AkuManiMani said:
The thing is that the foundation of epistemic pursuit it one's immediate experience. As it happens, the topic of discussion -- consciousness -- is the sine qua non of all knowledge. Without the subjective there cannot be any knowledge of the objective. One's own consciousness and immediate experience is the only 'ur-substance' that one can have direct knowledge of; all else are hypotheticals with varying degrees of reliability.
Yes, but haven't you simply turned 'experience' into an ism, specifically idealism? I have no reason to believe that my epistemic position in the world, reliant on experience, implies that experience is the most fundamental substance in existence. I don't make that assumption.
That is why I think it worthwhile to explore the possibility that experience, feeling, emotion, etc. are not fundamental but are reducible processes. There is only one way to find out and that is to try. It seems to me that proclaiming them fundamental puts an end to enquiry. We can't explain fundamentals.
My point was that the only epistemic base we have is our own consciousness. Any ontological considerations we can entertain are all tentative conceptual structures that we grow from the seed of immediate experience. This isn't to say that our consciousness is necessarily the only real 'stuff'
[or even the 'root directory' of the ontological web] but it is the only real thing beyond reasonable doubt. One's own consciousness is not a hypothetical or proposition to place faith in -- it just unequivocally
-is-.
That being said, we've an odd state of affairs where there is a jarring conceptual disconnect between our subjective reality and the theoretical structures we use to model the 'exterior' world. The most obvious gap is that nowhere in our physical model is there an accounting of our own 'interior' subjective reality. The closest thing we have to such an accounting is the
'observer' effect in QM.
So, as I said before, I'm not denying the reality of the 'physical' objects we observe
[ideal-ism
], or asserting a fundamental disconnect between 'physical' objects and observers
[dual-ism
]. My point is that consciousness --- the
observer -- is not described in the explanatory model of the
observed.
ETA:
I
proposed that a good theoretical approach would be to find an equivalence relation between
quanta and
qualia and all I got from you was a brief comment about my rejection of physicalism. Any opinions regarding this proposal in particular?
AkuManiMani said:
Hence my objection to turning any model into an ideological view -- an '-ism'.
[...]
My point is that attachment to the ideology of physical-ism, and not so much the physical model itself, is the problem.
Who is attached to an ideology? This isn't an ideological war. Every enquiry must begin with some assumptions in place in order to ask questions. I happen to think that a good starting place is -- I don't know what the heck is out there, but we have to have some ground rules. The ground rules that have always worked are these -- the uni/multiverse seems to follow a set of rules, so let's try to figure those out.
I don't care if anyone tacks an ism onto any of this because the label isn't important.
Like I said, the only non-hypothetical starting point is our own consciousness and its the very thing NOT included in our hypothetical model of the world, except as a hand-waving assumption. This is a problem.
And despite your insistence that ideology has nothing to do with this discussion, I'm afraid that it not only has something to do with the discussion -- it is the main culprit in obstructing it. There are deep ideological assumptions driving the majority of arguments in this exchange. A good portion of the participants in this thread are steadfastly defending physical-
ism from any and all perceived challenges. One can't so much as use trigger words like 'subjective', 'feelings', or 'qualia' and the natives go crazy crying 'nonsense!' and 'blasphemy!'. Then the so-called "discussion" turns into an assertion/counter-assertion fest that leads nowhere except farther of people's behinds.
If I were a less brash person I could employ ways to make my same arguments while flattering physicalist sensibilities and using only language that is sanctioned. However, I refuse to tip-toe, round the block, or walk on eggshells because of certain individuals ego-attachments to their favorite "-ism" and the price I pay for that is boneheaded stonewalling. I'd very much prefer to have a calm reasoned discussion as you and I are having now but, for the most part I've had to content myself with slashing thru the psychological issues at the root of this quagmire. Certain individuals here are so psychologically enmeshed in their ideologies that I can scarcely attack the argument without drawing blood from the arguer. After a few years of dealing with the same @#*&damn bull***t I've come to the point where I'm more than happy to do so. So yes, whether you recognize whats going on here or not, ideological commitment is THE obstacle to the meaningful progression of this discussion.