We "understand" a work of art not because we know the mind of the artist, but because we know our own.
Consciousness is self referential.
It creates itself.
It therefore can only be recognized by itself.
The question for me is not how does consciousness arise, which is answered above, but why does consciousness create itself?
Consciousness creation by matter assumes that matter is conscious.
To avoid this dualism I believe the why of consciousness can only be explained within its borders using its substance, thought.
Sure, if we were less pedantic and more helpful we would have gotten to the bottom of the problem of consciousness by now.Exactly. It was and is never going to be simple. It might be one of those things we never qute get a handle on but Im not one of those who advocate there are some things beyond the realm of human understanding.
All I have seen above is a bunch of people trying to score points off one another, pedantic and unhelpful. This is probably why no one has got to the bottom of the question yet.
Robin said:If there is no process and no change then we neither decide nor think - so the question is redundant.And how would we decide whether there is process or change other than employing thinking?
Exactly, this is the unavoidable nature of thinking. It is self referential because I create it myself.
Not my definitions dictionary.com definitions and the point of the exercise was to demonstrate that these concepts are not atomic facts which can be scrutinized by logic. They 'are' self referential, no matter how much you want to analyze them further they won't give. Get over it or lets change the subject to bricks.This has precisely nothing to do with what I said. Providing a circular definition of "think" and "conscious" does not prove that consciousness creates itself.It only proves your definition is meaningless.
Please try, it would be most interesting to see.If someone provided a circular definition of "matter" would that prove that matter creates itself?
You obviously did not read this reply http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=5282531#post5282531But if you create thinking please feel free to go ahead and explain how you create it.
"Thinking" is not a metaphysical proposition as metaphysics pre-supposes thinking.
That is my reading of thisSo what? Did I suggest that thinking was a metaphysical proposition?
Robin said:So "thinking" is no better a metaphysical starting point than "matter".
I never suggested that thinking required proof as I assume it. Feel free not to assume your own thinking. But then again feel free to reply with some further thoughts.I can't even prove there is such a thing as thinking and neither, apparently, can you.
Yes, but you are still taking an experinece, which is 'thing in an of itself' and ascribing to it a value.
We may have experiences that we label as 'Ithink' but that is what they are , experiences, they are no more a valid reference point than any other.
To assert '*I think*' is as much of an assumption as '*matter exists*', it is a face value, an appearance. There is no more validity to *I think* than there is to *matter exists*, the error is the same either way, one can not assume either materialsim or idealism, one can only judge appearnces.
I am trying to get back to not 'what is thought' but the basis of the idea "I think", because that is what we ahce to start at before we can get into the other stuff.
Now it appeared to me that you stated
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showpost.php?p=5278679&postcount=18
Which is a huge assertion, that requires a discussion of the basis of many sperate parts.
In that you have not demonstrated premise 2 'It creates itself.' but merely asserted it.
these are really profound speculations to make, and I think we need to discuss them before going on to things such as
And no way we can even resolve the tautology of
it matters not, the tools we have are the same regardless.
This is not meant to be snarky or mean or judgmental, I apologise if my post appears that way.
If there is no such thing as thinking I didn't decide it.And you decided all of this without thinking I suppose![]()
What - based on a couple of circular definitions from dictionary.com and your own unsupported assertions?Not my definitions dictionary.com definitions and the point of the exercise was to demonstrate that these concepts are not atomic facts which can be scrutinized by logic. They 'are' self referential, no matter how much you want to analyze them further they won't give.
OK, from dictionary.com also:Please try, it would be most interesting to see.
I did. It does not even remotely answer the question I asked.You obviously did not read this reply http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=5282531#post5282531
I said the very opposite. It is not a metaphysical starting point.That is my reading of this
You seem to be very intent upon defending the conceptI never suggested that thinking required proof as I assume it.
Assuming of course that there were ever any in the first place.Feel free not to assume your own thinking. But then again feel free to reply with some further thoughts.
Sorry that looks wildly speculative to me, I will take the time to read through it, but it goes against my childhood training at the feet of my father. (A famous mezo american archaeologist.) Structural analysis of living culture is very difficult to do, economic and game theory provides some metrics for theory, but speculation about un-measurable metrics is fraught with danger.
For example the common Victorian assertions about egyptian culture, which is not montheistic.
More later.
well, I take it all to a neutral stanceAll good David, I am happy for post.
Just to be very clear. I am not referring to the finished product of thinking ideas, thoughts, concepts and assuming them. I am only assuming thinking. Also not your thinking or somebody else's thinking, but my thinking.
then that discusses why one given and not the other..
As far as "matter" is concerned I differentiate between matter and thinking in that matter is "given" and I play no role in its appearance, whereas thinking is what I must be active in for it to happen.
