A priori synthetic statements

Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:
What's your favorite result?

~~ Paul

The Schlitz/Wiseman remote staring experiments where Schlitz kept getting a stastical positive and Wiseman kept getting nothing. No conclusive explanation has ever been accepted, because Schlitz claims it is down to "the experimenter effect" where the beliefs of the researcher influence the test results. Wiseman simply refuses to accept that this can be the reason, but admits he can't nail down the source of the anomaly. He cannot demonstrate why the result should be rejected. New Scientist carried a long piece about this about three years ago, and included another study which examined what level of stastical result was considered acceptable in other fields. They showed that when it comes to parapsychological effects like the one described above, the statistical "bar" is rasied to whatever is neccesary to exclude unwanted results, even if they would have been accepted in a non-controversial science like pharmaceuticals. So you have double standards employed in order to be able to maintain the claim "there is no evidence", and the reason given for raising the bar is that "there is no evidence.....".
 
Stimpson J. Cat said:
Then you are defining consciousness to have aspects whose existence you could not possibly know about, which is self-contradictory given what the word "consciousness" is actually supposed to refer to. By definition, there can be no aspects of your consciousness which you are not aware of, and all of the aspects which you are aware of affect your brain activity in some way.

This is hopelessly muddleheaded. I do not know I am conscious by virtue of its causal powers. Its causal powers merely refers to its power to affect the physical world. There is no epistemic or ontological gap between the "I" that knows and "my" consciousness, where a causal relationship could dwell. The knowledge of my own consciousness is unmediated. More specifically the recognition of the reality of my own consciousness is not parasitical on any particular brain state.

You're arguing my position is unintelligible from the materialist perspective. This is the informal logical fallacy called begging the question ;)

Notice my position differs from epiphenomenalism because there my understanding of the reality of my own consciousness is parasitical on particular brain states.
 
Stimpson J. Cat said:
Reductivist science? The only science I know of studies all empirically observable effects. Since consciousness clearly affects the brain (at the very least, if it is not brain activity it certainly affects brain activity), it clearly falls into this category. I don't know what you think "reductivist science" is, but I rather suspect that it is some bizarre misinterpretation of science which you think actually represents what scientists do.

Reductivist science is the idea that all phenomena can be understood by an appropriate analysis. In other words any phenomena could in principle be derived by a total understanding of the behaviour of the ultimate relevant parts.




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It is either that which constitutes our sensory qualia, or that which is able to relate the patterns in our sensory qualia as part of our ongoing experiences.
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I have never heard of any scientist attempt to define the category of things which they study in terms of metaphysical terms like "qualia".

Good for them. So what? I have no interest in how scientists define things. You asked me "How do you define "physical realm"?" (emphasis added). The problem with scientists is that they generally are clueless at philosophy (as indeed are many philosophers eg Mr Lowe).

Oh, and BTW, qualia is not a metaphysical term. Now if you were to say it is a supernatural term then I might have some sympathy ;) Incorrigible proof of the existence of the supernatural! :D


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In other words such interaction between consciousness and brain processes would be interactive dualism rather than materialism.
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What do interaction dualism and materialism have to do with any of this?

I was addressing your misunderstanding of what materialism means.

It does not matter to science one little bit whether materialism, or interaction dualism, or some other form of monism or polyism is true. It makes no difference to science. As far as science is concerned, all that matters is the interactions, not some mysterious ontological status of the things which are interacting.

All very interesting I'm sure, but irrelevant to the point I was originally making i.e that materialists cannot allow for the possibility of a "life after death" unless particular physical processes were to be implemented.

Even if some form of interaction dualism is true, science simply doesn't care. It's all physical as far as science is concerned.

Science is not a sentient being. And I repeat, if you label 2 utterly characteristically differing types of existents as both being "physical", this just causes confusion and makes communication impossible.


In fact, science cannot even tell the difference. Science just sees interactions, and attempts to understand and describe them.

Well there you go then. You've just admitted that science cannot accommodate consciousness. ;)
 
Stimpson J. Cat said:
II
[I do not have a definition of consciousness. I do not thi . . . . nay I know it is not possible to define.
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I think you may be confused about what is meant by "definition" in this context. You seem to think that by "definition" I mean "complete description". I don't. The definition of a term is simply the set of criteria for stipulating what the term refers to. If you truly do not have a definition for the term "consciousness", then when you use it, you are just babbling nonsense.

