PixyMisa
Persnickety Insect
That depends on what the question is supposed to mean.Where is the point of observation?
Here's a hint, Nick: Starts with B. Ends with RAIN.It appears that I am a human being observing things in the world around me, that the locus of awareness is located somewhere behind my eyes. Yet actually, according to for example Dennett, this brain is simply a parallel processor creating simultaneous drafts (from data streams) and there is no place where consciousness is happening.
Yes.One of the drafts it creates pretty much ongoingly is a little story about what's happening. This little story features the principle character "I," and it seems that this "I" is located somewhere inside the head, that it is the holder of opinions, the haver of feelings, the owner of a car, this kind of thing.
Wrong.This to me is the typical model for observation or experience, yet we know that it is false.
Wrong.It is also dualistic
Wrong.in that there are immediate infinite regress issues
Wrong.that emerge as soon as one considers the possibility of this self existing within the body
Wrong.brain
Meaningless.or located in some hypothesized non-physical space.
What? What do you think people mean when they say "I"?One might claim that the subject of experience, the observer of things, is the whole organism, even though this is not how people invariably claim it appears to be.
No. One is not. You might be, but that is because you have no grasp of the subject at hand.This I would consider valid in the sense of addressing the need for "I" to maintain psychological health but to me it is still dualistic in that one is inevitably left hypothesising non-physical entities to explain expressions like "my body."
