AkuManiMani
Illuminator
- Joined
- Jan 19, 2008
- Messages
- 3,089
Or it could be that, after the scientific discovery, it was found that feelings are different interactions of chemicals within the brain.
That's a very nice, terse answer. But it is, in fact, an answer that explains very little.
There are very many questions that arise from all of these observations. What is it about these particular chemical interactions that causes them to have this property of "feeling"? Do they have this quality outside of the context of the brain -- say in an animal without a brain? Does a single cell have any kind of subjective experience? For what is the brain, but a huge collection of such cells working in concert?
Is it just a very specific class of organic reactions that give rise to subjective experience? Does it really matter what chemicals are interacting? Does it come from them simply being organized in a certain way (i.e. context dependent)? Could you, say, have an inanimate object experience pain or some other sensation or feeling? Is the capacity for subjective experience something fundamental to existence or is it purely an emergent phenomenon? What is the subjective experience of feeling, anyway?
The understandings obtained from current neuroscience, while greatly invaluable, are only surface knowledge of a much deeper mystery; it's barely scratched the surface. It's one thing to say that X class of chemical is associated with Y feeling, but quite another to explain why that is so or even help understand how there is such a thing as feeling in the first place. With that in mind, its more that premature to conclusively say that feeling is identical with a certain class of chemical reactions. All we know is that there is a correlation; we don't know if it is a necessary correlation or even if it is a causal relation.
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