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Any proof of the existence of a self?

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Can be determined.
Is there a tree fallen where there was a tree standing yesterday?
Can it become firewood/table to bump one's leg on?

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The cat, by intent, is in the box.
Wondering about the state of the cat is extra. And mostly just plain silly to the extent the example is taken.
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Other than observing, and/or harvesting the tree, or opening the box, the observer does nothing to either.
Both exist (makes noise when it falls/until the air runs out) regardless of any observation.
But here you are actually reinforcing my point I'm trying to make, essentially (at least from where I'm sitting).

Everything you pointed out can be boiled down to the highlighted statement I think. They exist regardless of whether or not we observe them. BUT ... you are only aware of that, because you understand the various concepts that go into their existence in the first place (like what a tree is, where it will be, the fact it is there even though you're not looking at it, the fact there is a cat in the box and opening it will only reveal the state of the cat, etc etc).

All of those are concepts of concepts of concepts. What I'm saying, is when I get to the root, I am aware of the idea of concept itself. And there is some part of my "make-up" that is aware that I am aware of those concepts. In other word, I am looking at myself saying, "hey, you are looking at me", but I'm doing both at the same time. I can be in the "right side" of my brain as well as the "left side" of my brain simultaneously, looking at both sides. It is analogous to having two eyes that work. One lets me perceive things, combined with the other I can perceive depth more accurately.

BUT still ... there is a "third" thing if you will, that is aware that I am on both sides of my brain. That third thing is how I'm able to understand the concept that I'm understanding the concepts in the first place. It's as though I'm observing myself observing, while observing myself.

I think this might be hard to visualize because
a) it could be an illusion LOL :)
b) we are used to thinking of things in terms of symmetry. Two eyes, two ears, two hands, two halves of the brain, etc etc. Perhaps there is a trio at work that is "unseen" which makes it harder to put the finger on, and produces this illusion.

But what I'm saying is that, regardless of whether or not it's an illusion only, it is "something". At least imo.

Now that is a more difficult concept and one that requires some parsing. I am not sure how much research has gone into the 'sense of a self', on one hand there is a lot of research into how the perceptions come about from the sensations, and some strange stuff about how senses interpenetrate, especially in the vestibular sense.

But as far as what constitutes a perceiver? Is it thought, is it meory?

It seems that a brief search is going to be overwhelming! I am not vetting these!

Extended social perception as a model of self perception:
http://www.ocf.berkeley.edu/~johnlab/self.htm

And then I lost interest:

Sorry, I will read later:
http://scholar.google.com/scholar?hl=en&q=research+on+self+perception&as_sdt=400000&as_ylo=&as_vis=0
No worries I lose interest about twenty minutes into something ... LOL :)

I don't think so. I'm looking more at this "self" thing. The assumption is that "I see the tree", but where actually is this is "I" that sees the tree? Is it the body? Are we really saying that the body sees the tree? I don't think so.

Now if you say that this "I" is just a process and not a tangible "thing" so to speak, and that you cannot investigate what "I" is beneath the level of the whole organism, or whole brain, then coolio, no problem. This leaves "I see the tree" with the "I see-ing" bit just as a figure of speech. Which to me is what it is.

Impressions of the tree form in various places inside the brain but there is no one there to see them. They are just there. Yet the brain has learned to create a voice-over - it creates "I see the tree." But this is just something it has learned. There is no tangible "I" that sees the tree in actuality.

The presence of thoughts tends to create the belief that there must be someone who hears the thoughts. Yes? It seems obvious and ridiculous to suggest otherwise. Utterly ridiculous. But when sensory consciousness remains but the amount of thoughts reduce then it can be clearly seen - there is no one there. It is only the presence of thinking that suggests this mental self - this thinker. Without the thoughts there is no one there.

Nick
Again, it's not trying to find an "I" that is seeing the tree. It is trying to find the "I" that is aware of the fact that you see the tree.

That's the "endless loop" of self-observing. And outside that loop, there seems to be a way I can even observe the loop. That is the third "thing" to me .... that is perhaps the "I" in the way I'm describing it. Even if it is an illusion or the result of the processes at work in my cabesa :)
 
The presence of thoughts tends to create the belief that there must be someone who hears the thoughts.


What's the difference between a belief and a thought? Can you have a belief without a thought?
 
In actuality no one is conscious of anything.
You may speak for youself by saying "I am not conscious of anything"
there is this brain, creating these pictures and feelings, and there is this other module doing a voice over that "I am experiencing" this.
Yes that is the expendable, 'little-sir-echo' self
No one is conscious.
The body is conscious
Self is just an aspect of consciousness, not its recipient.
Self is the self reflective point that arises in self-conscious animal bodies.

btw, i would suggest that it is meaningless to ask if someone is conscious of now. Consciousness is now.
Waffle. You are either conscious of being now or you are thinking about it. I leave you to confuse everyone, because you have not realised the greater reality behind the 'illusion' of self. Which is pure perception, consciousness perceiving existence and the whole of the subjective reality at once.
 
