AkuManiMani said:
Yes. The bulk statistical properties of matter can be and are approximated quite well using classical deterministic theories, without employing QM. The thing is, what I'm referring are a class of phenomenon whose behaviors do not lend themselves well to such an approach. I am, ofcourse, referring to the behaviors of living organisms.
Gee... if only one of us were a behaviorist. Oh, wait! I am! Ok, proceed.
You say that as if behaviorism is a particularly insightful approach [emphases added]:
Behaviorism or Behaviourism, also called the learning perspective (where any physical action is a behavior) is a
philosophy of psychology based on the proposition that all things which organisms do — including acting, thinking and feeling—can and should be regarded as behaviors.[1] The school of psychology maintains that behaviors as such can be described scientifically without recourse either to
internal physiological events or to hypothetical constructs such as the mind.[2] Behaviorism comprises the position that all theories should have observational correlates but that there are no philosophical differences between publicly observable processes (such as actions) and privately observable processes (such as thinking and feeling).[3]
From early psychology in the 19th century, the behaviorist school of thought ran concurrently and shared commonalities with the psychoanalytic and Gestalt movements in psychology into the 20th century; but also differed from the mental philosophy of the Gestalt psychologists in critical ways. Its main influences were Ivan Pavlov, who investigated classical conditioning, Edward Lee Thorndike, John B. Watson who rejected introspective methods and sought to restrict psychology to experimental methods, and B.F. Skinner who conducted research on operant conditioning. [3] In the second half of the twentieth century, behaviorism was largely eclipsed as a result of the cognitive revolution.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Behaviorism
Behaviorism is a relic from a time when means of effectively studying the internal realities of the brain [i.e. neuroscience] were unavailable. As a
philosophy behaviorism is epistemologically sloppy, IMO. The assumption that internal states are irrelevant and that external behaviors suffices as a sufficient understanding of an organism shallow and completely uninsightful. I don't understand why such an archaic philosophy appeals to you so much when there is so much more that we can to to gain a deeper understanding of things.
I suppose behaviorism's appeal to you reflects a major difference between you and I: You are satsified with pat, superficial knowledge while I prefer to dig for a real
understanding of the world. Unfortunately, i think this may prevent us from being able to see eye-to-eye on most things
AkuManiMani said:
I very strongly suspect that the reason for this is that those kinds of behaviors are linked inextricably with QM phenomenon.
Do you have an actual reason to suspect that QM adds anything to the equation? Positive evidence?
Yes. I've posted them already. I've linked various articles and scientific papers which support my suspicions and I've gone to great lengths to break down
why I'm inclined suspect as I do.
Pixy already alluded to evolution; we can go a step further and demonstrate that the process of selection works in behavior as well; that is a perfectly good reformulation of operant conditioning.
I don't deny natural selection as
a driving force in biology. I'm just saying that there is strong reason to conclude that other organizing physical principles are at work in living processes and that, scientifically, it would be a good idea to investigate them.
If you had a more coherent picture of what consciousness is (it is no surprise, I agree with Pixy that you are conflating several different terms), you would find much less here to unravel. And no need to invoke QM.
I look forward to evidence of this non-trivial role.
I've already presented said evidence. Whether or not you choose to accept it as personally convincing is irrelevant to the fact that there
is evidence.
Thus far, the only role I have seen for it is to take the place of Descartes' pineal gland, or a magician's smoke and mirrors. In practice, it is not used to explain, but to hand-wave.
I'd say that Pixy's definition of consciousness as
merely reflective processing explains nothing in regards to what is actually meant by consciousness, and is hand-waving of the nth degree.
And FYI, the reason why the discussion has digressed down the road of QM is because I was supporting my claim that a distinguishing feature of organisms from inanimate classical machines is the role QM plays in their functioning. The question of consciousness itself is a bit of a different issue.
It is something that will become much clearer once you have settled your definitions. Operationalization is the key to clearly framing your problem; your definitions are all over the place.
I, and other on this thread, have only only presented
one definition. Each time I personally provided this definition Pixy simply claims that I've not provided a definition. When I rephrase, to clarify, he claims that I've changed the definition. Its a no-win situation when you're trying to have a meaningful discussion with someone who's so willfully dense.
Not as bad as Iacchus used to be, but on that continuum; just because one sense of a word is synonymous with one sense of another word, does not mean that the two words are functionally identical. Our language is much more complex than that.
So you're saying that the problem isn't so much one of definition but of language? Interesting...
AkuManiMani said:
My suspicion is that organisms are expressions of a kind of complex field that organizes the interactions of their constituent atoms. I also suspect that QM will play a major role in understanding this class of field. While I admit that this is speculation, it is based upon reasonable inference from established scientific facts.
And you wonder why we used the term "magic"? You sound like Sheldrake here!
The difference between me and Sheldrake is that he takes a much larger inductive leap than I'm taking here. While I'm arguing my position in terms that can possibly be described with current science [for instance, the fields I'm proposing are information carrying EM fields] Sheldrake proposes mechanisms that much farther away from being described in current scientific terms. While I'm not so certain that I can accept a lot of Sheldrake's more radical claims it seems, IMO, that there is some merit in proposing organizing fields in biology. I just think its extremely premature to start invoking new fundamental processes in nature when current ones my suffice.
I've many specific reasons for proposing organizing fields when it comes to biological functions. A lot of them are presented in some of the articles linked above. I also suspect that evidence for thinking of the mind in terms of an information carrying field can be found in the holonomic brain theory [@
Wikipedia and
Scholarpedia]. Some of my other reasons are based off of my own reflections on the issue which I've posted
here.
What I'm attempting to do here is not invoke 'magic' but to formulate a hypothesis.