Third Eye Open
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Mar 13, 2008
- Messages
- 1,400
*me being a jerk*
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I don't see his statement as a rejection of physicalism. Why do you feel that way about it?
eta: AkuManiMani could you clarify please. Do you feel you are rejecting physicalism up front?
Merry Christmas to you, too.Sometimes I wish I could downvote posts here.
A wrong idea is a wrong idea and coming up with an alternative is not necessary to recognize it as such. If I were to find a flaw in M Theory, I would not have to come up with an alternative unifying theory of physics before voicing my criticism. It is also useful to a discussion to challenge claims that appear wrong or flawed.
Of course. Now that I muse on the it, it occurs to me that the personification of pure evil is SATAN and the personification of the platonic ideal of good is, of course, GOD.
Of course. Now that I muse on the it, it occurs to me that the personification of pure evil is SATAN and the personification of the platonic ideal of good is, of course, GOD.
I don't see his statement as a rejection of physicalism. Why do you feel that way about it?
eta: AkuManiMani could you clarify please. Do you feel you are rejecting physicalism up front?
So has consciousness been fully explained yet? If not please wake me when it has.
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All because of qualia.
I would probably try to determine what the person proposing the hypothesis meant to communicate to me by their references to 'human insight' and 'platonic reality'. What do you mean by those terms?
Um...the way you describe it sounds as if it is like a religious belief to you. Perhaps you could explain what you mean by 'supporting a hypothesis'. Does considering it and/or testing it constitute support in the context of your above question?
This is a sceptic forum. If that is your claim, you need to produce the evidence.You never actually left square one. And you won't, until you recognize that "qualia" is a meaningful term for 'meaning'.
As I said before physical-ism is just a non-falsifiable semantic game; its basic premise is simply that everything real is 'physical'.
...Ergo, physical-ism is simply defining reality according to one's particular conception of what constitutes 'physical'.
So if a given physicalist encounters a proposition that doesn't seem to fit with their personal pre-existing notion of 'physical' they reject it a priori.
In what way is that meaningful?You never actually left square one. And you won't, until you recognize that "qualia" is a meaningful term for 'meaning'.
Sorry. Doesn't work. Consciousness is an illusion. Introspection is hopelessly unreliable. We can see what actually happens in the brain. Test it. Measure it. We know that nothing you are saying is true. Sorry, dude.Again, to even ask the question shows that either A) you are not conscious yourself or B) you have no idea what you're asking.
I already gave as clear and concise a definition of qualia as is posible to convey with words alone. When one speaks of qualia one is speaking of the the fundament the foundation of meaning IN AND OF ITSELF.
You wanna to know the definition of FEELING? Introspect your own goddamn feelings. Wanna know what an EMOTION is? Dude, you %@&*ing experience them all the time! You ask what SENSATION is? Touch your flippin' keyboard! To even ask "what is perception?" -- "what is experience?" -- "what are qualia?" demonstrates a profound lack of self-awareness. THEY ARE THE SPECTRUM OF YOUR VERY BEING!
Really? I'm self-aware. That statement is proof. I have no idea what you are talking about when you mention "qualia". Looks like incoherent anti-scientific nonsense invented by washed-up immaterialist philosophers to me.THAT qualia are is beyond question to any self-aware being.
That's rather a failure on your part then, isn't it? Because our theory of mind not only coincides with confirmable reality, it can actually be communicated.WHAT qualia are is not something that can be conveyed by words alone.
The subjective is a subset of the objective.More pertinent questions would be: What is the ontological relation between our "interior" subjective being and the "exterior" objective world?
Right. Of course we don't reject things a priori. We're basing our theories on the observed behaviour of the Universe. If we reject an observation, then pretty soon someone else is going to come along and make the exact same observation. The Universe is stubborn that way. As are people.Doesn't follow. Whatever the rules of the universe are we have no option but to accept if we are to be honest. We decide what is provisionally true about the world based on evidence and the models that we construct best to explain that evidence. The strength of evidence within a model always depends on the number and types of alternative explanations. If alternative explanations are not available within a model, we are forced to change the model, as has occurred in the past.
I see no question there, just dishonesty.Answer my earlier question, and you'll find that you already know the answer to yours...
Right. How?They do so by learned association. The entities in question must be conditioned to associate particular symbol(s) with some common experience(s) between them.
Right. How?Once the association is sufficiently embedded every time the particular symbol(s) enter the awareness of the conscious entity(s) in question it will trigger the corresponding experience(s).
And, by extension, to the behaviours of reality and reality itself.'Physics' is just a word that refers to our conceptual model of reality.
Nope.Models, by their nature, are tentative and incomplete. I would amend your statement to: "If you can't explain it, tentatively, with physics, then it doesn't exist within our model".
Yep.You are right in one regard. Symbols, IAOT, do not have meaning outside of their association with something else.
What's experience?However, the root "something else", from which all meaning is derived, is experience.
What are these entities? What's this experience? Apparently information processing systems aren't entities with experiences. So what are these entities? What are these experiences? How do they work? Where do they come from? What are they made of?Even an IP system has no meaning as such outside of the context of some entity(s) that can experience them as such.
How do identify a quality then? What is it made of? What does it do? How does it interact?Qualities are the 'suchness' that -define- an experience; symbols are a means of evoking experiences in a -constrained- manner.
"In formation"?Information, broadly speaking, is a constraint -- in formation.
What closed loop might that be?Its high time for you to open than closed loop of yours to the larger reality...
It's fine to point out specific things that are flawed, I'm talking about when the only problem someone is raising is 'we don't know enough'.
It seems that in this thread, many of the objections raised to certain ideas can be boiled down to 'we don't know enough about the brain to say that for sure.'
And then it goes on and on and on and on for dozens and dozens of pages with one side explaining their idea, and the other saying 'but we don't know! we don't know!' Over and over again.
However, the idea that M Theory impacts consciousness clearly falls into the latter category.What's wrong with that? In many contexts that is a serious problem. You can't equate "we don't know enough" with "we don't know enough, because we can't know anything for sure". For instance saying we don't know enough to calculate the probability of a given planet with earth-like conditions containing life, or we don't know enough to conclude that M Theory is correct, is very different from saying we don't know enough to conclude that the Earth is not flat or 10000 years old.
Yes. Yes we do.Well, it's true. We don't know enough about the brain to conclude all that much.