westprog
Philosopher
- Joined
- Dec 1, 2006
- Messages
- 8,928
Well, it is a bit of a bummer compared to the hypothesis that really, we are eternal souls (or something like that) temporarily residing in a physical body.
Who's been arguing that? Oh, right...
Well, it is a bit of a bummer compared to the hypothesis that really, we are eternal souls (or something like that) temporarily residing in a physical body.
I think these concepts are definable, but we have to be willing to break them down into simpler components.
I had to turn to wiki to know what the ship of Theseus was.
How sad is that?
Hi, Maia.
I am a behaviorist. I would hazard a guess that you have never actually met one, nor read anything written by one after Watson.
You might like to know that you are wrong. So wrong. Very wrong. "Wrong enough to consider legal action against your professors" wrong. Fortunately, behaviorists have not had to build upon your perceptions, but upon their own research, so your ignorance has not been fatal to our science. If I could suggest, perhaps, Todd & Morris' (1992--a bit dated, but 50 or so years ahead of the behaviorism you are aware of) "Case studies in the great power of steady misrepresentation", in American Psychologist, which I hope can be read in Nashville. I also suggest an online tutorial I have linked on this forum before, which focuses on the differences between methodological behaviorism (that which you have been exposed to) and radical behaviorism (that which people actually did for decades after Watson left Johns Hopkins with Rosie...)
Behaviorism knows that the real world is messy. The operant chamber is behaviorism's equivalent to chemistry's test tube--an oversimplified subset of the real world. Behaviorism has explored, in operant chambers and in the real world (from B-MOD with individuals to ABA with classrooms, to community interventions, to Behavioral Economics), the effects of the environment on our behavior, and has found simple, profound, and practical applications. Behaviorism has changed lives. I sincerely and honestly hope you find out some day.
There is a reason that CBT is evidence-based. That reason is behaviorism.
No, this is not unequivocal truth. And I have taken my time. I have designed therapeutic interventions. Other people are not idiots because of the simple fact that they do not agree with you. (They may be idiots for *other* reasons... but not because of that.) I will be happy to send you all of the literature that *I* have. I know the history very well. Do you? While we're on the subject, do you know the limitations not only of behaviorism, but also of CBT itself? Do you know who Pierre Janet is? Are you familiar with the works of Onno van der Hart and Ellert Nijerhuis? How about the theories of structural dissociation of personality? How about neurological changes in post-traumatic stress disorder? Do you know that there is no evidence-based intervention for PTSD, and that any treatment for it based on behaviorism or CBT is a complete and resounding failure in clinical practice?Do you know anything about the research that I know? What would happen if someone challenged you to think outside of your box?
Sometimes, I just get tired of the party line around here. Whenever I stray too far outside of it, I seem to get in trouble-- well, too bad. I'm not rude, I'm not nasty, I'm not sarcastic, I don't even BEGIN to get as bad in these areas as a lot of other people get, but sometimes I just lose my patience with it.
Do you know that there is no evidence-based intervention for PTSD, and that any treatment for it based on behaviorism or CBT is a complete and resounding failure in clinical practice?
Sometimes, I just get tired of the party line around here. Whenever I stray too far outside of it, I seem to get in trouble-- well, too bad. I'm not rude, I'm not nasty, I'm not sarcastic, I don't even BEGIN to get as bad in these areas as a lot of other people get, but sometimes I just lose my patience with it.
This is pretty close to how I’ve perceived their stance. Here’s Patricia Churchland discussing about it in very general outlines (9 min.): P. Churchland on eliminative materialism
[derail]"How big of a nazi was Heidegger, anyway?" has been a lively topic in philosophy going back at least to Farias' book in the 80's.
Sometimes, I just get tired of the party line around here. Whenever I stray too far outside of it, I seem to get in trouble-- well, too bad. I'm not rude, I'm not nasty, I'm not sarcastic, I don't even BEGIN to get as bad in these areas as a lot of other people get, but sometimes I just lose my patience with it.
Before we can do the neuroscience we need good definitions of the various aspects of attention and awareness, so the psychologists can examine them in detail.
It's certainly helpful if we do. From what I've read, cognitive psych has a decent way of conceptualizing attention with relevant neural correlates. Selective attention is viewed as made up of an alerting system (sensitivity to stimuli; locus coeruleus and R lateral frontal cortex; deficient in ADHD patients and the elderly), an orienting system (selecting info from input; temporal parietal junction; schizophrenics and autistic patients have lots of trouble here), and an executive system that monitors thoughts, feelings, and behaviors to maintain attention on stimuli (DLPFC and ACC; organic brain damage and Alzheimer's disease compromise this more integrative functioning). Pretty cool stuff.
If we have finished with the derail, and if anyone is still interested, may we return to the issue of "what is awareness?"
Several issues have arisen -- so why not start somewhere near the bottom? Let's go back to paramecia -- if they respond to something in their environment, then what word can we use to speak of their ability to respond in the first place except 'awareness' of the stimulus?
But what is this primitive form of 'awareness'? It seems to me to be attention to stimulus (which includes intentionality -- and the reason I keep bringing up intentionality is to satisfy the philosophical crowd who seem to think that intentionality is vitally important and hopefully demonstrate just how trivial the concept is since it's just something built into the nature of being an individual interacting with the environment) and ability to respond. Is there anything else there?
