Nick227 said:
I can foresee any future criticisms I might make of your understanding being dealt with in similar manner! Lucky that I am not "in it to win it."
You could also have interpreted it as an illustration of what happens when we simply choose to change description levels when it serves to keep our perspective intact – a kind of defensive mechanism? Perhaps (from one point of view)! I realize it was still uncalled for and thus I should apologize. Sorry for that! My rhetoric can also be seen as implying you are being silly or naïve by introducing such terms when criticizing a point you have made. For that too I should apologize. Again, sorry for that!
Now, back to the discussion…
However, from another point of view it could serve to illustrate where the first-person perspective can go no further without resulting in negation of a previously discussed phenomenon… but where a third-person perspective actually might be able to continue, although in a modified manner. I submit that even though such continuation is ‘modified’ it could still be quite ‘valuable’ for understanding the self, at least the underpinnings of such phenomenon.
As I see it, it would be problematic if there was no identification. How would you consider it problematic?
It ‘could’ be problematic if ‘self-narrative’ and ‘benign user illusion’ is taken to be the same thing without being aware of the ‘potential’ difference. As I see it, a self-narrative could simply imply a narrative of a central figure in the narrative, whereas ‘user illusion’ seems to include both the narrative and the interpretation of the narrative as a narrative (regardless of content). But you seem to have cleared that up later in your reply.
Watch the duality radar here. Spelling radar too!
That is the limitation I have (speaking English as a third language). I still think you can understand what I write.
About the duality radar… well, I don’t think it is too much of a concern here. It would only come up if one would confuse a way of referencing to something within a given context with the ontological position of dualism. If I watch hockey on TV and the commentator talks about someone passing the puck to someone else, it is fairly ineffectual to talk about ‘no one’ actually passing the puck. When talking about processes in the brain, from a third-person perspective, the same contextual situation should be understood. That is actually the strength of trying to be objective: it can illuminate and thus make it possible to communicate some detailed processes that aren’t directly accessible through introspection. We can assign properties to distinguishable “entities” without actually proposing dualism – it is simply a way to denote.
I think if you examine this notion of a "narrative interpreter" you will agree that it cannot be regarded as a self.
Some philosophers and scientists certainly seem to call it that. Why else would James call it the “I” or Baars conclude the following:
“Consciousness enables access to "self" -- executive interpreters, located in part in the frontal cortex.”
It is certainly not the same as the self in any given narrative about self; it can perhaps be seen as one of the systems that make it possible for there to be a self-narrative, including narrative content, in the first place.
It is also perhaps an example of why we even talk about self-referencing systems to begin with: we can observe such “closed” mechanisms (by which we then understand some of them to be best described as self-referential). We talk about them being self-referential because they seem to at least to some degree have semi-autonomous characteristics. Our observations would also lead us to think that such “self-systems” would receive their own flow of sensory input, which empirically seems to be the case.
One problem here... it is not only the presence of a narrative about "I" that creates a sense of self. Once the notion of limited selfhood is created in the brain any thinking narrative will maintain this notional selfhood, for it will constantly appear that there must be a self that is experiencing the thoughts. Furthermore, the thoughts themselves will soon relate almost entirely to this notional self.
Which is also to say that ‘re-inventing the wheel’ every time is ineffective (conversely also called learning)!
I do not necessarily disagree with you here (regarding the notional self). I’m however skeptical about that being all that there is to this issue, i.e. that you simply talk about a tiny portion of what other people perhaps mean by self.
Whilst thinking, and identification with thought, are taking place it will tend to reinforce selfhood, pretty much no matter what the thinking is about. An exception might be a narrative specifically intended to attack the idea of notional selfhood though.
Many thoughts do not relate to the notional self either (for instance when concentrating deeply on a task, the task might engulf “oneself”, so to speak), it is only afterward when thoughts like “I did well (or bad) in that task” when notional self is brought back. On the one hand, there seems to be a connection between intensity of thinking, concentration, experience & doing, and how much of a notional self is perceived at those instances. On the other hand, with extreme relaxation or meditation a similar relationship is also found.
Since the notional self can be attacked by the idea that the notional self is, well, just a notion – I know, it sound trivial on paper but it is much harder to put into practice, well, at least harder to get to the result. One could maybe say that one meme is attacking another meme: the ‘benign user illusion’ is transformed into a ‘malign user illusion’ before it is eventually ignored (as Blackmore would have it).
Well, narratives are narratives. They create self. When I say one can passively observe thinking I am trying to relate that which appears to take place. Who knows?
Well, I submit that there wouldn’t be any kind of such
relating unless there is some kind of self-reference that isn’t directly dependent on thinking alone. You could perhaps call that
the self as observer?