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The Hard Problem of Gravity

I'd say hes about as qualified to speak on computer programing as you are to speak on philosophy of mind. You clearly have no idea what you're talking about on the matter of consciousness.


And there you are, demonstrate to me that the 'philosophy of mind' has anything to do with 'consciousness'!

That should be really interesting!

You just assert that speculation without data is related to consciousness, now show there is a link. Please.

:)

I like you AMM, but I don't think you have stopped to examine your own beliefs. This is just assertion that philosophy is related to science. Now show me the steps, please.

You have just stated (to me in my warped perspective) that angels dancing on the heads of pins use QM superposition to fit an infinite number of angels on a very small pin.
 
Oh whoops the QM Godwin, this discussion is over!

No need to scale up QM, that is just silly.

Chaos (complex behaviors of deterministic systems) is enough. More silly on you!

:)

There is sufficient scientific reason to invoke QM in biological process since those are the rules governing them. Do you have evidence to the contrary?
And there you are, demonstrate to me that the 'philosophy of mind' has anything to do with 'consciousness'!

That should be really interesting!

First I would like to thank you for challenging my ideas. It really helps force me to articulate them better and make them stronger! :D

BWUAHAHAHAHAHA!

*ahem*

So yea, anyway...

A philosophy is the underlying conceptual framework thru which one examines the world. The field of philosophy is the application of an analytical approach to those underlying frameworks; in much the same way one would approach numbers [Maths], or nature [Science].

Philosophy of the mind is using this analytical approach to how one conceives of the mind and, by extension, the question of consciousness.


You just assert that speculation without data is related to consciousness, now show there is a link. Please.

Do I need to cite evidence that objects fall when you drop them or can you just test it out for yourself?

My speculation is based upon reflecting on my own consciousness from the 'inside' -- so to speak -- and scientific data on a number of different topics, but most especially the brain and biology.

My on first person examination of my own consciousness I trust implicitly. The scientific findings, to date, concerning how the brain works we pretty much agree on. I just interpret all the empirical data differently than you 'cause I'm wired differently. ;)

I'm basically what happens when you expose small children to too many science books and an early age O_o


I like you AMM

I like you too. Lets be friends :)


but I don't think you have stopped to examine your own beliefs.

Oh but I have! Obsessively. In fact I'm so obsessive about being skeptical of my own views that I keep most of them in a limbo of suspended judgment -- what I call the "hold-that-thought" bin. The only ones I present over the internet are the ones I feel are now viable enough to be tested by the rigors of public argumentation on the internetz w/ smart people like you.

I must confess that I'm just using you, and some others on this forum, to help logic test some of the ideas most interesting to me. I am an imagineer and you are one of my quality testers!

Most of your counter arguments have been pretty good so keep up the good work! :D


This is just assertion that philosophy is related to science. Now show me the steps, please.

Modern science and the scientific method were developed by natural philosophers of the Enlightenment period. It has since evolved into a distinct field of it's own but it doesn't hurt to subject it to a philosophical tune up every once inna while.

You have just stated (to me in my warped perspective) that angels dancing on the heads of pins use QM superposition to fit an infinite number of angels on a very small pin.

I'm saying the biological processes are more a part of the weird quantum scale of reality than a an inanimate chunk of matter. In my mind's eye, it seems to me that organisms are scaled up complex uber particles, which is part of the reason our behaviors are so weird and hard to predict compared to, say, a rock.
 
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Yea, that thing people like to hide under the carpet is called the HPC.

...snip...

You seem to have lost track of the discussion - my comment was not in reply to a point about the HPC, it was about an unacknowledged assumption.

But being as how that term has been banned from discussion, for the reason mentioned above, it has been replaced w/ the EMA.

No the label "the HPC" has not been replaced by the label "EMA". You attempted to re-define what we mean when we refer to "the HPC". When it was pointed out to you that your definition did not match the common usage, you said (to paraphrase) "Fine - I'll call what I mean the 'EMA'". But what you refer to as the "EMA" is not the same "problem" as the HPC is meant to contain.