I see. So the fact I understand what consciousness is, even though I do not have a definition, means that I am babbling nonsense in talking about consciousness.

quote:
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I directly experience consciousness. My inner qualitative subjective feel is my consciousness,
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See, that is a definition.

WOW! :eek: I never realised you would be satisfied with such a "definition". I thought you wished me to provide a scientific definition, which of course is not possible.


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and it is quite distinct from tables and chairs and electrons.
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So is combustion, so what?

Combustion is a sequence of physical events. Physical things or events are that which are perceived by consciousness. But the perceiver or consciousness is not itself an object of perception. You're conflating 2 very very different things.


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Indeed there is no similarity whatsoever. Given that it is utterly different from all physical things, I see nothing to be gained in labelling it as physical.
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It is not utterly different from all physical things. On the contrary, it has in common with all other physical things precisely the one characteristic which all physical things share: that it interacts with other physical things. That is the only necessary and sufficient criteria for something being physical, and it is the only characteristic which all physical things share.

The power to interact and only the power to interact is the defining characteristic of physical things. Consciousness differs from all physical things in that physical things do not have inner subjective qualitative feels.
 
Interesting Ian said:
What does the word "somehow" mean in this context? You're misusing the word. It would be correct to say that you believe that consciousness is somehow material. After all, I am just accepting consciousness for what it is. If it exists then it necessarily is immaterial because no sense can be made of the notion that it is somehow material. It's not just that there is no evidence that it is material, the whole notion is simply incoherent.

Well, if merely asserting that the idea of consciousness in the form of atoms is incoherent is good enough for you, then merely asserting otherwise is good enough for me.

I do not need empirical evidence. I am directly aware of my own consciousness and am directly aware it is of a characteristically differing kind of existent from trees, chairs, tables and whatever.

My view is that the question of why you hold this belief to be absolutely true is psychologically interesting, but that the fact you hold this view says nothing about whether you happen to be right or wrong.

So far, there is no evidence you are right and ample evidence you are wrong.

Moreover we know that consciousness cannot be accommodated within reductionist science unless we equate consciousness with either the neurons firing or the function they perform. But of course this is absurd.

Normally I would ask you to justify this extraordinary claim. But it seems highly likely based on your past behaviour that if I did so you would slap a straw man for a bit and then call me names. So I'll save myself the aggravation.
 
Interesting Ian said:
I don't understand how it can be more than the sum of its parts and yet still be material.



Then name some.


Of course I accept the prima facie possibility of such emergence. I don't think it could be described as being material though. It seems such consciousness would need to be an epiphenomenon -- i.e not entailed by the laws of physics.


Perhaps you should read Searle's paper 'Why am not a property dualist' where he defines conscious experiences as being nothing more than physical states of the brain but which cannot be ontologically reducible (subjective experiences more exactly). In this view there is no problem with epiphenomenalism and there is no claim that conscious experiences are non physical (something which you or property dualists assume automatically).

Personally I slightly disagree with his view, we can still talk of emergentism even in this case, we simply cannot talk of consciousenss as a non physical emergent property of the brain. Conscious experiences might be causally dependent only by the brain and with the brain being basically in a 'new state of matter' but this new 'state of matter' is characterized by the property of conscious experience not existent in simple neural structures (that is qualitatively we have more than the sum of some neurons though quantitatively those neurons might be enough to cause consciousness, the new 'state of matter' I was talking about). Thus we can see conscious experiences as emergent material properties of the brain.

My above lines do not mean that my personal stance is the same (I am rather a property dualist with reference to an ultimate level of Reality). Maybe at that ultimate level of reality Searle's view might be right (involving [states] of some quantum/subquantum 'ultimate' fields not brain states) but anyway in my provisional 'imago mundi', a synthesis of consciousness does survives brain death, a 'synthesis' having a greater 'life expectancy' not an immortal one.
 
Kevin_Lowe said:


My view is that the question of why you hold this belief to be absolutely true is psychologically interesting, but that the fact you hold this view says nothing about whether you happen to be right or wrong.


Can you explain why?
 
davidsmith73 said:
Can you explain why?

