Ian,
Because the conclusion does not follow from the research.
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How would you know?
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Because scientific research cannot acheive the miraculous. In supposing it can you are misunderstanding the nature of science;
Nobody is suggesting that science can accomplish the miraculous.
what its legimate area of concern is. There is nothing, nor could there ever be anything about the physical facts of the world (ie those facts discernable from a third person perspective) which suggest or imply phenomenal consciousness. I''m afraid that scientific research is simply not relevant pal.
You have claimed this many, many times. What you have never done is given any good reason why anybody should believe it is true, much less any actual evidence that it is true. What, are we just supposed to take your word for it?
You have flat out stated that you "have absolutely zero interest in research design", and "have no interest in correlational studies". This would suggest to me that you are poorly qualified to be making assessments about the scientific research in this, or any other area of research.
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I do not need to make an assessment of the scientific research since it cannot acheive that which is impossible.
This is nothing more than a metaphysical assumption you have made. Which makes more sense? To assume that a particular endeavor is impossible, and never even try, or to assume that it is possible until such time as it is demonstrated not to be?
Give us a good reason to believe it is impossible. I am not so pessimistic as to simply assume it is a-priori.
On one hand you are asserting that you have no interest in the kind of research that people are claiming shows a causal relationship between brain activity and consciousness,
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Such a "causal" relationship, in the sense that Gebeker has defined it, is an irrelevance.
How so? You apparently want to hold research on consciousness to a higher (and impossible) standard than other things. Why? Do you not realize that it is, in general, impossible to prove causation in the strict sense? The best we can do is show that a causal relationship is the most parsimonious explanation for the observed correlations. In the case of consciousness, the scientific evidence, which you so blissfully ignore, clearly demonstrates that a causal relationship between brain activity and phenomenal consciousness is the most parsimonious explanation for the observed correlations. That is how science works.
but on the other hand you are confidently asserting that there is no causal relationship, and that the research does not indicate such a relationship, even when people who are knowledgable about the research say otherwise.
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If there is a causal relationship as the physicist would define it then this is completely different.
I am puzzled as to what you think a physicists definition of causality would be. Although the definition Gebeker provided was a bit oversimplified, it is essentially the standard used throughout science. The conditions he outlined are exactly the type of conditions under which a causal relationship is the most parsimonious explanation.
I would assert that such a causal relationship is in principle impossible. How can any scientific research get around that which is in principle impossible??
You can assert that until you are blue in the face. Can't you wrap your mind around the fact that many very intelligent and knowledgable people
simply don't agree with this assertion?
If phenomenal consciousness is causally inefficaceous, then how can it play a fruitful role in any theory?
It can't. But since it clearly
is causally efficacious, as evidenced by the fact that its very existence has caused us to be having this discussion, the point is moot.
If on the other hand phenomenal consciousness is logically entailed by third person physical processes, then this isn't a causal relationship. For A to cause B, A and B can neither be numerically identical, nor can A logically entail B. A causal relationship betweeen "A" and "B" implies a natural relationship rather than a logical relationship.
What's your point? The hypothesis supported by materialists is that consciousness is a physical process of the brain. The causal relationship being posited is not "brain causes mind", but rather "alterations to the brain cause effects on mental states". The causal relationships are
evidence in support of the theory. They constitute such supporting evidence because the existence of such causal relationships is predicted by the theory, and because the theory is falsifiable.
Thus according to the theory, consciousness is logically entailed by physical brain activity, and a causal relationship exists between physical influences on the brain and changes to mental states.
Now why, exactly, do you claim that this scenario is impossible? Other than the fact that you believe it is?
Dr. Stupid