The Hard Problem of Gravity

I suppose that I and Six7s and anyone else who is arguing along the same lines as Aku can safely be disregarded.

Well, I'm sorry if you feel left out and I didn't mean to ignore you guys, but I don't think you're quite along the same lines as Aku. It's his "You're being against me on purpose" kinda comment I quoted in my message that got me fired up.

Oh, and Six7s isn't actually arguing.
 
It's not a difficult issue. We know of exactly one way to create a conscious being. We don't know how to do it any other way. If you know how to do it, go ahead.
What is the difference between you and SHRDLU?

Except, of course, that SHRDLU can explain its own behaviour.

Or do what the Pixy does and point to a thermostat and say "Look! It lives!"
I have never said anything of the sort.

Two thermostats, on the other hand...
 
Its a 'field hypothesis' not 'magic-field theory'. Stop deliberately misrepresenting what I say
Sorry, magic-field "hypothesis".

Edited by chillzero: 
Edited for civility
Darn, I missed it. :(

Neural activity
Cannot produce the field you - well, describe is too strong a word - handwave.

There's no need to. Its endogenous.
I see. So it doesn't actually do anything?

More baseless, inane assertion.
No. There is no such field. It does not exist.

Aw, gee. I guess if you say so then it must be. Everyone else must provide evidence and justification for what they say, but every word you utter is infallible truth. You disgust me.
You are the one positing the undefined, unevidenced, impossible, incoherent, magical "field" that contradicts every part of physics, chemistry, biology, neurology, and psychology to purportedly explain something that is far easier explained without it.

So I rather think the burden of proof lies with you.

My apologies for contradicting the inerrant gospel of PixyMisa. Surely, I can be forgiven???
Sure. All you have to do is start making sense.
 
Does "running" exist?

Of course it does.

Strawman. I did not say "consciousness does not exist because consciousness happens" as you appear to be implying that I did.

I did not even say that consciousness does not exist.

The point of my example is that every object that we observe exists in the same sense as 'running'. Atoms are what their constituents do -- literally. We may assume their existence to be a given fact.

I said we can't know that consciousness exists, we can only know that it happens.

Okay then, if you insist, one can rephrase to say that we know consciousness happens. That does not change the fact that its a given reality.
 
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The point of my example is that every object that we observe exists in the same sense as 'running'. Atoms are what their constituents do -- literally. We may assume their existence to be a given fact.

So... if I wish to ask someone who they intend to vote for, you are saying that it makes just as much sense to poll their constituent atoms? Oddly enough, I would have guessed that even polling their constituent organs would have been the wrong level of analysis.

Questions asked at one level are often best answered at that same level. Consciousness is clearly something we see in whole organisms (ok, outside of horror movies where a murderer's hands, transplanted to a pianist, retain their murderous nature... you did see that movie, didn't you?), and so is best answered in terms of whole organisms rather than organs, let alone molecules, atoms, or quarks. This is the case regardless of whether whole organisms may be reduced to collections of organs (they can), molecules (ditto), atoms (ditto), or quarks (ditto).
 
Err... ok... but "1 + 1 == 2" is not an axiom of mathematics.

If anything, that is just a definition of "2," I.E. the successor of the successor of zero, or S(S(0)) or something along those lines.

So thank you for proving me correct -- something you thought was irreducible to the point of needing to be an axiom, because it "seemed" so simple to you as to be self evident, is in fact the result of logical inference applied to even simpler true axioms.

I mean, you can add whatever you want as an axiom to any system, but since you are wrong about this statement needing to be an axiom maybe you are wrong about consciousness as well.

I was using the example of 1+1=2 as something that is self evidently true. I also said that the reality of consciousness is self evidently true as per definition 1 of the word 'axiom':

ax⋅i⋅om
   /ˈæksiəm/ Show Spelled Pronunciation [ak-see-uhm] Show IPA
–noun
1. a self-evident truth that requires no proof.