Just because people can hold things to be true and obvious that are neither.

I do not believe that God exists just because Descartes claimed God did. In just the same way I do not believe that the mind must be immaterial just because Interesting Ian claims that this is true.

In both cases I want to see the argument and judge it, and if it looks like a load of old rubbish I will reject it.

This all seems terribly mundane and obvious. Is there a nuance to your question I am missing?
 
II
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The reality of physical things is exhausted by the role they play in some fruitful theory describing the world. There is nothing more to an electron than such a role. But consciousness is not constituted by its causal powers. Rather it is constituted by raw experiences.
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You are simply assuming here that theory could be constructed which successfully describes all aspects of our experiences. You have not provided any justification for asserting this.

I could as easily claim that there is some "meta-electron" which has all of the physical properties of the "electron", but which may not be exhausted by that scientific description.

I have no more reason to believe that consciousness has such non-physical properties than I do to believe that these "meta-electrons" do. The mere fact that consciousness is "constituted by raw experiences", does not in any way imply this.

What is the distinction between a "meta-electron" and an electron?

Now ask yourself what is the distinction between a real human being and a p-zombie.

You cannot maintain the questions are analogous without concluding that consciousness does not exist. And if you do conclude that, then there must be something wrong in your reasoning since we know beyond any shadow of a doubt that we are conscious.

What I'm saying is that if materialism is true, then we would have to conclude we are all p-zombies (unconscious automata). Just like a "meta-electron" is really nothing more than an electron -- as nothing can have aspects to it which are not susceptible to science -- so we would have to conclude we are all p-zombies since we cannot have aspects to ourselves inaccessible to science (the aspect in this case being consciousness).

But we know we are conscious, thus materialism is refuted. Yes?


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Huh? Why on Earth not? Consciousness affect behavior. I can therefore conclude all sorts of things about consciousness by observing behavior.
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Hang on. So what can you conclude about the consciousness of a boulder as it rolls down a hill?
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What kind of nonsense is that? What I can conclude is that boulders don't have consciousness at all.

Then the question here is what is the distinction between us and a rolling boulder?? How are you able to conclude consciousness in the one case, but not the other? According to naturalism both boulders and peoples' behaviour simple follow physical laws. So why conclude no consciousnesss in one of them, but consciousness in the other??


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Obviously nothing, so why are human beings special?
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Because we have brains.

A brain is just a physical thing. The processes within it follow physical laws, just like a rolling boulder.


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They ought not to be according to materialists.
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Complete BS, and totally irrelevant, since nobody here is defending what you call materialism.


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If we can infer nothing about a boulder's consciousness by observing its behaviour, then by the same principle we can infer nothing about the consciousness of other people by observing their behaviour.
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That's like saying that since I can't infer anything about the orbital dynamics of a chicken from its behavior, that we can't infer anything about the orbital dynamics of planets by observing their behavior. It is complete nonsense. Why you would imagine that the notion that consciousness is physical should somehow imply that all things have it, is completely beyond me. It is quite possibly one of the most idiotic things I have ever heard you suggest.

That's not a correct analogy. The orbital dynamics of an object is directly given to you in your observations. Our consciousness is not directly given to you in your observations. Not unless you equate consciousness with our behaviour; but then you are denying that we have subjective qualitative experiences -- in other words we are p-zombies.
 
II
I do not need empirical evidence. I am directly aware of my own consciousness and am directly aware it is of a characteristically differing kind of existent from trees, chairs, tables and whatever.

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Kevin_Lowe
My view is that the question of why you hold this belief to be absolutely true is psychologically interesting, but that the fact you hold this view says nothing about whether you happen to be right or wrong.

So far, there is no evidence you are right and ample evidence you are wrong.

I am maintaining that all physical things and processes in the Universe are simply that. And the reality of such things and processes can, in principle, be known completely by an observing consciousness. In particular they do not have aspects -- namely consciousness -- which is not in principle accessible to our observations.

Now in order to say these things and processes are of a characteristically similar type to the consciousness which does the observing, you would need to say that the apparent radical difference between myself and a table is an illusion. Thus the notion that I have subjective inner qualitative states and the table does not, is an illusion.

With me so far and are you in agreement with everything I've said?