That thing that happens to you between waking and sleep.

Not specific enough for you? ...snip...

Again you seem not to be able to follow the flow of the discussion. I was not asking for any specific definition I simply made a comment that I couldn't answer the question a Member had asked me without them supplying the definition they were using for "consciousness".

Unlike a term with a commonly accepted definion, like the HPC, consciousness is a word that has many different meanings and one that people use in many different ways so it is alway better to clear up how someone is using the word before attempting to answer such a question. Otherwise you often find that you were talking about something totally different to the other person, for example as you did when you created your own unique definitions for a p-zombie and for the HPC.

Hope you've found these explanations useful.
 
I'd say hes about as qualified to speak on computer programing as you are to speak on philosophy of mind. You clearly have no idea what you're talking about on the matter of consciousness. Glass houses, son.
Feel free to point out anything that we ascribe to consciousness that is not covered by my explanation. (Note that when I say "my", I don't claim to have formulated it, merely promoted it in this thread.)

You will be required to show, however, that whatever it is you are claiming (a) exists and (b) is not in fact covered by my explanation.

Oh, and you don't get to redefine terms, either.

Go!
 
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There is sufficient scientific reason to invoke QM in biological process since those are the rules governing them. Do you have evidence to the contrary?
Do you have any evidence whatsoever that quantum mechanics has any influence on consciousness beyond the bulk, statistical properties of the matter that makes up our brains?

If so, feel free to present that, too.
 
Dennet's not saying that because experience is a confused concept that it should be ignored. He's saying that because experience is a confused concept with no referent it should be ignored.

In ignoring experience, he at least has some justification. But when he ignores experience/awareness/consciousness, but then claims to have explained consciousness, he's taking a step too far.

Consider a dictionary. Every word in a dictionary is defined. However, each word is defined in terms of other words. How do we extract meaning from the dictionary when every term is simply a combination of other terms?

In order for a dictionary, and any other defining mechanism, to be useful as anything other than a self-referential closed system, there must be some things which we know before we approach the dictionary.

In the same way, in a world where things are described and defined in terms of the way we interact with them, we must, in order to form the definitions, have an understood basic level of interaction. Since we interact with the world via our awareness, that has to be at a level which cannot, inherently, be described in terms of the things of which we are aware. Nevertheless, we do understand what is meant by awareness. How could we not?

Are you familiar with the vitalism analogy?

Philosophy etc said:
But consciousness is different in that it cannot be analysed in functional terms. That's what zombies show us, for example: we can imagine creatures functionally indiscernable from ourselves, that nevertheless lacks conscious experience. Whatever consciousness is, it isn't just the having of certain functional relations. That's not what we mean by the term - our phenomenal concepts are something quite different.
 
1, That doesn't follow at all. Just because I am unsure about others' subjective experiences (or lack thereof), does not mean I am unsure about my own subjective experiences. Anyone who has ever stubbed their toe knows what I mean. It is not just that you injured your foot; stubbing your toe hurts, it feels bad, and any theory of consciousness better take that into account.
There is an extensive literature on the pain problem in consciousness; I certainly would not be promoting a theory which does not take it into account. Of course, pain is a very good example of how we are unable to describe a subjective experience without reference to a public one; the words we use to describe pain tend to make metaphorical reference to observable events (is it a stabbing pain, or a burning pain? Doc, it feels like somebody hit me with a hammer...), and doctors still have the unenviable task of figuring out whether this person who stubbed his toe and claims it is a 9 on the 10-scale is really in more pain than this fellow with the compound fracture and partial amputation who calls his pain a 6. "Worst pain imaginable" changes as a function of what injuries you have actually suffered; our reports of pain are very much learned, and even our subjective experience of pain is dependent on individual and cultural learning histories.
2, Who's the radical skeptic around here? Do you really walk around doubting you (and other people) are conscious? It's one thing to doubt physical matter exists, it's something else entirely to deny conscious experience. Do you honestly think it's possible you're a zombie?
Yes, I think it possible I am a p-zombie. (Or m-zombie, from an earlier thread.) But then, I am a veteran of these threads going back to Interesting Ian, and I have had plenty of opportunity to come to this conclusion.