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I think therefore I yam.
I think poetically, therefore iambic.
I think musically therefore I jam.
I think of mint jelly, therefore I lamb.
I think about beavers, therefore I dam.
I think about sleep, therefore good night!!
 
Again, it's not trying to find an "I" that is seeing the tree. It is trying to find the "I" that is aware of the fact that you see the tree.

And again that is going to depend upon the defintion of "I".

I will do some reearch but it is part of verbal cognition in some ways, the labeling with internal language. many different models there.
It is partly an illusion created by persistence of memory. the body is the same on many different levels and different on many different levels moment to moment.
Yet the awareness is also just plain old perception. IE awareness of what is going on around 'you'.

This is the danger of the use of blanket words like 'awareness', it actually covers a huge number of possible processes, like attention. (We have possible inputs most of the time, however attention waxes and wanes.)
 
You may speak for youself by saying "I am not conscious of anything"

This is not what I am saying. I'm saying that people tend to create models of self which suggest an observer or experiencer within the brain. What I'm saying is that this "I", this mental self, is purely an emergent phenomenon that arises from brain activity. There is, in reality, no tangible self that experiences or observes.

Nick227 said:
btw, i would suggest that it is meaningless to ask if someone is conscious of now. Consciousness is now.
Waffle. You are either conscious of being now or you are thinking about it.

Can you give me one example of consciousness not occurring now?

Nick
 
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What's the difference between a belief and a thought? Can you have a belief without a thought?

Personally, I'd say you need thoughts to create beliefs but that you can have a belief and operate from it without conscious thinking. I could be wrong here, just how it seems.

Nick
 
Personally, I'd say you need thoughts to create beliefs but that you can have a belief and operate from it without conscious thinking. I could be wrong here, just how it seems.

Nick


Sort of like how you need leggos to create lego structures?
 
And again that is going to depend upon the defintion of "I".

I will do some reearch but it is part of verbal cognition in some ways, the labeling with internal language. many different models there.
It is partly an illusion created by persistence of memory. the body is the same on many different levels and different on many different levels moment to moment.
Yet the awareness is also just plain old perception. IE awareness of what is going on around 'you'.

This is the danger of the use of blanket words like 'awareness', it actually covers a huge number of possible processes, like attention. (We have possible inputs most of the time, however attention waxes and wanes.)
Perhaps it boils down to this:

I go to a restaurant, and I enjoy the food I order by itself without mixing it all together. In other words, I don't pour my drink over my hamburger and then take the corn and pour that on top of that, etc etc. I leave them separate ... even though in my stomach, it essentially gets all mixed together anyway. I like the separate tastes, flavors, and textures to remain separate.

My grandfather, on the other hand, doesn't give a rip about the flavors or textures being separate. It is a matter of eating to live, and he will do exactly what I mentioned above :)

Either way, we both live.

I'm beginning to see this entire section of the forum can be broken down into "tastes great" verses "less filling" ... ;)
 
Biomorph to demonstrate your above statement please describe your whole subjective condition this moment so I can correlate it in my experience, using words such as perception, sensation, feeling, thought, if you want to you can use love, truth, life or death aswell.

I see things.
I hear things
I touch things.
I think things

Love - hormone poisoning

truth - that which is the same for all observers.

life - a form of biochemical, physics related end product derived from primitive self-reproducing molecules

death - cessation of body function, chemical decomposition

You are not allowed to use 'we' either obviously because you are 'I'. Please have a go at describing your inner reality (in the absence of a perceiver!) and that means no reference to the 5 external senses of sight, hearing etc. and certainly no mention of brains because they are not subjective..

Goodluck ;)

I don't have an "inner reality" to describe....just where do I find that data?

Perhaps it got lost......
 
truth - that which is the same for all observers.

I don't have an "inner reality" to describe....just where do I find that data?

Perhaps it got lost......

I enjoy your definition of truth, that is mine aswell. The truth is that which is the same for all observers or the same in everybodies experience.

Your inner reality starts where you feel hungry, where you feel emotion, where you think, where you feel love, where you know truth.
 
Well, I am the brain, change me, as with a stroke or other damage and I can be changed.

Now I will leave it up to other human brains to complicate it all and get all magical.


Paul

:) :) :)
 
Again, it's not trying to find an "I" that is seeing the tree. It is trying to find the "I" that is aware of the fact that you see the tree.

In accordance with the thread title, I was more asking if there actually is an "I" which sees the tree, within the brain. Can you find one?

Nick
 

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