If so I wonder if you would be good enough to reveal some of this evidence demonstrating I am in error?

Oh and BTW, does this evidence suggest I do not have subjective inner states, or does it suggest that the table does?
 
davidsmith73 said:
Originally posted by Kevin_Lowe


My view is that the question of why you hold this belief to be absolutely true is psychologically interesting, but that the fact you hold this view says nothing about whether you happen to be right or wrong.


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davidsmith73
Can you explain why? [/B]

I can absolutely guarantee that no answer to this question will be forthcoming.
 
Kevin_Lowe said:
Just because people can hold things to be true and obvious that are neither.

I do not believe that God exists just because Descartes claimed God did. In just the same way I do not believe that the mind must be immaterial just because Interesting Ian claims that this is true.




You can call consciousness "material" if you like, but then you are simply applying the word "material" to 2 utterly differing types of existent. That is my position. Now look at the post above to my elaboration.
 
Interesting Ian said:
I am maintaining that all physical things and processes in the Universe are simply that. And the reality of such things and processes can, in principle, be known completely by an observing consciousness. In particular they do not have aspects -- namely consciousness -- which is not in principle accessible to our observations.

I see no reason to believe that consciousness is not in principle accessible to our observations. It might turn out not to be accessible even in principle, but I would be surprised.

Now in order to say these things and processes are of a characteristically similar type to the consciousness which does the observing, you would need to say that the apparent radical difference between myself and a table is an illusion. Thus the notion that I have subjective inner qualitative states and the table does not, is an illusion.

It seems to me that if, as I suspect, our inner qualitative states arise from and depend on a meaty brainy thing, I am not at all obliged to believe tables have inner qualitative states.

With me so far and are you in agreement with everything I've said?

That's a big no.

If so I wonder if you would be good enough to reveal some of this evidence demonstrating I am in error?

Everything we know about the brain?

Oh and BTW, does this evidence suggest I do not have subjective inner states, or does it suggest that the table does?

Stop being silly.
 
Kevin_Lowe said:
Just because people can hold things to be true and obvious that are neither.

I do not believe that God exists just because Descartes claimed God did. In just the same way I do not believe that the mind must be immaterial just because Interesting Ian claims that this is true.

In both cases I want to see the argument and judge it, and if it looks like a load of old rubbish I will reject it.

This all seems terribly mundane and obvious. Is there a nuance to your question I am missing?

I just wanted to see if you understood that its not possible to provide evidence for the non-physical nature of experience. The meaning of "evidence" depends on the necessary assumption that the phenomena you seek evidence for is physical (meaning it can be described by logical relationships). If experience is not physically definable then you reach a logical dead end if you try to find evidence for it.

So the natural alternative might be reasoned philosophical argument. But if we cannot define non-physical existence in the first place then I doubt it is even possible to deduce its existence from reasoned argument.

Instead we must simply be honest to ourselves about the nature of experience and/or reality. Once we have done that, and we all agree about what it is we are talking about, it is easy to understand how such existence cannot be described by physical relationships. Another way to make sure we all know what it is we are talking about is to use a label that refers to direct knowledge such as "blue".

Of course, you are free to be honest with yourself about the nature of experience and claim that there is nothing about experience that is non-physical. If you do that, I can't provide a sound argument, using evidence or otherwise, that proves you are wrong. I must simply assert that you are mistaken because I have direct knowledge that you are wrong.

The thing I would also say is that any claim or statement that refers to a conceivably physical phenomena is automatically defered from the above case. Your example of a claim made about god may be an example, it of course depends on the definition of god or whether god is claimed to be non-physical.
 
Ian,

By definition, there can be no aspects of your consciousness which you are not aware of, and all of the aspects which you are aware of affect your brain activity in some way.
This is hopelessly muddleheaded. I do not know I am conscious by virtue of its causal powers.
I did not say that you do. What I said is that every aspect of your concsiousness which you are aware of, does affect your brain in some way. Why this happens to be the case is another question entirely. The validity of my argument does not depend on the answer to that "why" question. It only depends on the fact that those aspects do, in fact, affect your brain!