I do not walk around doubting that people are conscious, but then, I have a definition of consciousness that refers to public behavior, so there is no inconsistency. It is only those who claim a primacy of subjective experience as the defining aspect of consciousness who are in an untenable position.

I absolutely do not deny conscious experience; what I do deny is that there is some sort of consciousness that we have that p-zombies do not. They behave indistinguishably from us; there is no way to tell them from us; I certainly do not feel some sort of magic inside of me, so I think it entirely possible that I am--and I cannot but think the same of others--a p-zombie.
I must? To deny my own consciousness is to assert it- I cannot undertsand the denial of consciuosness without being conscious to begin with.
Exactly what a p-zombie would say.
Why does it follow? How do you define consciousness? Define "sad" for me. We all feel sad sometimes, and if someone tells us they are sad we know what they mean. So what does that mean "feel sad"?
Do we know what they mean? Each of us has perhaps a unique learning history with "sadness". There is certainly overlap in our experience, but the more dissimilar our environments, the less this would be the case; I suspect that the descriptions of what we call sadness would vary tremendously across cultures. I know that "love" certainly does; I just have not had the opportunity to do the same analysis with "sadness".

And of course, you have had a lifetime of learning in your culture to hone your definition of sadness. Think of a young child just learning the word. How much variety in experience goes into that word, and how much can the child relate to that, even if she has reason to be sad?
If qualia are irrelevant, you won't mind slamming your fingers in the door, right? It doesn't really hurt. That's an archaic term dependent on qualia. You can redefine things all you want to try to remove subjective experience, but at the end of the day, you're going to take the novacaine shot at the dentist. Not because you have some abstract notion to block mental processes telling you a hole is being drilled in your tooth, but because it feels bad.
Wow. You really don't understand*. The door slam and the hole drilled in the tooth are both environmental stimuli (both, in this case, causing tissue damage!). I react to getting my fingers slammed into the door, not to "the perception of" getting my fingers slammed into the door. Or the qualia of the perception of getting my fingers slammed into the door. Or the sensation of the qualia of the perception of getting my fingers slammed into the door. Or the rest of the turtles. Qualia add nothing at all to the equation; they are offered without evidence, and can be dismissed just as easily.

*I infer this from your public behavior, obviously. It is quite possible that you understand perfectly, but consistently behave as if you do not. For all purposes, this amounts to the same thing; it is just the "understanding" version of the "dude, what if you say something is red, and I say it's red, but really what looks like red to me would look like green to you but you've just always called that red...dude, my hands are soooo big...." Red is defined by a set of publicly observable objects and events, not by qualia. We know this, because we agree that these things are red, and those are not. I infer that Darat understands my points because we react similarly to comments; I infer that you do not because you say such things as "If qualia are irrelevant, you won't mind slamming your fingers in the door, right?"
 
I know I have posted a link to this paper on several previous threads, but I'll be damned if I can find the right link right now, so this will have to do. Consciousness as you describe it in your last paragraph above is a trivial and useless thing, not at all what we usually think of as consciousness. It is a "something" that can't really even be labeled, as it cannot be verified as the same from one person to another.

I regard the fact that consciousness cannot be labelled (or defined, or described) as being indicative that it is more fundamental and important than other properties.
 
I regard the fact that consciousness cannot be labelled (or defined, or described) as being indicative that it is more fundamental and important than other properties.

I'm a bit confused. You use "it" to refer to what cannot be labeled, defined, or described. How do you know there is an "it" there? How can you? Mightn't it be "they" rather than "it"? Or nothing at all? Is this one of those god things, that has very specific characteristics that everybody knows, except when you actually try to look at it scientifically, at which point it turns into something that cannot be labeled, defined, or described, but which is excruciatingly important because, dammit, it's god?
 
