AkuManiMani said:
I'm not saying that perceptions are not responses. When it comes down to it perception is a class of response. What I'm proposing is that there must be a specifiable media which is responding to stimuli by producing what we call perceptions. I'm not saying that experience is not a 'behavior' or response; I'm saying that there must be a very specific class of physical interaction that generates experience and that if we determine what this specific class of interaction is we will have found 'consciousness'.
Fair enough. I think, however, that we've been assuming this additional layer for far too long, and I don't think it's been warranted. This is based on my own experiences, mind you, but also on the direction that the relevant scientific fields seem to be taking.
I think I'd tend to agree with you on that one. As much as my arguments sound like a case for dualism what I'm really seeking to do is propose a way to come upon a more satisfactory definition of consciousness w/o having to resort to Cartesian dualism.
They're still things. Is a wave a process, or a thing ? I honestly don't know how physicists see that.
I'm sure many of them don't worry about the question overly much and just do physics. For the most part, unless one is a purely theoretical scientist or philosopher, physics isn't in the business of metaphysical interpretation. They generally just go on the ontological terms already put in place and use them as best they can.
Personally, I'm a bit obsessive about trying to categorize and make sense of the world in my own way. Just as long as the schemes I'm going by are consistent with known facts and logically coherent I'm not too concerned with whether or not its a mainstream opinion. I guess a big part of why I like participating on these forums is that I get help from other people to make sure they actually
are logically sound.
Not really. Words have arbitrary meaning but they do have meaning because we give meaning to them. Phonemes have no meaning in any language.
It seems like this is more of a
to-may-to/
to-mah-to issue. Even if we come to some kind of mutual agreement on this its probably not a worthwhile digression. We could probably start an entirely different discussion on this topic alone.
AkuManiMani said:
So you view science as being more a search for process rather than substance?
Indeed.
Okay
AkuManiMani said:
If even light and sound can be broken down into particulate quanta, what makes you think that 'private behaviors' would be exempt?
Again I 'd go with the "running" analogy. You can't talk about the act by refering to its sub-atomic constituents only. You have to describe their behaviour as well.
And even if I agreed, I'd simply answer that the quanta of private behaviours are the same quanta as those of other behaviours, so the term "qualia" is really a placeholder for something even more basic, anyway.
This is why I've come to the conclusion that what we call consciousness is probably a physical state and 'qualia' would be informational quanta within the context of such a state. I don't think there is some separate metaphysical reality for mental phenomena. In order for the mental to have any physical relevance it must have direct relation to the physical -- and our mental states and thoughts clearly
do have physical relevance. It seems that before consciousness becomes reproducible by computer engineers and technicians it must be better understood by neuroscience and biophysics.
No, indeed. And such ways of thinking produce young-earth creationists, holocaust deniers, and global warming critics.
Which is why I try to base my opinions off of reliable sources. My conclusions and interpretations may be very different from your own but they are still in reference to the same body of established facts.
There is no contradiction. You can infer my consciousness from my behaviour but you do not observe ALL my behaviours.
[...]
How do you determine if I'm more conscious than an 8mm camera, then ?
The main reason why I'm convinced that consciousness is not the same as general information process [
and why I distinguish perceptions from sensory input] is because such processes continue to go on even when we're
not conscious. This strongly suggests that there must be very specific physical criteria for consciousness; its more specific than just receiving/processing sensory input.
As you and others have pointed out, we determine whether a subject is conscious by observing their external behaviors. What I'm proposing is that there must be some way to narrow down the diagnostic list of consciousness even further. It should be possible to find out what
exact physical states and behaviors constitute being conscious. I suspect that once that has been determined scientists will be able to go about figuring out how to determine which 'public behaviors' necessarily correlate with particular 'private behaviors'. Once there is more sufficient scientific understanding of how this comes about, people like
RD will be able to apply it to their field of work. Whether one wants to call such processes 'qualia', private behavior, or magical pixydust doesn't matter. The point is that they are well within the abilities of science to study but the expertise to do so has not been developed yet. There is a hard problem but it
is solvable.