AkuManiMani said:
I've quite clearly explained why consciousness is a requisite of knowing -- by definition. Knowing is an emergent property of consciousness. Period.


Actually, you haven't -- none of the definitions you just listed include "consciousness" anywhere. Of course, you can claim that some of the other terms included require "consciousness" as a prerequisite, but isn't that the same game all over again?

Face it -- your argument, just like the arguments of the HPC that you are supporting, is circular.

Oh, gosh... You're really going to try and resist me point-for-point-for-point and I'm gunna have to whip out the dictionary every time, aren't I? Uhg....this is so tedious...

know
1   /noʊ/ Show Spelled Pronunciation [noh] Show IPA verb, knew, known, know⋅ing, noun
verb (used with object)
1. to perceive or understand as fact or truth; to apprehend clearly and with certainty: I know the situation fully.
2. [/B] to have established or fixed in the mind or memory: to know a poem by heart; Do you know the way to the park from here?
3. to be cognizant or aware of: I know it.
4. be acquainted with (a thing, place, person, etc.), as by sight, experience, or report: to know the mayor.
5. to understand from experience or attainment (usually fol. by how before an infinitive): to know how to make gingerbread.
6. to be able to distinguish, as one from another: to know right from wrong.

Definitions 1 and 3 are particularly relevant to the sense in which I'm using 'know'. To know isn't merely to have information but to be aware of it.



AkuManiMani said:
You've yet to established that its even logically possible for an entity to 'know' absent being conscious. In this case, its painfully obvious that you're the one making the extra ordinary claim and its hightime you started proving some extra ordinary evidence; elsewise, we've no basis for discussion.

Huh?

All one has to do in order to show this to be logically possible is to provide a definition of "know" that can be satisfied by a scientifically observable process.

If you don't agree with that definition, so be it.

What is interesting is that the only difference tends to be this assumption that "consciousness" is required to begin with.

Suppose, for instance, that I said "to know X" simply means "to have a fact X in one's knowledge base, where 'knowledge base' is simply a collection of facts about the world."

What is wrong with that definition -- that it doesn't presume consciousness?

For starters, you're using an entirely different definition of the word 'know' than I've been referring to, and it's clearly not the common usage of the word. In the standard definition(s) of the word to 'know' something is to consciously apprehend information in some sense or another. The above definition you brought forward is in a way analogous to knowledge


Containing a collection of information is not the same as knowing [In the sense that I, or the vast majority of other people use the term]. A book does not 'know' the information it contains anymore than a wiki site 'knows' the information provided in it's articles.

I do agree with you that 'knowing', in some sense, is a kind of 'information base'; the information must be stored and retrievable somehow. The thing is that there is a qualitative difference between having a conscious information base vs. a mere collection of information. Earlier I gave the example of a newborn child containing all the information required to build a human; this does not mean that every person born has knowledge of biology. Clearly, the kind of information a person consciously contains is, in some sense or another, in a different format than information their body uses to build itself. What an individual actually knows is information accessible via their conscious memory; without consciousness they cannot be said to know information anymore than a book knows the information it contains.


I guess you could consider the desire to adhere to the rules of logic and mathematics -- which have, after all, gotten us this far -- to be ideological. Guilty as charged!

Okay, perhaps I was unjustified in saying that your objections were 'ideological'. Even so, there is perfectly rational justification for assuming consciousness as a real phenomenon, IAOI.


You don't understand how subjective experience could be the result of a system that can be fully described by mathematics / physics as we know it. In other words, you think it is irreducible I.E. can't be explained in terms of simpler concepts or, formally, can't be inferred from the existing axioms of any system.

Is that close?

Not quite; I don't think such things are necessarily irreducible. I'm saying that we don't know what physical properties allow/give rise to qualitative experience. Whether it's sensory experiences like olfaction and sight, or emotional arousal, we do not know what in physics allows or generates the type of experiences we get from these stimuli. In short, I'm saying that we don't currently know how the specific qualities of experience arise or why such things should be at all.

