Dancing David
Penultimate Amazing
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Brain processes and individual experience
Well , C-sense I am not sure that Ican explain my beliefs in a way that will change yours. Please understand that this is different from saying that everyones stomach is different. Each stomach is different, the cells are different, the size of the cells is different, the molecular composition of the cells is different. But the function is the same. Just as avery ones bones are different, yet similar.
What I am stating is that the brain developes and grows and creates the associative netweorks that create the 'brain events'. Even though each person who is not color blind can point to a color and say that they are red. There is not going to be an exact mapping of the process the way thier would be in a computer.
Each brain develops along certain structures but the way that those structures relate in process to each other is going to vary from person to person. So while the visual cortex is going to respond to the stimulation from the optic nerves, the exact location of a specific visual response in the visual cortex is going to vary from individual to individual.
Each process is unique but convergant, the structures of the brain are designed to grow in certain paths and then develop in response to the continuing flow of stimuli. So there is an underlying purpose to the whole thing, they are similar in structure but unique.
The brain has certain tasks that it can preform, say recognise patterns and store patterns. Each brain can preform those functions and sort out which area of the brain will do what during developement. But while we all use the left motor strip area to deal with language, how and where I store the word "red" is likely to be similar to yours but in different areas and with different patterns.
So while it does lend itself to the idea that qualia are irreduible, our brains develop in response to the perceptions we have. So if exposed to the same perception, our brains will learn to recognise them in similar but unique fashions.
Qualia are learned and developed in the neural networks. We have them because we are exposed to them.
Clear as mud right?
csense said:
I would think that materialism could not logically posit this. If each brain were to be unique, then the physical processes would also have to be unique, and if physical processes are what we know as consciousness, then each consciousness is unique.
Yes, similar but unique.Materialism is not a logical stance it is an observational stance, my POV
The only fundamental principle you could posit from here is just mere form and mere substance of the brain itself.
You could not say that this or that is consciousness since in each instance, it could only be potentially true of only one particualr consciousness.
Most likely true, which is why psychology studies the similarities and the differences, we can discuss what c-word looks like. But as each tree is different yet similar, each c-word will be different yet similar.
If there is identity in the physical process, then how can it produce that which is unique
Could you clarify that statement, I am not sure which identity you are reffering to?
Well , C-sense I am not sure that Ican explain my beliefs in a way that will change yours. Please understand that this is different from saying that everyones stomach is different. Each stomach is different, the cells are different, the size of the cells is different, the molecular composition of the cells is different. But the function is the same. Just as avery ones bones are different, yet similar.
What I am stating is that the brain developes and grows and creates the associative netweorks that create the 'brain events'. Even though each person who is not color blind can point to a color and say that they are red. There is not going to be an exact mapping of the process the way thier would be in a computer.
Each brain develops along certain structures but the way that those structures relate in process to each other is going to vary from person to person. So while the visual cortex is going to respond to the stimulation from the optic nerves, the exact location of a specific visual response in the visual cortex is going to vary from individual to individual.
Each process is unique but convergant, the structures of the brain are designed to grow in certain paths and then develop in response to the continuing flow of stimuli. So there is an underlying purpose to the whole thing, they are similar in structure but unique.
The brain has certain tasks that it can preform, say recognise patterns and store patterns. Each brain can preform those functions and sort out which area of the brain will do what during developement. But while we all use the left motor strip area to deal with language, how and where I store the word "red" is likely to be similar to yours but in different areas and with different patterns.
So while it does lend itself to the idea that qualia are irreduible, our brains develop in response to the perceptions we have. So if exposed to the same perception, our brains will learn to recognise them in similar but unique fashions.
Qualia are learned and developed in the neural networks. We have them because we are exposed to them.
Clear as mud right?