angrysoba
Philosophile
Just keep repeating NO, tsig. I mean it's always worth a try - No, No, No. But look what happened to Amy Winehouse in the end. She should have gone with a yes.
Nick
Computer says, "No!"
Just keep repeating NO, tsig. I mean it's always worth a try - No, No, No. But look what happened to Amy Winehouse in the end. She should have gone with a yes.
Nick
I'm not saying it's defeated. I'm saying it needs to assess and compensate for evolutionary bias
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If our brains developed a sense of an observer existing, through evolutionary bias, then what does scientific method look like without this add-on ?
It's straight materialism. You can't have an observer. Do you look for an observer within the brain? No. So it has to emerge. Can it have actual reality? No, that would be dualism. End of story.
Does materialism spell the end for scientific method? I've been pondering this question for some time. It looks like this...
* At least 99% of modern scientific research into the brain points directly to it being the sole source of consciousness. Pretty much every aspect of conscious experience has now been tracked to brain activity.
* Consciousness emerges from brain activity. It's what neural processing actually looks like, actually is.
* If the brain is the source, or foundation, for consciousness then there cannot actually be an observing self. Though it's a pervasive and convincing phenomena it can't be real, or we'd be back in dualism. If we tell a materialist that they're going to be painlessly and instantaneously killed, and replaced with an identical copy, in theory they should be OK with it. It seems like something is going to be lost - them - but materialist logic dictates that this cannot be so in reality.
* This seeming presence of an observing self is likely therefore some highly favoured illusion resulting from millions of years of selective pressure. It's useful primarily for evolutionarily favoured tasks - finding food, shelter, sex, and avoiding predators.
* If selfhood is merely a highly favoured illusion then what does this say about some of the cornerstones of scientific method, principles and techniques used to determine the truth about things? Surely perspective is finished. Objectivity must be in quite some trouble if there is in reality no subject. Separation - got to be an illusion. Distance - sounds dubious. These concepts, so much the bare bones of our daily existence, must just be artifacts of our hunter-gatherer past, not reflections of reality. Even empiricism, perhaps not blown away, but surely weakened now.
Materialism - could it spell the end of science?
Nick
or how about a TV show, where all the thinkers in the world have to fight it out until only one remains? Then we all accept what they believe. Or has that already been done?
or how about a TV show, where all the thinkers in the world have to fight it out until only one remains? Then we all accept what they believe. Or has that already been done?
I would like to suggest more cooking shows. Not the scientific ones, but you know, the regular, non-sciency cooking shows.
Does materialism spell the end for scientific method? I've been pondering this question for some time. It looks like this...
* At least 99% of modern scientific research into the brain points directly to it being the sole source of consciousness. Pretty much every aspect of conscious experience has now been tracked to brain activity.
* Consciousness emerges from brain activity. It's what neural processing actually looks like, actually is.
* If the brain is the source, or foundation, for consciousness then there cannot actually be an observing self. Though it's a pervasive and convincing phenomena it can't be real, or we'd be back in dualism. If we tell a materialist that they're going to be painlessly and instantaneously killed, and replaced with an identical copy, in theory they should be OK with it. It seems like something is going to be lost - them - but materialist logic dictates that this cannot be so in reality.
* This seeming presence of an observing self is likely therefore some highly favoured illusion resulting from millions of years of selective pressure. It's useful primarily for evolutionarily favoured tasks - finding food, shelter, sex, and avoiding predators.
* If selfhood is merely a highly favoured illusion then what does this say about some of the cornerstones of scientific method, principles and techniques used to determine the truth about things? Surely perspective is finished. Objectivity must be in quite some trouble if there is in reality no subject. Separation - got to be an illusion. Distance - sounds dubious. These concepts, so much the bare bones of our daily existence, must just be artifacts of our hunter-gatherer past, not reflections of reality. Even empiricism, perhaps not blown away, but surely weakened now.
Materialism - could it spell the end of science?
Nick
You agree that if consciousness is purely a brain phenomenon then this must indicate a selfless reality?
So, everything is just happening, observed by no one. This is as near as we can get to a True statement here, as opposed to a socially useful one. Then it seems reasonable to me that our sense of perspective, of things being near or far, is just an artifact of evolution.