I'm of the position that we can gain a better scientific understanding of these processes. I also think that in order to do this, we have to understand the physics of it.
 
I know of no such time period. Quite often I nod off for about a minute, litterally, and I have time to dream, and I most certainly dream right up to the moment I wake up in the morning. As far as I'm concerned, I'm either awaken or dreaming.

There are other people who can vouch for your unconsciousness during your period of 'missing time'. Not only that, but there is technology available to monitor one's brain active during waking and sleeping. The periods of time during which people [and some other species of animals] have dreams take place during a particular phase of the sleep cycle called REM sleep [e.g. Random Eye Movement]. There are very different physiological states, in the brain and body, during the different phases of waking and sleeping and there is abundant scientific evidence that during a person's missing time they are indeed unconscious.
 
How are humans not machines, exactly ?

Humans, and other critters, are analogous to the synthetic devices we call machines in that they utilize energy to perform functions. The difference is that the machines humans humans have developed, as of now, do not meet the criteria of being living biological entities. Machines are a class of technology, meaning that they are inanimate devices utilized by a living creature(s) to perform functions; it just so happens that in humans the capacity to develop technology has increased by an unprecedented degree.

Perhaps one day we will actually have 'machines' that meet the criteria of being actual living entities. Until humans learn to create synthetic life machines will always just be inanimate tools.
 
It's not a difficult issue. We know of exactly one way to create a conscious being. We don't know how to do it any other way. If you know how to do it, go ahead. Or do what the Pixy does and point to a thermostat and say "Look! It lives!"

That is not an answer to what I asked you.

What is the difference between these biological atoms and non-biological atoms and how do you distinguish them apart? Do the biological atoms stop being biological atoms once the person dies or do they always remain biological atoms?​
 
Pointing "to them"--where?
I'll unapologetically move the goalpost and claim that I'm talking solely about the mapping on V1, which coincidentally, happens to be the most firmly defensible "image". I'll explain why I'm moving the goalpost shortly.
You have ripped up an image and given parts of it (odd, that some parts overlap, other parts are "motion" or "hedonic relevance") to a score of independent messengers, each zipping through the city, some to separate destinations, others to the same destination through different stops. If this constitutes "an image" to you, then we will simply disagree.
Then assume we disagree. That's fine. But we disagree about what exactly?

My problem isn't that we disagree, but rather, that I can't seem to make sense out of what you're saying. In particular, it seems to me that I simply get to disagree in the first place--not merely as a matter of personal opinion--but in a fundamentally correct way. That is, it seems to me that I can not only claim there are images in the brain, but I can mean something by it, and be entirely correct about it. And, likewise, I not only can claim that there's a Cartesian Theater, but I can mean something specific and, again, be entirely correct about it. If both of these are true, then your claim that there's no Cartesian Theater is either wrong, or means something different; likewise, your cautions about my not using the word "image" to describe what is represented in the visual cortex is either a misguided assertion, or is a disconnect.

This is the third post I've made in this exchange, and I don't think I quite got an answer yet. I'm going to proceed and play devil's advocate by doing exactly what I think I probably get to do, and I'd like to challenge you to explain where this diverges from your definition set.

In terms of an image, you've been claiming that the things in the visual cortex are not an image, but you've yet to tell me what it means to say they are not an image. So until you give me a better definition of image, I'm going to say that in terms of neural processing, an image is nothing but a spatial mapping of spatial information onto the brain. Given this definition, there is most certainly an image on V1--as there is a spatial mapping on V1 of the retina, down to the blind spot. Forgetting all of the a priori reasoning about consciousness--opinionating about its nature, and what not--which is something I'm not yet interested in--the raw facts, the a posteriori structure of the actual brains we're using to see with, include that there is a spatial projection of the entire visual field on V1. As such, there's an image. Whether there "should" be one or not, whether it is supposed to explain something, or can't explain anything... well, there it is!

