AkuManiMani said:
When I say "awareness" I'm referring to the state of being aware. The whole issue of the HPC [which I will henceforth all the EMA] is the attempt to define just what exactly does it mean to be 'aware'. Just what exactly is this state and why should it be at all?
Which means you have constructed a kind of conceptual
map. And which means that HPC-EMA is demanding a whole collection of them, one on top of each other. In effect, by piling then on top of another, you don't get to the semantic endpoint, it's just a ongoing movement of syntax.
I think that the study of consciousness, like every other intellectual pursuit, has is no
ultimate end-point. In a sense, this is a good thing because there will always be more for future generations to investigate and learn. The funny thing about studying consciousness in particular is that its like putting a mirror up to a mirror -- which is probably why it will remain a 'hard problem' in some regard no matter how much we learn about it
Anyways, I'm not claiming THE answer to the EMA; what I'm proposing is a possible next step in understanding consciousness
AkuManiMani said:
I'd say that 'awareness' isn't so much the map but the particular medium the map is on/in. Its my position that the state of being aware isn't just a process but should be considered a class of thing IAOI. A specific experience would be a kind of disturbance or wrinkle of awareness.
For first sentence, see above. The two latter sentences are assertions which you can surely make, but is there any good reason to postulate them in the first place? What is the basis for the postulation?
Whats the basis?
Almost two decades of reading, sleeping, and reflecting on a wide range of scientific works [I've been fascinated by science and philosophy since I was little

] related directly and indirectly to this subject. Its a general intuition that's been growing on me since highschool. Needless to say my basis for it is rather broad and it would probably take an entire book to properly lay it out. Obviously, I'm not going to do that here but I did summarize a bit of in this
post.
One of the reasons [which I don't explicitly mention in the link above] is that the
'consciousness as field' [CaF] postulate seems the best way to deal with the
binding problem.
Another reason is that it puts forward a more specific physical basis to investigate consciousness without the vague "well its got something to do with neurotransmitters, and firing neurons, and such".
Also, the CaF dovetails quite nicely with another hypothesis that mainly addresses how memories many be stored across the brain. Its called the
holonomic brain theory.
Those, among other reasons, are my basis for strongly suspecting CaF.
AkuManiMani said:
In short, I'm saying that there must be a physics to awareness and qualitative experience that we simply haven't developed yet.
Yes, I understand your position, but what I don't understand is the 'necessity' of it. It could also be that you're simply drowning in more conceptualizations, with no end in sight.
How would that be different from anything else in science? Is that necessarily a bad thing? I'm just proposing what could be the next of a very long line of theories addressing the scientific and philosophical questions of consciousness.
AkuManiMani said:
Ironically, that's what I'm charging some of the posters here with. They are equating representations of conscious experience with conscious experience IAOI.
Well, but translate "money" for "awareness" or "consciousness" and you understand where I'm coming from. In a way it's like the
banana problem: whatever you might throw at me as an explanation, you haven't explained "banana-ness". For surely it is different form "apple-ness" even though we could agree on the formal taxonomy of both being fruits, ultimately that's just an agreed upon convention.
What seems increasingly apparent to me, is that no real truth is to be found (as in ultimate explanation). What is needed is a useful explanatory system that's
internally coherent, that's all we're going to have. That seems to me where both Pixy and RD is also coming from.
Well, to put this in light of the OP, if everyone just remained content with Newton's definition of gravity we would have never learned about General Relativity. All of our theories are inherently incomplete and tentative. This isn't necessarily a bad thing. It only becomes problematic when we become so trapped by them we blind ourselves to gaining an even better understanding of the world.
I'm just trying to help brainstorm and inspire folks to look at this from a different perspective and possibly discover something new
