of the problem, and when problems are phrased poorly, we get poor answers. But if tied on a railroad track and forced to agree or disagree with it, I would easily disagree with it. Congratulations, someone who has been labeled an eliminativist has now disagreed with both of your strategies.)But what we do have is something called "Being". "Being" is another form of "is" - they are both parts of the verb "to be". So in actual fact the "extra thing" in my system that you might say isn't needed is another manifestation of the meaningless "IS" which invoked by the non-eliminative materialists. But there is a difference. Their "is" doesn't mean anything and mine does.
Re-arranging the deck chairs on the Titanic is not gonna stop it from going down.Theirs is in the wrong place and mine is in the right place. All I am doing is re-arranging the components of the system so things have the correct relationships with each other instead of the incorrect ones.
Geoff
**** Computers do not have minds ****
Fine. Let's accept that. But computers do embody computation. Computation is not a physical thing. Whilst it requires a physical computer of some sort to run on, computation does not in itself have physical properties. Not only that but a wide variety of physical things can implement computation and any one of them can, for example, calculate prime numbers, play chess, simulate aircraft in flight and a whole range of things that we wouldn't imagine just from looking at their physical structure. Just as we wouldn't imagine a physical brain could be conscious. Computation is a "thing" in it's own right, but not a physical thing.**** Computers do not have minds ****
I'm happy to say you're describing a monism as long as this Being thing doesn't actually serve any function.
Are you disagreeing that there may be something it is like to be a computer?Mary said:O...M...G!
But you are still phrasing it in the terms used by dualists. You are just bending over backwards to deny that you are doing so.
The very assertion that their IS is meaningless implies that you are still seeing some dualistic difference between brain stuff and mind stuff. Otherwise, why do you find their IS problematic, while your IS solves everything?
Which reminds me of something I found the other day, that I thought was amusing....Are you disagreeing that there may be something it is like to be a computer?
~~ Paul
http://www.consciousentities.com/There is something it is like.
This innocent-looking little phrase, which I believe comes from Nagel's famous paper 'What is it like to be a bat?' (summary of the paper - 'how would I know?') has played a quite astonishing role in raising the morale of the lovers of qualia. Whenever they're on the brink of throwing in the towel and admitting that it's been confused nonsense all along, they repeat the mantra and everyone brightens up again. The idea is that when you see something red, it isn't just a matter of acquiring some information about the light hitting your eye: there is something it is like to see the colour red.
To me, this is about as sensible as trying to include carnal knowledge in epistemology, or debating the ontology of the 'it' that does the raining. (Come to think of it, some idle philosopher has probably done that last one). When we talk about a thing being like something, that's what we mean - it's like something else. If I eat ostrich, and someone asks me what it's like, I don't screw up my face and say 'Uh, well I can't tell you, but there was an ineffable experience which it was like'. I say 'A bit like beef, with a slightly less granular texture.'
So, if there is something it is like to see red, what is it? Seeing puce?
Are you disagreeing that there may be something it is like to be a computer?
~~ Paul
Who said anything about it being nonphysical? Are we required to load "something it is like" with dualistic notions, too?Mary said:It amazes me how incongruent your arguments are.
Asking this question just shows that you have no idea about what you´re really defending. Why would a physical object have an non physical experience?
Fine. Let's accept that. But computers do embody computation. Computation is not a physical thing.
Whilst it requires a physical computer of some sort to run on, computation does not in itself have physical properties.
Not only that but a wide variety of physical things can implement computation and any one of them can, for example, calculate prime numbers, play chess, simulate aircraft in flight and a whole range of things that we wouldn't imagine just from looking at their physical structure.
Just as we wouldn't imagine a physical brain could be conscious. Computation is a "thing" in it's own right, but not a physical thing.
Now we could go further and say that consciousness is just computation and some do. But we don't have to go that far.
Let's just say that like computation, consciousness is a thing in it's own right, but not a physical thing, even though it is entirely dependent on the physical world for its existence.
Likewise consciousness is brain processes but is not the same as the physical brain.
Geoff, I have no idea what you're saying here. It sounds so heavily dualistic that I don't know where to start. You really need to move along with your description of neutral monism.Geoff said:No. It is a process taking place in a physical thing. That process has entirely physically-describable properties. It has no mental properties. It does not resemble a mind in any way, shape or form. What is DOES resemble are physical processes taking place in a brain. It resembles them because both brains and computers are physical objects which, in some way, process information.
Yes it does. There are no properties of the process going on in a computer that cannot be described physically. None. What sort of properties do you think it has if they are not physical? Mental properties? No. We've already agreed that computers don't have minds, so they aren't mental properties. All of it's properties are properties of a physical process. Period.
Geoff, I have no idea what you're saying here. It sounds so heavily dualistic....
that I don't know where to start. You really need to move along with your description of neutral monism.
Who said anything about it being nonphysical? Are we required to load "something it is like" with dualistic notions, too?
And, by the way, what is it I'm defending?
In a physical world, where only physical things and processes exist, the experience "what is it like to be a computer" is nonsense.
In a physical world, where only physical things and processes exist, the experience "what is it like to be a computer" is nonsense.
What does it mean for something to have a mind?
How is it that people do but computers don't?
What are these mental properties?
What does the "moderate" qualification bring to the table? Does that allow you sneak in a bit of cartesian dualism -- just to cover all bases?Hey, look at the Wikipedia definition of eliminative materialism:
I'm perfectly happy to be called a moderate eliminativist. I don't see anything about denying subjective experience in there at all.
Why?I feel so much better now.
~~ Paul