Its causal powers merely refers to its power to affect the physical world. There is no epistemic or ontological gap between the "I" that knows and "my" consciousness, where a causal relationship could dwell.
Nonsense. There is absolutely no question that the brain is, at the very least, involved in the processes of thinking, remembering, and thus ultimately knowing. You can try to argue that there is something more than just the brain involved in knowing, but you cannot deny that the brain is involved. Not without simply burying you head in the sand and completely ignoring everything which we have learned about this over the course of history. Unfortunately, this seems to be exactly what you are doing.

The knowledge of my own consciousness is unmediated. More specifically the recognition of the reality of my own consciousness is not parasitical on any particular brain state.
No knowledge is unmediated. To know implies that thinking and remembering, and the brain is (again, at the very least) involved in those processes.

You're arguing my position is unintelligible from the materialist perspective. This is the informal logical fallacy called begging the question
I haven't said diddly-squat about materialism. I have clarified several times now that the position I am defending is not what you call materialism. At this point I can only assume that you are being deliberately dishonest in referring to it as such.

Notice my position differs from epiphenomenalism because there my understanding of the reality of my own consciousness is parasitical on particular brain states.
Correct. Your position is not epiphenomenalism. It is, however, both incoherent and incompatible with known facts about the relationships between consciousness and the brain. You keep repeating the mantra "empirically" determined correlations between consciousness and the brain do not imply that consciousness is the brain", but you don't seem to recognize that, even if that is true, those correlations do still tell us things about the nature of the relationship between the two. This means that our model of consciousness, whether it be the "consciousness = brain activity" model, or something else, must be consistent with those known relationships.

You have repeatedly asserted that neuroscience and psychology can tell us nothing about consciousness, and that therefore you don't need to bother learning anything about them. But this is simply not the case. To say that science cannot tell us anything at all about consciousness is to claim that there are no correlations between consciousness and brain states. If you accept that there are, then you can not ignore what science tells us about those relationships when you construct your model of consciousness. But this is exactly what you have done.

Reductivist science? The only science I know of studies all empirically observable effects. Since consciousness clearly affects the brain (at the very least, if it is not brain activity it certainly affects brain activity), it clearly falls into this category. I don't know what you think "reductivist science" is, but I rather suspect that it is some bizarre misinterpretation of science which you think actually represents what scientists do.
Reductivist science is the idea that all phenomena can be understood by an appropriate analysis. In other words any phenomena could in principle be derived by a total understanding of the behaviour of the ultimate relevant parts.
So I was right. What you are calling "reductivist science" is nothing more than a misunderstanding of scientific reductionism (which is, itself, only one approach which is used in science). Your notion of reductivist science is inherently metaphysical, and makes all sorts of assumptions which it is simply not necessary for science (or even scientific reductionism) to make.

I have never heard of any scientist attempt to define the category of things which they study in terms of metaphysical terms like "qualia".
Good for them. So what? I have no interest in how scientists define things.
Well, you probably should, if you want to be able to meaningfully criticize what scientists say. Otherwise you are just babbling nonsense when you talk about things like "reductivist science", or attempt to argue against the approach of trying to scientifically understand consciousness. How can you claim that consciousness cannot be scientifically understood, when you don't even know what is meant by the phrase?

You asked me "How do you define "physical realm"?" (emphasis added). The problem with scientists is that they generally are clueless at philosophy (as indeed are many philosophers eg Mr Lowe).
Unfortunately, not being a scientist does not automatically make you an expert at philosophy either. At least scientists have a basic understanding of logic. That's more than I can say for you.

Oh, and BTW, qualia is not a metaphysical term. Now if you were to say it is a supernatural term then I might have some sympathy Incorrigible proof of the existence of the supernatural!
Riiiight. Qualia is not a metaphysical term. Sure it isn't. OK, define it without making reference to anything metaphysical.

Even if some form of interaction dualism is true, science simply doesn't care. It's all physical as far as science is concerned.
Science is not a sentient being.
Don't be a twit. You know what I mean.

And I repeat, if you label 2 utterly characteristically differing types of existents as both being "physical", this just causes confusion and makes communication impossible.
As usual, you completely ignored my entire argument, and just restated the assertion which my argument addressed and refuted. I might as well be talking to a brick wall.

In fact, science cannot even tell the difference. Science just sees interactions, and attempts to understand and describe them.
Well there you go then. You've just admitted that science cannot accommodate consciousness.
You aren't even bothering to actually read what I say, are you? You just look at individual statements and post whatever idiotic response pops into your head.