Likewise, as with the Cartesian Theater, until you give me a definition, I'm going to say that if all of the following are true, I have a Cartesian Theater:
  • I can identify an image in the brain
  • The image is in large part a source of information about the visual field
  • The image serves as a starting point for gleaning further visual information; the said processing of further information is done in parts of the brain other than the image
The first two can, in a very meaningful sense, be described as a Cartesian Theater screen. The third part is, in a very meaningful sense, ascribable to Dennett's homunculi.

The raw facts are, that there is an image on V1, and that there's a tremendous amount of processing of visual information that occurs using as a primary source, that image on V1. Said processing occurs throughout the rest of the visual cortex, extending outside it altogether. So given the above definition, there's a Cartesian Theater.

Now I'm pretty sure you mean something a bit more specific by image, and a bit more specific by CT. I'd like to know what that is. However, there are some other points about your post to dig through...

The V1 mosaic is not an image; at best it is part of one, at worst it stretches the image metaphor to the breaking point.
Until you define image, I don't know your grounding for making this claim. It may very well stretch your metaphor to the breaking point, but I have no clue what your metaphor is. It most certainly doesn't stretch my metaphor.
If we pretend that our best case scenario qualifies as an image... what is the viewer?
The rest of the brain. The only qualification I need for a meaningful "homunculi" is listed above--I need a "little man" looking at, and gleaning information from, in large part, a "theater screen". That completes, for me, every fundamental aspect needed to make a metaphore. "Little man", formally, to me, means anything smaller than the whole theater. Given the qualifications above, which I deem devil's advocate like but certainly very fair to the analogy, there's a perfectly viable "Cartesian Theater", that actually happens to describe vision.

Should you mean something different by Cartesian Theater, I'd like to hear it. Specifically, though, I would like to note that CT, as far as I understand it, is an analogy invented by Dennett, and furthermore, he specifically claims that it's something people ascribe to without even knowing they're participating in dualistic thinking, and using "such a terrible idea". From a devil's advocate viewpoint, I'm going to claim that all of the accusations of dualism are nothing more than meaningless connotation, and that all that's really being done by proposing a Cartesian Theater is proposing that there's a partition with those pieces... i.e., if I try to find the raw meaning behind the CT removed from all of these reasons why I'm supposedly not supposed to have one, I wind up with a mere description of structure, not some grand dualistic metaphysics. Again, this is from a devil's advocate view, but I'm seriously flirting with the possibility that this isn't an inaccurate description of the situation.

What would cure me is a better definition of a Cartesian Theater, and some sort of reasonable account of why so many people studying cognitive sciences are somehow without knowing it buying into a dualistic metaphysics. You could say I'm a bit skeptical here.
In the story of the blind men and the elephant, we have a reader to combine the disparate elements; if we only have the blind men, each with a portion of the elephant available to them, do we have the whole image perceived? I say no; if you say yes, again, we will simply disagree.
The analogy is poor, though. What actually happens in the visual cortex is nothing like the blind man parable. What happens is more like this:

First off, the men aren't blind--they are just nearly blind. Second, they aren't standing at different parts of the elephant. They're gathered in a crowd, in somewhat of line talking to each other. The guy in the front is staring at the elephant--the entire elephant, mind you, but he is mostly blind. He notes: "Hmmm... there's something over here", waving his arms, "and over here, and here...", etc, simultaneously (sorry, it's a poor analogy) pointing to all of the places where there seem to be things. The second man in line takes a look at it and says, "hmmm... hearing everything you just said, it sounds like the stuff over here is sort of oriented this way, and the stuff over here, is sort of oriented that way", etc... simultaneously talking about rough qualities of the entire elephant. The next man hearing this says, "yeah, it's like it has this sort of shape" to the second man, who agrees since that fits what he said (though he, like many of us, changes his mind midway in the details, but it's mostly like he said, except for the shapeliness pointed out by the third guy), etc.