I don't see any fleshing out of your reasoning, just another statement of your claim. Can you explain why method would be weakened if there isn't an observer. And, don't you mean a non-material observer? Or are you allowing for a material observer when you say "observer?"Yes. I'd say to a degree. Mathematical principles shouldn't be under any threat, for example. But the sheer weight of value given by scientists and others to method must be weakened by the reality that there isn't actually a subject, an observer.
OK. You're definitely conflating epistemology and ontology. Whether someone believes in Cartesian dualism or a strictly monist materialism says nothing about the validity of scientific realism or antirealism. You can be a monist who accepts, say, Daniel Dennett's "Multiple Drafts Model" and still believe in scientific realism.
Such a person would say that while the "Mind's Eye" is indeed an illusion it is nevertheless an emergent property of real material things: namely neurons, and these real entities provide a (for the most part) faithfully recreated depiction of how the universe really is
In such a scenario we'd simply reinterpret the results of said method as being an approximation or construct of reality. The scientific method would still be useful even if we started to understand science as an invention of models rather than the discovery of truth since, you know, it seems to work pretty damn well. Atomic theory works and its predictive power is unmatched no matter if "atoms" are actually real.
Surely it is far better to have a bit of, possibly unavoidable? bias, which tests and checking can resolve, than to have to stop advancementss in Science ?
So your 'observing self' is what, the conscious mind watching itself?In this context, an observer.
Are you asking how something could be self-aware without having a metaphysical component? Then I ask you - why should a metaphysical component be required?How so?
what purposes, and why do you say it is an illusion?Not really a good analogy for the sense of an observer. It's an illusion that developed for specific purposes,
Huh?and can corrupt data interpretation for others.
Oh now I get it - you're a bot!Sent from my D5503 using Tapatalk
See! Stuff like this is why philosophers can't have nice things.
* If the brain is the source, or foundation, for consciousness then there cannot actually be an observing self. Though it's a pervasive and convincing phenomena it can't be real, or we'd be back in dualism.
Nick, what do you suppose these evolutionary biases are likely to be? Keeping in mind how evolution actually works.
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These, though, are known biases; indeed, the entire foundation of scientific practice consists largely of acting in ways that counteract those biases, such as by performing controlled experiments, performing statistical tests for significance of results, and discounting intentional supernatural agency as an explanation for observed phenomena.
What biases did you have in mind? Can you give some examples?
Yes, we use double blind studies and look for reproducibility of results, ideally from different researchers. We do this to try and remove subjective bias.
It's great, but the next layer of bias that will need to be assessed and dealt with is now on the horizon. And it's not so subjective, more the opposite. From evolutionary biology & psychology we learn of instinct blindness. The fact that human brains developed instinctual reactions to certain stimuli through selection pressure, over a long period of time, means two things. 1) they're pretty much all the same, and (2) their perceptual and cognitive systems are fundamentally instinctual, though mental capacities to override instinct have more recently emerged.
Consider separation. Seems pretty reasonable, huh? I mean I'm here and well, the laptop is just there. Oh, the wall's over there. Until we remove the subject, I, out of the scenario. Now everything is just object. Everything looks the same but the sense of hard boundaries is dispersing. It's more like a TV screen. Now, a masked gunman has just walked into the room! Ah good, hard boundaries again, instinctual responses override this non-dual spaciness. Glad I learned to fight. That's him dealt with. You get the idea?
Perception, distance - I mean they look real. And in any situation where the brain's instinctual response to danger (or other favoured stimuli) is triggered they will seem real as hell. But that guy measuring the distance between those two points, well that's just an action taking place! Where's the real significance?
The significance of scientific method is weakened when the illusion of there existing an observer is seen through. Great, guys. We measured the distance and checked the time. And now, er, we know more about relationships within an erroneous perception of space. Uhm, great.
For tasks with evolutionarily-derived significance, staying alive, reproducing, of course science is wonderful. Determining truth... well maybe. Maybe not.
So your 'observing self' is what, the conscious mind watching itself?
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what purposes, and why do you say it is an illusion?
Oh now I get it - you're a bot!