I think you may be confused about what is meant by "definition" in this context. You seem to think that by "definition" I mean "complete description". I don't. The definition of a term is simply the set of criteria for stipulating what the term refers to. If you truly do not have a definition for the term "consciousness", then when you use it, you are just babbling nonsense.
I see. So the fact I understand what consciousness is, even though I do not have a definition, means that I am babbling nonsense in talking about consciousness.
No, it means that when you use the word "consciousness", you might as well be using the word "narf". If you can talk about what you think of as "consciousness" in a meaningful way, then it follows that you have a definition of the term. It just appears that your understanding of basic concepts of language and logic are so meager that you don't even know what a definition is.

See, that is a definition.
WOW! I never realised you would be satisfied with such a "definition". I thought you wished me to provide a scientific definition, which of course is not possible.
As I already explained, and you ignored, I asked for a definition of what you mean by the word, not a complete or scientific description for what the word refers to.

Combustion is a sequence of physical events.
You have not presented any evidence that consciousness is not a sequence of physical events.

Physical things or events are that which are perceived by consciousness. But the perceiver or consciousness is not itself an object of perception.
Says who? Am I just supposed to take your word for this? I don't seem to have any difficulty in inferring from my observations that other perceivers exist, and that is exactly how I determine that physical things exist. So it would appear that this claim of your is not only unjustified, but clearly false.

It is not utterly different from all physical things. On the contrary, it has in common with all other physical things precisely the one characteristic which all physical things share: that it interacts with other physical things. That is the only necessary and sufficient criteria for something being physical, and it is the only characteristic which all physical things share.
The power to interact and only the power to interact is the defining characteristic of physical things.
You can define it that way, but doing so is pointless since (a) we have no way of knowing that something does not have "only the power to interact", and (b) we have no way of knowing that something does have "only the power to interact".

Consciousness differs from all physical things in that physical things do not have inner subjective qualitative feels.
Since you have not established that this involves anything more than interactions, this is nothing more than defining consciousness to refer to that subset of physical things which have "inner subjective qualitative feels". I could just as easily define "invisible" to mean anything for which we need devices to detect, and then claim that electrons are not physical because they are invisible. The fact that you wish to arbitrarily divide physical things into subsets, and call one of those subsets "physical" and the other "consciousness", does not have any bearing whatsoever on the actual nature of things. It is just playing word games. I could not possibly care less whether you choose to use the scientific definition of "physical" or not. What matters is that you have not presented any evidence whatsover for the claim that consciousness is not a set of brain processes, much less for the less specific claim that consciousness can be studied scientifically.

What is the distinction between a "meta-electron" and an electron?
The term "electron" is defined to refer to a specific set of physical properties. The term "meta-electron" is defined to refer to a hypothetic object which possesses those physical properties, as well as additional non-physical properties.

Now ask yourself what is the distinction between a real human being and a p-zombie.
Since the definition of a p-zombie is logically self-contradictory, the question is meaningless.

You cannot maintain the questions are analogous without concluding that consciousness does not exist. And if you do conclude that, then there must be something wrong in your reasoning since we know beyond any shadow of a doubt that we are conscious.
The questions are not analogous. The word "p-zombie" is not defined in a logically self-consistent way.

What I'm saying is that if materialism is true, then we would have to conclude we are all p-zombies (unconscious automata).
No, we can never conclude that we a p-zombies under any framework, because p-zombies are self-contradictory.

Just like a "meta-electron" is really nothing more than an electron -- as nothing can have aspects to it which are not susceptible to science -- so we would have to conclude we are all p-zombies since we cannot have aspects to ourselves inaccessible to science (the aspect in this case being consciousness).

But we know we are conscious, thus materialism is refuted. Yes?
No.

What kind of nonsense is that? What I can conclude is that boulders don't have consciousness at all.
Then the question here is what is the distinction between us and a rolling boulder??
Well for starters, we have brains.

How are you able to conclude consciousness in the one case, but not the other?
By noting that brains seem to be necessary for consciousness.

According to naturalism both boulders and peoples' behaviour simple follow physical laws. So why conclude no consciousnesss in one of them, but consciousness in the other??
Because consciousness is, at the very least, correlated with behavior. Boulders do not exhibit the type of behavior we associate with consciousness.