In other words, these are not blind men playing with what one thinks is a rope, what one thinks is a hose, what one thinks of as a tree, etc., standing at different parts of the elephant. The brain could work this way on the vision problem, it just doesn't. Each man is picking out certain kinds of things from the whole image--except when they don't, but even when they don't, and they're working with portions, it's still a specialized aspect of the image they work on. They just plain aren't splitting the elephant up and handing it to each other.
Parallel throughput processing does not have a place where an image is available, nor a place for a viewer.
But there are images, and viewers. In spirit, it sounds pretty much like what the Cartesian Theater presumably is supposed to do in itself--only it seems there are multiple layers of it (with feedback signals). I'm not quite sure where the CT aspect actually falls on its face.
The tapestry of experience simply is not what it seems.
Right, but that much I can figure out before even bothering with a posteriori.
Any explanation of consciousness needs to explain what actually happens, not the fairy-tale version.
Agreed. That's why I'm not going to trust any sophistry, no matter what ism it supports, until it's backed up by cold hard a posteriori data.

But I still see the problem of "getting to" call this a Cartesian Theater, and "getting" to call those images.

What's more, I'm not really talking about how consciousness works overall... I'm talking only about the visual pathway (for which I'm so terribly a layman, but this is the one aspect that I'm fascinated by, and as such, know the most about). I wouldn't be so forward as to claim that consciousness itself, or any other sense pathway (e.g., hearing), works in similar ways.

Vision, though, is fascinating in this regard, because we can at least loosely trace our way from feedforward effects of the photon all the way up to the feedback effects of attention itself.
 
Well, I'm sorry if you feel left out and I didn't mean to ignore you guys, but I don't think you're quite along the same lines as Aku. It's his "You're being against me on purpose" kinda comment I quoted in my message that got me fired up.

OK, mistook what you meant.
 
That is not an answer to what I asked you.

What is the difference between these biological atoms and non-biological atoms and how do you distinguish them apart? Do the biological atoms stop being biological atoms once the person dies or do they always remain biological atoms?​

There's clearly no difference between biological atoms and non-biological atoms. There is, however, a difference between living and non-living material.

Hence the distinction applies at different scales. It's been suggested that an as yet undiscovered physical field is associated with consciousness. That's one explanation, though I'm far from convinced.
 
AkuManiMani said:
Truth is an invariant statement of validity that remains true regardless of one's relative perspective to it. Heliocentrism and geocentrism are neither true nor false; they are merely relative perspectives within a 'true' framework. The actual truth is that the earth and sun are in relative motion to one another and the rest of the universe; each 'centrism' is merely a view of this truth from a particular "angle", so to speak.

Sorry, but how can you know that is truth? How do you not know that this version is dependent on your relative perspective to it? You are clearly speaking from a 4-dimensional time-space matrix, and you may be utterly wrong by other perspectives.

Your view, however, is very pragmatic; it explains the things geocentrism does, and that heliocentrism does, and why they disagree. It has greater utility, even though it cannot be known to be "true" by your own definition. Thank you for illustrating my point.


That's the thing. One can never reach 'ultimate truth' because one's understanding of reality is always incomplete; one's relation to the truth can be refined indefinitely. The question is, what level of truth are you content with? To an individual who does not work in any field of science the geocentric view might be perfectly practical; of course they would be doing themselves a disservice by not learning what they can about what we currently know about the solar system and the universe at large.

Personally, I find that kind of incurious attitude baffling. Going thru school, I've often been stunned by comments by classmates who complained that learning such-n-such is "such a waste of time" because it would have no practical use for what they would be doing after completing school. How could one not want to learn about and understand as much as they could?

I remember hearing an anecdote [I don't remember who told it or if the parties in the story were real persons] in which a physicist requests government funding for a particle accelerator. When asked if it would advance the interest of national defense the physicist replied to the effect of, "It would make the nation more worth defending." I can relate to such a statement. I strongly feel that there is great value to gaining truth and knowledge for their own sakes; application merely follows from their natural value.