Well that is an even more interesting question.Furthermore thinking cannot be grasped whilst it happens only thereafter.
Are you sure?I can only reflect on my thinking. Whereas I can interact with matter as it appears before me.
I will try to address the rest of your concerns later.
Well by training I am cautious. theer are the personal filters of the people involved and then the cultural filters of the people involved. And all the other confirmation bias, and sampling error.On first impressions I would tend to agree. However the unique documentation by the linguist Wilhelm Bleek and his assistant Lucy Lloyd in the 19th century of Bushman ethnology provides a hugely important resource for understanding ancient rock art directly from the creators thereof.
A specific and limited dictionary filtered through two cultures.In a way this documentation has allowed archaeologists to look back at the archaeological record of abstract representations using a "dictionary" to translate what they observe.
If you want to read some journal publications on the work of Lewis-Williams look here
http://web.wits.ac.za/Academic/Science/Geography/RockArt/Home.htm
I've been investigating Roger Penrose and I found out that he wrote a book about consciousness entitled "The Emperor's New Mind". In it, he argues that classical mechanics are insufficient to study and understand the process of human consciousness, and that quantum mechanics is closer to becoming a tool to understanding it.
Since the issue of Artificial Intelligence has been argued here before, and dualists have argued that you can't explain the "magical" process of consciousness through science and math; it occurs to me that maybe we haven't been fair to the process and appeared too simplistic with our explanations, and we have not fully reviewed in what way is it that consciousness can be approached (And the way Penrose suggest is Quantum Mechanics).
(And considering that things behave very different at the Quantum Level, it looks like this could be a clue to the apparent "mystery" to the behavior and nature of consciousness)
This is why I invite anyone who can contribute their thoughts and knowledge about how consciousness can better be understood from the Quantum Mechanics point of view.
And that includes people who have read Penrose's book and can give their layman version of what's more or less addressed in such book (Trying not to spoil us the surprises too much)
Whether or not you want to read the book should not be determined by any of the summaries put forward so far in this thread. They've all been wildly inaccurate. One might assume that Penrose was some kind of new-Age mystic instead of on of the leading living Mathematical Physicists.
Penrose might well be wrong on some specific issues, but he has one thing going for him - he's the only Physicist who's addressed the issue of consciousness, AFAIAA.
If you accept that consciousness is a physical phenomenon, then you have to assume that it will be explained in physical terms, by physicists.
An advantage of the book is that because Penrose is a physicist, he feels the need to explain exactly what he means by just about everything.
So there's some quite deep physics right from the start.
No, he's not a new-Age mystic. He's simply wrong.
Big deal. My cat may well be the only Cat who's addressed the issue of consciousness. That doesn't mean that "Meow" is a useful or correct contribution.
Not at all. Broken bones are physical phenomena, but they're explained and addressed by physicians, not by physicists.
Yes, but that's overridden by the disadvantage that it's wrong beyond repair from day one. He gets the physics wrong, he gets the cognitive science wrong, he gets the neuroanatomy wrong, and he even gets the math (Goedel's theorem) wrong.
(And, no, Penrose is NOT a physicist. He's a mathematician. Emeritus Rouse Ball Professor of Mathematics at the Mathematical Institute, University of Oxford, with a Ph.D. in mathematics (algebra, specifically) from Cambridge. One of the top mathematicians in the world, but NOT a physicist.)
Wikipaedia said:Along with Stephen Hawking, he was awarded the prestigious Wolf Foundation Prize for Physics in 1988. In 1989 he was awarded the Dirac Medal and Prize of the British Institute of Physics. In 1990 Penrose was awarded the Albert Einstein Medal for outstanding work related to the work of Albert Einstein by the Albert Einstein Society. ... From 1992 to 1995 he served as President of the International Society on General Relativity and Gravitation
And it's all incorrect.
Which makes "deep" rather less than useful.
He might be wrong, but he's certainly not simply wrong, as any perusal of the discussions will show.
I'll leave it to the OP to judge whether "Penrose is not a physicist" has any implications as to the truth of the statement "Penrose gets the physics wrong".
Let's take one concrete example. Part of the collection of mental processes that fall under the label "consciousness" is proprioception. Neuroscience has localized proprioception functions to the basal ganglia, and can make successful predictions based on the knowledge gained from this study. They can stimulate specific brain regions to induce OBEs.
No, he's simply wrong.
There's a reason it's called the Lucas-Penrose fallacy.
It does not, since the fact that he gets the physics wrong (Tegmark's 17 orders of magnitude) is independently documented.
.... And, contra westprog, these neuroscientists are by and large not physicists. Suggesting that the idea that the best people to work on explanations of consciousness are not physicists.