hammegk said:
Forget the human mind/brain problem. Try something simpler. Watch a flower opening.
Well, ok, but if I am understanding you correctly below, you jump right back into the mind-body stuff below, with your "what" questions.
What does a behavorist conclude when he considers the questions, 'What is doing the "behaving"?',
um...I am. (um...the behavior of watching a flower opening...is that what you meant?)
and 'What is observing the behavior?'
Again, I am, if I understand your question. Why "what"? Are you looking for some subset of "me" that observes? If so, why? Is there a subset of me that walks? Plays music? Answers questions? These are all things I, as an organism, do. Any attempt to dissect out bits of me that do different parts of what I do is, well, artificial.
'Is (my) observation required'?
What a seemingly deep question. Kind of like "can you conceive of something that cannot be conceived of?"...in the sense that it cannot be answered. Without observing the non-observing condition, how can I answer? How can you? How can anyone? Why waste time on questions that not only have no answer, but
can have no answer? (of course, if you can come up with a way of answering it, you have a different question entirely)
Erm, sure ok, "who cares" (whoops! who???).
There is no problem with "who", here, Hammegk. I don't know why you think there might be. In fact, your first two questions work better with "who" than with "what".
(I am assuming, from your past posts here, that your "what" was not intended to refer to a literal dissection--you were not after "the visual centers in the occipital lobe, along with association pathways through frontal & temporal lobes, limbic system, etc.. And yet, "what" still implies that you are looking for a part of a whole--this search for a partition comes from those silly mind-body dichotomous notions...)