It seems that your temperament is of a more strictly pragmatic nature so you may not value 'truth' to the same degree or in the same sense that I do. While I suppose I can respect such a difference, I find it extremely difficult to relate to. /shrug

AkuManiMani said:
Axiomatic assertion is the unavoidable basis of any description of reality; this includes even Behaviorism. What is of more primary concern is the logical consistency of the postulation [do the inferences follow reasonable givens, do the conclusions justifiably follow from the premises, and is the overall postulation paradox free, etc?] and how much it can potentially explain.

Certainly; one assumes axioms (def. 3 of your dictionary quote in 553) to see how far they will take us. We are supposed to be willing to abandon these axioms if they lead nowhere. We are also supposed to remember that axioms by def. 3 are not axioms by def. 1 or 2; this will become important below.

To clarify, the only axiom I am assuming is that consciousness is self evidently a real process and, as a process, is the fundamental basis for all knowledge [i.e. consciousness is real and entities cannot know anything unless they have consciousness]. Aside from that, the vast majority of claims are logical inferences and postulations from those inferences.


AkuManiMani said:
List the claims from that post which are allegedly "not supportable by any evidence" and I will provide evidence for every one of them

Axiom 3.

First, I'd like to clarify that the 3rd proposition of the post is not intended to be axiomatic. I'll provide some explanation for it none the less but before I do that I think I will post a portion of the post we're referring to for those who don't know what we're talking about:

[1]First off, I'm drawing a semantic line in the sand. When I say "matter" I'm referring to a specific class of 'objects'; namely the units of matter called atoms and things made of atoms. I do this for the simple reason that extending it beyond these criteria tends to confuse the meaning so much that its no longer useful.

What is an atom anyway? Its an oscillating pattern of interacting fields. Atoms and their properties are emergent phenomenon. Simply put, an atom is what it's subatomic constituents do. More broadly, all real entities are patterns or systems of patterns. In my parlance, an entity is identified as its overall system of organization and distinguished from is components.


[2]An organism is a self sustaining system utilizing atoms (which are themselves oscillating patterns of fields). The organism itself constantly maintains a flow of atomic matter and energy into and out of itself to maintain its integrity. The organism isn't so much the atoms that comprise it's structure at any given time but the coherent hierarchy of systems than organizes and harnesses the matter and energy it takes in. Each subsystem layer (from the cellular up to the organ system level) can be thought of as a form of unconscious intelligence in the sense that they process and utilize information for some purpose (e.g. growth, maintenance, etc). In my parlance, an organism is an organizing system of living software operating on/within a substrate or medium of some kind.

[3]Some organisms maintain a structure we humans call a 'brain', which is used to help coordinate some of the gross activity of the rest of the organism (especially locomotion). In atleast some cases, an organism's brain can generate a subsystem of activity that has a property that we call 'consciousness'. Like the other subsystems that make up an organism it intelligently processes informational feedback but unlike the others it is aware. This generated subsystem is what I call the conscious mind [I'll call it the CM for short]. Its generated by the brain during the waking and dreaming states.

Not only is the CM aware of certain kinds of information filtered to it but can intentionally initiate certain kinds of action within the rest of the body, retrieve or reorganize certain stored information (provided, its in the correct format), or even simulate it's own sensory perceptions. In my parlance, the CM is a living subsystem generated by and operating on a brain.

Your question is in reference to Prop 3 [the portion about the 'CM'], right? What I'm referring to is the state our brain sustains during waking and some phases of sleep. I listed capacities that are available during these states such as being conscious of sensory information, voluntary behavior, recollection of conscious memories and the ability to visualize and imagine scenarios. I chose to call this state the CM [or conscious mind] because one's brain processes [an example of a behavior] information very differently than when its in other states [an example of a behavior]. I've run it by friends and professors and I've yet to encounter anyone taking issue with this portion of my post. So I suppose my question is; What specifically do you find objectionable in that passage?


AkuManiMani said:
"'Cats' do not exist; there is simply the collective behavior of groups of atoms which we label 'cat'. To invoke 'cats' is to invoke a fiction since one does not observe the behavior of cats but of collections of atoms."

or...

