FedUpWithFaith
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- Joined
- Dec 22, 2009
- Messages
- 243
Finally! Something we differ on
I disagree with your assessment that consciousness is a "self-perceived abstraction". For one thing, consciousness begins with the perception of any object, whether they be external or one's self. Also, IMO, its not an abstraction any more than the individual firing of brain cells is an abstraction. Its a concrete phenomenon with essential characteristics inherent to it.
I'd say that the only 'illusions' are our individual interpretations and understandings of the objects we perceive, which will always be incomplete and imperfect. The actual process of perception itself is undeniably real and the sine non qua our existence as subjects and our knowledge of the world.
This is something I'd like to argue about with you on several levels because it has deeper philosophical implications as well. You're going to have to convince me that perception itself is not an abstraction process. Actually, since you believe perception is a computational process, as I do, you're going to have to explain to me how computation is not abstraction. It relies completely on mathematics and symbols or signals and nothing more. Yes, the substrate for computation, in this case the brain/neurons, is "real" but its also mutable and irrelevant. I can simulate a computer simulating a computed ad infinitum if I wanted to to serve as brain substrate. I'm not arguing that mind isn't ultimately dependent on the physical.
When we observe something we are not, in philosophical or real terms, experiencing "the thing in itself". We are experiencing a representation or model of that thing computed by our perception. That "thing" is nothing more than equations (that's a simplification but you know what I mean) in your brain and the degree to which those equations "mirror" reality depends on the quality of functioning. We have all been fooled by our senses and there are many optical illusions I could show you to prove this. This is what Kant called "the veil of perception".
Consider a photograph of a tree. I'd consider the picture of the tree to be an "illusion" in the same sense I described consciousness as an illusion, which is basically a representation that can be potentially distorted and to which there is no guarantee or even possibility of capturing everything in the essense of the object being observed/photographed. A photo of a tree is not the tree itself. It could be out of focus or the colors could be off - even inverted on the complementary color wheel (reds to greens etc). Of course, our minds effortlessly and unconsciously recognize the degree of clarity and color integrity assuming they're functioning properly. In the "world" of the photograph (pretend it was conscious), the inverted-color image is how it would naturally experience its qualia and frankly, it would be no better or worse than ours. In that sense the representation has to be like an illusion, otherwise you'd have to prove to me that anything conscious in the universe perceives what you do exactly as you do. You can't even prove I do.
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