Akhenaten
Heretic Pharaoh
Lemurian has raised some good points though. If you are your brain, Joobz, then you must weigh about three pounds.![]()
I see what joobz means about equivocation.
Lemurian has raised some good points though. If you are your brain, Joobz, then you must weigh about three pounds.![]()
Thank you for providing a perfect example of the equivocation I was referring to.
No apologies needed. there has been too much drift in this discussion and all of it is based upon in consistent definitions being applied. I wanted to use your post as an attempt to refocus on what I was discussing and where the hypotheticals stand.My apologies. I misspoke.
I perhaps meant to say that you were at the van of dealing with that particular hypothetical, but to tell the truth I've lost track to the extent that I now consider myself hypothetically challenged.
I'll just be over here scaring the goldfish if anyone needs me.
Greatmindsbrainsselfsgoldfish think alike.
The problem with the equivocation game that Malerin played is that it is logically inconsistent with his/her argument for a soul.
Silly Malerin; only matter has weight.How much do you weigh? The same as your brain?![]()
If you don't see the problem now, you never will.
There are multiple definitions for words. You are applying a different definition than I am using. HEnce, you are equivocating.I'm sorry, where's the equivocation? You're making an equivalence claim: you are equivalent to your brain. E.g., a bachelor is equivalent to an unmarried man. What is true for one is true for the other.
How much does the bachelor weigh? The same as the unmarried man.
Considering you believe in a soul, your argument is quite dishonest.If you don't see the problem now, you never will.
There are multiple definitions for words. You are applying a different definition than I am using. HEnce, you are equivocating.
in this case, when I say "YOU" I am clearly (to everyone who is following this discussion) referring to the "You that recognizes itself". Your Conscious self.
Considering you believe in a soul, your argument is quite dishonest.
Joobz,
No soul for me, but I think you still have a problem. If you localize the sense of self to the brain, that's fine. But then you are left with an organ that can be further divided. We might ask, "Where in the brain?"
Now, if you go with some particular subsection, then that too can be divided. I'll presume you'll resist that method and instead go with non-local modules interacting -- consciousness arises from the interactions and removing one mass of tissue will interfere with consciousness. (Don't let me put concepts in your mouth if I'm wrong.)
Now, let's see how that works with someone who wants to add another ingredient to the brain itself. We know, for instance, that not having a circulatory system with a functioning heart and lungs will stop consciousness. So we should include those as necessary. But why stop there? What about nutritional requirements? Could even stimuli affect the "self" that results and be said to alter the type of consciousness you end up with?
Coming from another direction, we have examples of functioning brains that aren't conscious -- coma, deep and dreamless sleep.
We also have a kind of consciousness in organisms without brains. Chemotaxis and quorum sensing might be examples -- but only if strict materialism is adhered to. In other words, the brain shouldn't be "special" over and above other tissues at some deep level. Of course, it boils down to whatever we claim consciousness to be, whether it is scalable or discrete. I am not a fan of strict localization although I don't see why a soul would be needed either.
most recentlyWhich post did you make the distinction that "you" refers to "conscious self"? I scrolled back, but can't find it, although I didn't look through the entire thread.
This is the original post that set this all off.Just to be clear, when someone asks you How much do you weigh? what "you" do you think they're referring to? Conscious self doesn't work for those kinds of sentences.
Your question makes no sense in context to my previous posts.You're claiming that your conscious self is your brain? That's a definitional claim, right? You're defining "conscious self" as "your brain". Would you say that your brain is your conscious self?
This makes even less sense in context to what I have already posted.You're going to run into the same problems as if you said Windows is your computer.
I feel like you also need to read my post completely.Joobz,
No soul for me, but I think you still have a problem. If you localize the sense of self to the brain, that's fine. But then you are left with an organ that can be further divided. We might ask, "Where in the brain?"
I say commonly because the brain does seem to have plasticity with some of these wirings. But we have no example of our conscious self residing in the appendix. So I think "brain" is a reasonably small divisible unit for the self.joobz said:To be even more specific, that sense [of self]seems to reside commonly in the frontal lobe.
This path is a nonstarter.Coming from another direction, we have examples of functioning brains that aren't conscious -- coma, deep and dreamless sleep.
i'm speaking of humans not bacteria.We also have a kind of consciousness in organisms without brains. Chemotaxis and quorum sensing might be examples -- but only if strict materialism is adhered to.
So if we replaced your brain with another brain, you would still be you? Just like if we replaced your kidney with another's?In other words, the brain shouldn't be "special" over and above other tissues at some deep level.
Materialist <> Reductionist , by the way.
It would be inaccurate to say that modern materialists "reduce" the mind and consciousness to neurons and/or particles and such.
Rather what they do is figure out how the mind and consciousness emerge from networked systems of neurons and/or particles and such.
This is an important distinction, because without it, you get inane arguments such as "well, since a single neuron is not intelligent, then that means intelligence can not be explained by 'reductionist evolution'."
The counter-argument is that intelligence can emerge from a system of neurons, as such evolutionary selection pressures influence the development of the brain.
The important point of emphasis is in the details of such development, not so much the limited properties of the individual components.
most recently
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=7314708#post7314708
It was the exact sentence before the one you bolded in your previous response to me.
This is the original post that set this all off.
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=7292267#post7292267
Your argument of "how much you weigh" makes no sense in context to the conversation. You are drifting.
Your question makes no sense in context to my previous posts.
read this for my answer.
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=7314708#post7314708
This makes even less sense in context to what I have already posted.
read this for my answer.
http://www.internationalskeptics.com/forums/showthread.php?postid=7314708#post7314708
No evasion on this end. Just demonstrating your failure to actually read my posts.Evasions noted.
So if we replaced your brain with another brain, you would still be you? Just like if we replaced your kidney with another's?
No I believe it comes from God.
The book cited in post #1 probably explains this better than I can. Hit the arrow to page 130 and it starts 5 lines down.
People outside the US might not be able to get this page.
http://books.google.com/books?id=PC...&resnum=1&ved=0CCoQ6AEwAA#v=onepage&q&f=false