"'Atoms' do not exist; there is simply the observable and predictable behaviors of electrons and nucleons. 'Atoms' are a fiction, there is only observable behavior"

Do you really, honestly, think those are practical positions? Do those offer more explanatory value for behavior than the "cat" level? Pragmatically, we are looking at a cat, not a collection of cat organs in a cat skin. Clearly, your version of pragmatism is at best a distant mutant cousin of mine.

I wasn't positing those as statements that I hold to be valid and practical. I was using them as examples of the type of reasoning you use to argue that the 'mind' does not exist.


AkuManiMani said:
One can extend this type of logic to every level of organization and basically 'dispel' any entity. Behaviorists, by and large, merely set an arbitrary cut-off point at particular layer of organization in organisms. This isn't necessarily a bad thing if one is simply using it as a way to define a narrow disciplinary focus, but if it hardens into a dogma [as I suspect it has in your case] it ceases to be science and becomes ideology.


Arbitrary? No. Useful. We do this all the time, across disciplines. If it ceases being useful, we must take a different approach. This is not the case here.


It is arbitrary in the sense that geocentrism was/is. It is useful in colloquial terms for a person on the earth to refer to the sun as 'rising' and 'setting' and view themselves as being stationary relative to it. Historically, this view became so entrenched that not only were those who proposed another perspective [i.e. heliocentrism] considered mad, in some instances, they faced violent persecution for even suggesting something as 'absurd' as the earth moving.

I'm charging that you're making the same kind of mistake [sans the burning people alive part :D]. The Behaviorist doctrine is just a perspective w/ limited capacity in helping us explain and understand mental phenomenon. Right now you're scoffing at the notion of there being a 'mind' in much the same way [and for many of the same reasons] that a person centuries ago would scoff at the 'absurd' notion that the earth moves. The whole "mind-is-a-fiction" doctrine has become so entrenched in your school of thought that you've become highly resistant to even honestly considering that there are other valid ways of understanding and approaching the issue of animal behavior.

AkuManiMani said:
I suppose the main thing I'm taking umbrage at is that the basis of most of your objections are ideological rather than scientific in nature. You need to be able to take off your behaviorists spectacles when weighing differing points of view. Judge them by their own merits and not by how much they depart from the ideology of behaviorism, or what ever other 'ism' you happen to ascribe to.

I did judge it by its merits.

Seems to me that you are judging it by the doctrines of behaviorist philosophy.

AkuManiMani said:
Using that same logic, one can claim that there is no evidence of 'cats'. Images, what ever their composition, are ontologically real. The rationale behind such statements like "thus-n-thus doesn't exists because its merely composed of/consists of/emerges from X" is downright silly.

Sorry, you are using other logic. I am not responsible for your strawman of behaviorism.

Oh? So what's the logical difference between the claim:

"Thus-n-thus doesn't exists because its merely composed of/consists of/emerges from X"

and...

"There is no mental image of a cat; there is only neural firing caused by the distal stimulus of a cat"

AkuManiMani said:
Okay, I can accept that. I actually prefer that there be some disagreement -- otherwise we wouldn't have much to talk about :p

What I don't accept are blanket dismissals without balanced consideration of what is actually being said

Glad that's not what I did.

If you say so... But the evidence suggest elsewise, tho :covereyes

So... "the quality of sound"--which? Any? Pitch? Timbre? Loudness? Or is it something more than these? Is there a quality beyond the ones that can be modeled using what we know about the basilar membrane? (JREF poster "jj" has some absolutely stunning papers on artificial simulations of the human auditory system. You might be surprised by how much quality can be quantified.)