How do you infer that other people have consciousness, but that boulders don't? Do you just assume this to be the case? If you say yes, then I say you are lying. The simple fact is that the only reason it even occurs to us that other people might have consciousness like we do, is because we observe that they behave as though they do.

That's not a correct analogy. The orbital dynamics of an object is directly given to you in your observations. Our consciousness is not directly given to you in your observations.
Again you are appealing to the misconception that any facts about the external world are known to us directly. All are inferred from observations. There is no difference between me inferring that another person is conscious by observing their behavior, or me inferring that a distant star has a non-visible planet by observing how it wobbles.

Not unless you equate consciousness with our behaviour; but then you are denying that we have subjective qualitative experiences -- in other words we are p-zombies.
Complete nonsense. I need not equate consciousness with anything. I just need to accept that consciousness does, in fact, interact with other things. That is why p-zombies are logically self-contradictory. The fact is that consciousness does affect our brain activity. A p-zombie is defined to be physically identical to a human, but lacking consciousness. This is logically self-contradictory because if it lacks consciousness, then it also lacks the effects which consciousness would otherwise have on its brain. Thus it is not physically identical to a human.


Dr. Stupid
 
davidsmith73 said:
I just wanted to see if you understood that its not possible to provide evidence for the non-physical nature of experience. The meaning of "evidence" depends on the necessary assumption that the phenomena you seek evidence for is physical (meaning it can be described by logical relationships). If experience is not physically definable then you reach a logical dead end if you try to find evidence for it.

Undetectable, non-physical stuff is the kind of thing about which, in my opinion, there is simply nothing to say.

So the natural alternative might be reasoned philosophical argument. But if we cannot define non-physical existence in the first place then I doubt it is even possible to deduce its existence from reasoned argument.

Certainly every attempt to do so has fallen on its face.

Instead we must simply be honest to ourselves about the nature of experience and/or reality. Once we have done that, and we all agree about what it is we are talking about, it is easy to understand how such existence cannot be described by physical relationships. Another way to make sure we all know what it is we are talking about is to use a label that refers to direct knowledge such as "blue".

This is not an argument, it's just an insulting assertion. "If you don't agree with me, it is because you are dishonest. If only you were honest you would admit that I am right because this is easy to understand for honest people".

Of course, you are free to be honest with yourself about the nature of experience and claim that there is nothing about experience that is non-physical. If you do that, I can't provide a sound argument, using evidence or otherwise, that proves you are wrong. I must simply assert that you are mistaken because I have direct knowledge that you are wrong.

The usual philosophical definition of knowledge is "true and justified belief". Now as I see it, you do not have knowledge (direct or otherwise) because your belief is not justified. You can call it knowledge, but that does not make it more than mere belief.

If "if you were honest you would believe as I do" is really the best argument you have to persuade an uncommitted person to your side, your case is not in a very healthy state.
 
Geoff said:
No, that's not what I said either. The difference is that with non-materialistic metaphysical systems some types of what is called "psi phenomena" seem less impossible. They don't just "fall out". But the door is left open for them, instead of being locked shut.
In what way does physicalism lock the door to psi? Apparently this is the crucial question, since we are talking about "less impossible" vs. "supposedly impossible."

Sure, you have to understand the mechanism. However, there is no reason to assume that "the mechanism" follows the same sorts of rules that physical mechanisms follow. It may be a very different sort of "mechanism" altogether. It may be a "mechanism" which plays havoc with the normal methods of empirical investigation. In fact, if it existed, it would have to be just such a "slippery" mechanism or it would have been nailed down a long time ago.
Again, I don't understand which features of physical mechanisms preclude psi by definition. Heck, I can propose that there is a subtle fifth force that mediates psi. No problem for science at all.

~~ Paul
 
Kevin_Lowe said:
Now in order to say these things and processes are of a characteristically similar type to the consciousness which does the observing, you would need to say that the apparent radical difference between myself and a table is an illusion. Thus the notion that I have subjective inner qualitative states and the table does not, is an illusion.

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It seems to me that if, as I suspect, our inner qualitative states arise from and depend on a meaty brainy thing, I am not at all obliged to believe tables have inner qualitative states.