You wanted me to suggest to you specific approaches to the problem, right? I've posted some of them here, here, and here.

If you've objections to any particular point please state them :)

I have no objections to those points. In fact, people have been doing what you suggest for 20+ years.

I think what you fail to appreciate is how people can talk about something being "simple," like PixyMisa talking about "consciousness," when they really mean the fundamentals are simple and the issue can be as complex as anyone wishes to make it. Sort of like mathematics. Are you aware how simple the axioms of all mathematical systems are? Are you aware how complex the realm of mathematics can be?

That is why I really don't think you can suggest a way for researchers to behave differently. You might think they are barking up the wrong tree, but more than likely they are trying to build a bridge from this tree to the correct one because the bark of the correct one is too slippery to climb. Or something like that.
 
AkuManiMani said:
There is sufficient scientific reason to invoke QM in biological process since those are the rules governing them. Do you have evidence to the contrary?

Do you have any evidence whatsoever that quantum mechanics has any influence on consciousness beyond the bulk, statistical properties of the matter that makes up our brains?

If so, feel free to present that, too.

I've already presented it. The very fact that ALL the significant operational functions of the biology take place at quantum scales [i.e. cellular and sub-cellular scales] is evidence enough to establish the plausibility of the hypothesis. In fact, given what is already known about the brain, is seems extremely implausible that QM scale processes would not have a cogent effect on the neurological function of the brain and organism as a whole.

As I've already said, feel free to present plausible rationale for why this would not be the case. Once you have done so I we will address it.
 
I have no objections to those points. In fact, people have been doing what you suggest for 20+ years.

I think what you fail to appreciate is how people can talk about something being "simple," like PixyMisa talking about "consciousness," when they really mean the fundamentals are simple and the issue can be as complex as anyone wishes to make it. Sort of like mathematics. Are you aware how simple the axioms of all mathematical systems are? Are you aware how complex the realm of mathematics can be?

That is why I really don't think you can suggest a way for researchers to behave differently. You might think they are barking up the wrong tree, but more than likely they are trying to build a bridge from this tree to the correct one because the bark of the correct one is too slippery to climb. Or something like that.

I suppose you are right.

This is clearly an interdisciplinary problem that will require the expertise of many different people from many different fields. Perhaps I'm addressing the wrong profession at the wrong time.

Now that I think about it, at lot of what I'm proposing seems more relevant to philosophy, neuroscience, and biophysics than current AI research. It appears that I was the one barking up the wrong tree. I was too harsh on you; my bad :o

But, do keep in mind that the EMA is still a very real problem, not only philosophically but scientifically as well. Do what you can on your end.

Also, I think I may have stumbled upon a clue of distinguishing part of the 'meaning' problem in my response to yy2bggggs. I hope you find it helpful :)
 
At first I found this rather confusing but I've slept on it and I think I might have found the source of the error

The error is not so much with the factuality of claim 2 but its inclusion as being part of the list.
That's not "the error", that's the problem. Try this one:
  1. Bachelors are not married.
  2. Exactly one claim in this list is true.
  3. More than one claim in this list is true.
Now is claim 2 an issue? Should we remove it from the list?

Also, try considering the meaning of this phrase: "one plus the largest finite number expressible in English in less than twenty six syllables". Is the "correct" way to analyze this to remove that statement from the English language?

It's better to think of such things in terms of ways you can ascribe truth value to all of the claims and be correct. Claims then fall into two basic genres under said considerations--claims that have nothing to do with what truth values you assign, and claims that rely on them. Self referential claims--that is, claims that are, directly or indirectly, about the truth value being assigned to them--are of the latter type. But even those claims aren't necessarily an issue, unless there are no valid ways to assign the values (or, alternately, should you wish to consider it an issue, if there are multiple ways to assign the values).
 