I'd very much like to see the links to JJ's papers on this subject; it sounds like they would make a very fascinating read :)

And in answer to your question; in a sense, yes. But I'm referring to the experiential correlates of things like pitch, timbre, and phonal loudness[a.k.a. amplitude]. I'm curious as to the deeper physical reason that there can be any experiential correlation to these phenomenon and why each of us experience the particular 'hues' of correlation that we do. I'm not denying that we can't gain some quantitative understanding of such things; I'm just saying we don't have enough to answer the above questions [or to satisfy my curiosity :D]


I can read a dictionary. I wanted to know what you meant.
So, then, you do agree with the usefulness criterion.
Practicality is not just for teflon. It refers to how well things are explained. Einstein was accepted extremely rapidly, as scientific revolutions go, because his was simply a more useful--explaining more stuff--explanation than Newton's.

Fine, fine. The usefulness of a postulate is a measure of how truthful it is. :p

It seems we have differing temperaments when it comes to such things. For me truth is more 'primary' than practicality but, the 'Truth' is [hehe], that they are essentially correlated. You're right, tho; 'truth' is only as useful as it can be grounded in practicality [I'm curious as to how you would score on a MBTI questionnaire :)]


What would it take for you to falsify your axiom 3?

Convince me that I'm not conscious and that I do not have mental experiences or attributes.

Good luck with that :p

That is not an answer to what I asked you[westprog].

What is the difference between these biological atoms and non-biological atoms and how do you distinguish them apart? Do the biological atoms stop being biological atoms once the person dies or do they always remain biological atoms?​

I'll take a crack at it...even tho you didn't really ask me... >_>

The collective state and organization of those atoms changes after death. The constituents of you body become more more and more thermodynamically like the surrounding environment [i.e. the body decays]. What ever process that maintains and organizes a living individual apparently dissipates upon death.

[Anyways, I gotta get ready for school and I wont be back 'till much later today. I'll post back as soon as I can, tho :)]
 
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It's different to us, hence different. Even though it isn't really and that's just an illusion.

Illusions are damn persistent though when that's what you use to perceive reality.
 
It's different to us, hence different.

...snip...

I'd go a step further and bet if I pursue this westprog will not even be able to give me a coherent definition for "living material", that can be used as a bases for "consciousness".
 
I'd go a step further and bet if I pursue this westprog will not even be able to give me a coherent definition for "living material", that can be used as a bases for "consciousness".

Consciousness is the property that indicates that living material has special properties. Only living material has produced consciousness, as far as we know. Otherwise life would just be some interesting chemical reactions.

Consciousness is a more basic property than life.
 
I was using the example of 1+1=2 as something that is self evidently true. I also said that the reality of consciousness is self evidently true as per definition 1 of the word 'axiom':

But it isn't self evidently true.

It requires a mathematical proof.

If you don't believe me, then contact any mathematician and ask them.

Just because something is extremely easy to understand doesn't mean it is self evident.

Oh, gosh... You're really going to try and resist me point-for-point-for-point and I'm gunna have to whip out the dictionary every time, aren't I? Uhg....this is so tedious...

Your aversion to formalizing what you are talking about is what leads you to circular logic in the first place.

For starters, you're using an entirely different definition of the word 'know' than I've been referring to, and it's clearly not the common usage of the word. In the standard definition(s) of the word to 'know' something is to consciously apprehend information in some sense or another. The above definition you brought forward is in a way analogous to knowledge

See! You think a definition of "to know" should be predicated on consciousness and you are trying to define consciousness in terms of "to know."

I find it remarkable that you can't see how circular this argument is...

Containing a collection of information is not the same as knowing [In the sense that I, or the vast majority of other people use the term]. A book does not 'know' the information it contains anymore than a wiki site 'knows' the information provided in it's articles.

Well that is your problem right there. If you use fuzzy definitions instead of formal definitions, you will get fuzzy results instead of exact results.

No wonder you don't think consciousness can be explained by what we already know of physics.

I'm of the position that we can gain a better scientific understanding of these processes. I also think that in order to do this, we have to understand the physics of it.

Well, that would require a mathematical model of consciousness.

Which is what you seem to be asserting can't exist currently.

So which is it? Can we model consciousness mathematically, or can't we?
 

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