I think they may be some talking at cross purposes here. The fact, if it is a fact, that consciousness arises from the brain is neither here or there. Let's suppose you're right. Now as I say, you can call consciousness material if you like, but this does not alter the fact that the 2 existents are radically characteristically unlike each other. It is clear that the fact that one arises from the other does not, nor could not, alter this fact.

There is consciousness defined by its subjective qualitative feel, and there are tables and all other physical objects in the Universe which are certainly not defined in such a manner.

In addition physical objects and processes have to be defined exclusively by their causal role in the world. If there is anything other to physical objects/processes than their causal power, then we, by definition, could not know about them because, lacking causal power, those aspects could not make their presence known to us, not ever.

On the other hand consciousness is not defined exclusively by their causal role in the world -- consciousness is defined by its subjective qualitative feel. It may have causal powers (and I believe it does), but it is not constituted by such causal powers.

So why refer to both types of existent as both being material? All it achieves is to confuse things and muddy the water.
 
Geoff said:
The Schlitz/Wiseman remote staring experiments where Schlitz kept getting a stastical positive and Wiseman kept getting nothing. No conclusive explanation has ever been accepted, because Schlitz claims it is down to "the experimenter effect" where the beliefs of the researcher influence the test results. Wiseman simply refuses to accept that this can be the reason, but admits he can't nail down the source of the anomaly. He cannot demonstrate why the result should be rejected. New Scientist carried a long piece about this about three years ago, and included another study which examined what level of stastical result was considered acceptable in other fields. They showed that when it comes to parapsychological effects like the one described above, the statistical "bar" is rasied to whatever is neccesary to exclude unwanted results, even if they would have been accepted in a non-controversial science like pharmaceuticals. So you have double standards employed in order to be able to maintain the claim "there is no evidence", and the reason given for raising the bar is that "there is no evidence.....".
There seems to be some confusion here. No one is denying that Schlitz got "results" while Wiseman did not, to a statistically significant degree. The question is, what are the results?

The results are precisely that Schlitz refuted a null hypothesis, while Wiseman did not. So what is the null hypothesis?

The null hypothesis is that some "psi experiment" will not show a significant deviation from chance results, using some statistical model that may or may not be appropriate to the experimental procedure.

What people are not accepting is:
  • The experimental procedure had anything to do with transmitting information by a means unrelated to the normal senses.
  • That the difference between Schlitz and Wiseman was also due to transmitting information by a means unrelated to the normal senses.
because the hypothesis has little if anything to do with a model/theory of how information is transmitted by a means unrelated to the normal senses.

~~ Paul

P.S. Some pharmaceutical trials are most certainly controversial.
 
Stimpson J. Cat said:
II
if consciousness is not the same as brain processes, but nevertheless affects such processes, then such consciousness would not be physical because the causal power of consciousness does not equate to consciousness itself.
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Stimpson J. Cat
By definition, there can be no aspects of your consciousness which you are not aware of, and all of the aspects which you are aware of affect your brain activity in some way.
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II
This is hopelessly muddleheaded. I do not know I am conscious by virtue of its causal powers.
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Stimpson J. Cat
I did not say that you do.

Then I do not at all understand what you're saying. I have not the remotest idea how your statement:

"By definition, there can be no aspects of your consciousness which you are not aware of, and all of the aspects which you are aware of affect your brain activity in some way".


addresses the point I made.


What I said is that every aspect of your concsiousness which you are aware of, does affect your brain in some way.

Let us suppose this is so. So what? How is this not a complete non-sequitur?? I wonder about your ability to understand straightforward English.




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Its causal powers merely refers to its power to affect the physical world. There is no epistemic or ontological gap between the "I" that knows and "my" consciousness, where a causal relationship could dwell.
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Nonsense. There is absolutely no question that the brain is, at the very least, involved in the processes of thinking, remembering, and thus ultimately knowing. You can try to argue that there is something more than just the brain involved in knowing, but you cannot deny that the brain is involved. Not without simply burying you head in the sand and completely ignoring everything which we have learned about this over the course of history. Unfortunately, this seems to be exactly what you are doing.

I was simply stating that I do not know of my own consciousness by virtue of its causal powers. How does your response remotely address this fact??
 

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