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:lol2:

I love it!
The topic always gets there.
At least a couple of people raise their hands and declare they are P-Zombies and have no self-awareness whatsoever.

Actually, I follow their point.
There is no self that is aware.

The technical problem is how would we replicate a self-concept in an andriod such that she would have this marvelous mirage?

And why the heck would we want to?
We want clever tools not insufferable brats!

(Who's an insufferable brat? Me according to my ex-girlfriend.)
 
AkuManiMani said:
I'd say hes about as qualified to speak on computer programing as you are to speak on philosophy of mind. You clearly have no idea what you're talking about on the matter of consciousness. Glass houses, son.

Feel free to point out anything that we ascribe to consciousness that is not covered by my explanation. (Note that when I say "my", I don't claim to have formulated it, merely promoted it in this thread.)

You will be required to show, however, that whatever it is you are claiming (a) exists and (b) is not in fact covered by my explanation.

Oh, and you don't get to redefine terms, either.

Go!

You see the thing is I, and many others on this thread, have repeatedly and thoroughly done so already. You just seem either unwilling or unable to recognize this. The definition and criteria for consciousness which you have given is actually a redefinition of it. I does not explain, or even address, what we're even referring to.

All that you have explained and described are elements of operational logic and function. Conscious awareness is a separate issue, tho the two are related. The fact that you insist on claiming to have explained conscious awareness, while at the same time denying its self evident reality is absolutely baffling. Your seeming inability to comprehend the inherent inconsistency of your position -- both internally and with established fact -- is even more dumbfounding.

I suppose the old saying that "when one's only tool is a hammer every problem begins to look like a nail" especially applies here. You seem to only be able to think of this issue in terms you're familiar with when, in actuality, the tools you're trying to apply are not applicable.

The more I think about it, the more it becomes clear to me that your field [and rocket's related field of AI] cannot actually address the issue of awareness because it is, fundamentally, a question of biophysics and not really an issue of operational computer logic.
 
I've already presented it. The very fact that ALL the significant operational functions of the biology take place at quantum scales [i.e. cellular and sub-cellular scales] is evidence enough to establish the plausibility of the hypothesis. In fact, given what is already known about the brain, is seems extremely implausible that QM scale processes would not have a cogent effect on the neurological function of the brain and organism as a whole.

As I've already said, feel free to present plausible rationale for why this would not be the case. Once you have done so I we will address it.

I think Stuart Hameroff presented something of the sort at a Beyond Belief conference in 2006 (Quantum Consciousness). I think he worked with Roger Penrose on the theory. The audience wasn't too impressed with him however. Lawrens Krauss, coming from a physics perspective, jumped on him immediately about the QM stuff with something like: "...from a physics perspective, everything is nonsense... maybe I'm being too polite..." Terrence Sejnowski, coming from a computational perspective, wasn't that impressed either. Then there was a neurobiologist who also had some pointed criticism, and a philosopher.


I haven't followed up on the discussion though, maybe there's some papers on the disagreement, I don't know. Anyway, here's the presentation by Hameroff.
 
Do you really not understand the difference between knowing you are conscious and knowing it seems like you are conscious?

I don't see how there can be a difference. An entity that is not conscious cannot be fooled into thinking it is conscious because there's nobody there to be fooled. If it seems as if you are conscious, then you are. Otherwise there is no "seems".
 
That's not "the error", that's the problem. Try this one:
  1. Bachelors are not married.
  2. Exactly one claim in this list is true.
  3. More than one claim in this list is true.
Now is claim 2 an issue? Should we remove it from the list?

Statements 2 and 3 are referential statements about the list and, for this reason, it is semantically inappropriate to include them in it. Statement 1 is the only valid independent claim in that it is not self-referential; therefore adding it to a list of meaningful declarative statements is appropriate. Once again our list comes down to one statement.

With that said, statement 2, as a referential tag, is both true and meaningful. Statement 3 is a compounding of the original semantic error. Its referring to the same list as statement 2 but it contradicts the true status of statement 2 and is therefore false.
 
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