This is a classic false analogy.Argo Nimbus said:This is a classic fallacy, i.e. the fallacy of the beard. It's as though you argued that all a bearded man has on his face are individual facial hairs, so the beard is an illusion.
I didn't say "ones" and "zeros" analogous to your "individual hairs", I said "string of ones and zeros" analogous to your "beard"
All you are saying is that you have seen through the illusion.Argo Nimbus said:I would say instead that when I open my word processor, what I am given is an image displaying a page of data, much as it would look if it was printed on paper. If there is no chance that I would confuse the screen image with a sheet of paper, then there is no illusion.
Is it really?Argo Nimbus said:The screen image is what it is: a drawing on a computer screen.
Perhaps it's a string-of-zeros-and-ones instructing a stream of electrons where to land on a screen?
Not as illusory as those buttons on the screen or your mind's "I".Argo Nimbus said:That sounds very profound and I'm sure that there is also a sense in which a man's beard has only an illusory existence.
I must have misunderstood you then.Argo Nimbus said:No, I don't believe there is anything "in there" separate from the process running in my brain...
The process is not an illusion, the process creates an illusion.Argo Nimbus said:However, I believe that the process exists and is not an illusion...
No, notg just your brain, your brain AND your brain's processes (that create your "I" illusion).Argo Nimbus said:The whole point of calling the "I" an "illusion" is to be able to say that there is nothing in your head that is real except your brain..
Agreed.Argo Nimbus said:However, my computer seems to provide a perfect counter-example to that sort of argument in that it contains not only the hardware that makes a program possible, i.e. the brain, it contains something else that makes all screen displays possible, i.e. a process..
Perhaps I should have used the analogy of "Deep Blue", the program that beat the chess master, Kasparov.
Kasparov was convinced that the program was being augmented by input from a chess master. He was wrong. There was no "I" in there. It was just an illusion created by a very clever, complex, heuristic chess program.
Just as the very clever, complex, heuristic program running in your brain creates the illusion of your "I".