Awareness of awareness appears a little more complex, of course, with not only attention to attending but also emotional and motivational states thrown into the mix as well as our other common mental functions -- like retrieval of memory, etc.
Sometimes, I just get tired of the party line around here. Whenever I stray too far outside of it, I seem to get in trouble-- well, too bad. I'm not rude, I'm not nasty, I'm not sarcastic, I don't even BEGIN to get as bad in these areas as a lot of other people get, but sometimes I just lose my patience with it.
Actually, I was addressing a piece of the first post of the thread, namely...
"We will obviously need to define attention, but what else is a necessary component of awareness? Is awareness always awareness of something? Need we include intentionality to the notion of awareness?"
So I was not aware that I was derailing; I was more trying to offer up how cognitive psych has tackled the attention piece (with neural correlates).
Also, regarding the derail with the CBT/behaviorism stuff, I feel that it is important to step in and correct blatantly false assertions that, when perpetuated, can be damaging. This forum seems an appropriate place to do so, and it's actually difficult to come across a thread where it doesn't happen at least once or twice. I enjoy that people here have the fortitude and courage to do so.
Perhaps we could also discuss the possibility of an "illusion" of awareness. Paramecia show what's called a "photophobic step-down response" when they swim from a well lit area into a darker area... in other words, they avoid it and go back toward the light. Different photoreceptor systems have been studied that are connected with the "step-up" (move toward) versus "step-down" (move away) responses. At the light/dark border, swimming velocity and direction change (phototaxis) due to reversal of ciliary beats. Light stimulation of photoreceptor systems causes depolarization, which affects ciliary beat frequency. So we could parsimoniously say that the response is a photochemical reactivity pertaining to membrane hyperpolarization (light regions) or depolarization (dark regions) affecting ciliary beats and thus directional shifts. So do we want to package all that up and say, "it's aware?" Sure, if we razor the definition down to photochemical response to stimuli, but what else should we (or need we) tack on?
Also, paramecia shift direction (by changing flagellar beats) when they collide with a solid object-- reverse direction, then go forward again. But they do it clumsily and in a way that is not at all sophisticated (that is, they don't behave as if they "perceive" the object as a whole and then just go around the thing). Rather, they continue colliding with it until they fortuitously are able to get around it by an iterative, chemical-driven, seemingly mechanical process of reversed and forward motions of flagella. Is this "awareness?"
So we marvel at this and say, "Wow! It's aware of the object!" or is "paying attention to where it is going and is trying to get around that object!"
So we could say that these responses are driven by a complex functional contiguity and synchrony of chemical reactions regulating locomotive reactions in response to stimuli, but that's too unwieldy. But should we substitute "awareness" for this? Maybe Dennett is correct at this level to just say "little tiny robots."
Also, are plants "aware" because they grow toward light? Somehow, I don't think so.
http://www.newton.dep.anl.gov/askasci/bio99/bio99441.htm
Or the illusion of intentionality? Paramecia appear to have a dumb (not to detract from the marvel of nature, of course), in-built photochemical algorithm for staying in lit regions.
By the way, there's that darned derail word again. Attention.
Meta-awareness, absolutely. Lots more complex. Cerebral cortex probably has something to do with it.
I'm not a stubborn reductionist, I swear!
I'm not rude, I'm not nasty, I'm not sarcastic, I don't even BEGIN to get as bad in these areas as a lot of other people get, but sometimes I just lose my patience with it.
At a 'basal level' we see organisms like paramecia, and you have done a great job of discussing the mechanisms by which they orient to the world. The components seem to include some sense of the word 'attention' as well as 'intentionality' and 'perception'. Now, the way they do these things is fairly simple and not like the way that we do the same functions, but these (I think) are all part of what we call awareness.
Our attentional and perceptual systems are obviously much more complex than what paramecia do, but we essentially do the same things they do in orienting to the world. Paramecia work on the stimulus-response level, chemotactically with ligand-receptor interactions or concentration gradient detection or simple light-receptor orientation. We take similar stimuli and construct a model of the world, or at least a model of the percept in a way that paramecia do not -- so what we do is more complex, which is no shock to anyone.
But there is also another component to what we typically label 'awareness' that a paramecium does not have/do. We not only construct a model of the world when we perceive, but we add semantic content -- we understand what the 'thing' we are perceiving 'is'.
So, at a bare minimum, for 'awareness' I think we have at least four components -- attention, intentionality, perception, and understanding.
This may seem picayune, but this is what I think we need to do to understand what the incredibly complex (and not undefinable) process that we call awareness consists in.
Granted, we don't currently define emotional or motivational states well enough to operationalize them in computer systems, but is there any legitimate argument why we could not? Should we wish to have a computer that works or thinks like a human it would probably have to learn like a human -- have set up predispositions that can be altered over time by learning through interacting with the environment. I don't see why we could not include, with the proper understanding of how they work, both emotional and motivational systems within a robot that could end up doing things much like a human by learning semantic content as it interacts with the environment.
Or is there something to semantics/meaning/understanding that I have left out of the picture?