Mojo
Mostly harmless
Areas of the brain that assign relative importance to streams of processing information. Those deemed most important are amplified and propagated across multiple networks.
What deems them important?
Areas of the brain that assign relative importance to streams of processing information. Those deemed most important are amplified and propagated across multiple networks.
What deems them important?
I'm pointing out that the distinction is not a priori, merely the result of adaptation.
No! You are still assuming an observer behind the eyes, someone that is seeing.
You can't have a point of observation in monist materialism. It's a physical impossibility. The brain merely constructs neural representations to suggest to itself that a point of observation exists, again because of the adaptive advantage offered.
And the brain of the scientist is the same! It proceeds from assumptions.
Neural assemblies devoted to this task. They pattern-match ongoing representations against pre-existing stored schema that are calibrated for their effectivity to accomplish evolutionarily-derived aims.
Areas of the brain that assign relative importance to streams of processing information. Those deemed most important are amplified and propagated across multiple networks.
No. I am not saying this. I'm saying no observer of mind exists. That this is a highly favoured illusion.
I saying that under monist materialism there simply cannot exist a point of observation.
Quote:
"You can't have a point of observation in monist materialism. It's a physical impossibility. The brain merely constructs neural representations to suggest to itself that a point of observation exists, again because of the adaptive advantage offered."
But not everyone sees it that way.
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No! You are still assuming an observer behind the eyes, someone that is seeing. You can't have a point of observation in monist materialism. It's a physical impossibility. The brain merely constructs neural representations to suggest to itself that a point of observation exists, again because of the adaptive advantage offered.
What can be seen by examining both of these aspects of phenomenal reality is that there is a huge amount of adaptively-advantageous construction going on. And it is so effective that the brain simply assumes that this is how things are. It assumes that this perspective is a priori, not constructed. And the brain of the scientist is the same! It proceeds from assumptions.
We tend to look at the discovery of neural correlation and say things like - OK, great. But how do you get from that to me actually seeing?
[/I] Or - but my life is so vivid and intense how can mere neural activity create that?
Good point. But as far as I'm aware that is not the case. Olaf Blanke famously induced and studied OOBEs, and people saw parts of their bodies that would not be visible with the normal locus. I admit I don't know whether he, or various other scientists who've been involved in this area, tested to see if the dissociated perspective was genuinely perceived, or rather mentally fabricated from the body schema or whatever.
Well, if the actual locus can shift, then perspective would be seen to be non-veridical. So, what we've been measuring with our yardsticks would not really be coherent, rather an anomaly of the evolution of neural representation.
But there is no actual psychological self. There is not actually anything the word "my" applies to. It's a useful illusion.
Yes, as far as we know, the brain creates the representation. The representation is the result of brain activity. Nevertheless it is useful to understand that assigning it ownership is just construction.
I'm just pointing out the facts of the matter. Many things that we take for granted about our visual field and other neural representations simply cannot be demonstrated to be a priori. They are being constructed by the brain to appear as they do, because there has been an adaptive advantage in them appearing this way.
Nick227, I think you are approaching this in the wrong way. Instead of philosophizing, try approaching the issue from a scientific perspective. i.e. Science has to stop working in some unexpected way, or rather your hypothesis needs to make some definite prediction that can be tested. In the meantime as long as science keeps working, e.g. helping us to live longer healthier lives, discover gravity waves (as predicted), etc. etc, then there your ideas will go nowhere, and are probably wrong. Stop trying to force that square peg into a small round hole.
I still maintain if there was a significant difference between what we observe to be real, and actual reality, the human race would have died out long ago, as would probably every other life form on the planet.
Why? And how exactly does that work for every other life form on the planet? Are we elevating plants to a Shyamalan epic these days?
If our senses did not accurately reflect reality it would be hard to avoid walking off cliffs or being eaten by lions.
Try really hard to read what I said. How does this affect every OTHER LIFE FORM ON THE PLANET.
That means not just people. <snip>
Because other creatures would be eaten by lions or fall off cliffs too? (adjust as needed for creatures that aren't susceptible to falling and lion attacks)
Of course this only means that a mental model of the world has to function well enough to avoid dying before the creature can procreate, not that it has to be able to grasp some kind of capital t Truth.
Then again, if we are fundamentally impaired by our evolutionary history and biological makeup, and neither empiricism nor philosophising could help us, how would we ever know?
This is moving into the realm of solipsism.
Cyanobacteria are the most important and successful microorganisms on Earth
Why would plants and cynobacteria be left out? For a simple example then, take a flower which opens during the day and closes at night. If it couldn't detect properly what reality is (the sun is there now, now it's not, etc.) it could not reliably survive. If the plant could not reliably detect or react to reality, then the roots would grow haphazardly and randomly hit water, rather than roots growing deeper because there's more water located there.Again, I'm assuming you guys don't include plants in this discussion of "every single other LIFE FORM on the planet."
http://www.bbc.com/earth/story/20150211-whats-the-most-dominant-life-form
Again, I'm assuming you guys don't include plants in this discussion of "every single other LIFE FORM on the planet."
Again, I'm assuming you guys don't include plants in this discussion of "every single other LIFE FORM on the planet."
http://www.bbc.com/earth/story/20150211-whats-the-most-dominant-life-form