• Quick note - the problem with Youtube videos not embedding on the forum appears to have been fixed, thanks to ZiprHead. If you do still see problems let me know.

My argument against materialism

Reporting is a teleological function, involving a particular choreography of muscle movements, according to the medium, with the goal of conveying information. This involves decision making, which involves a "part of you that makes decisions".

So, yes, it follows. If you're going to say that the part of you that is aware doesn't make decisions, then you have to say that the part of you reporting the phrase "I make decisions" is not the part of you that is aware.

I might be missing some of the nuance. It probably revolves around the word "decisions" and the way you are distinguishing parts. Suppose I snap my fingers. There is the decision and nerve impulse which leads to the finger snap, but at some level, there are muscles, nerves and cells which I do not consciously control -- the snap happens as a result of some mixture of both. I cannot say that my fingers decide to snap on their own, but neither can I say that I control or decide every detail of what happens. My reporting of the event will consist of what I am aware of and at some level, I cannot be aware of what's going on.

Because I do not think of the mind as something that decides in any sense other than a muscle "decides" to contract when it is stimulated, I don't agree that there are different parts doing different things. I also do not have a strong sense of decision making. What seems to happen in my experience is that I consider something and the best decision emerges as "the best" and is then adopted. I never willfully and authentically make the second best choice -- although I may change my mind and reevaluate (as in an edit). So I don't look at it as a decision as much as I look at is as a formula that renders a decision in the same way my stomach makes acid after a meal.

That's not the question at all; I'm guessing you misinterpreted something here. When I said "say" and put a phrase in quotes, I'm not colloquially referring to a feeling; rather, I'm referring to the literal act of reporting a phrase that has that particular content.

cut a bit to get to this question:
{I said,"The advantage seems to be that investigating mind with analogies to biological processes that we understand better grounds us in the material instead of the metaphysical."}

I'm not sure what this phrase means. Are you trying to say that if I don't form biological analogies I'll wander into the metaphysical?

That was on my mind, but also I was thinking about the difference between a kind of armchair musing and going out to see what can be seen through a microscope. I did imply that all of metaphysics fell under that misrepresentation and I'm sorry that it was misapplied to you specifically. I sometimes forget whom I am arguing with.

And what do you mean here by "the other way around"?

I wanted to work from the biological/physical and reach consciousness/mind instead of starting with what I think needs explaining. It's not the only way to work it and certainly our own experiences are what drive us to search in the first place.
 
PixyMisa;6879172[QUOTE said:
]No need for them to be.

Light without photons?


Presumably manifesting in the mind of an intelligent entity?

What are the properties of a universe where 1=2? The question doesn't even make sense.

A conundrum in the mind of man.

Theoretically, gravitons are the gauge boson of the gravitational force. Practically, it is almost impossible to detect individual gravitons; their interactions are far rarer than neutrinos, which are already pretty damn elusive.

Detecting gravitational waves would provide significant support for the theory, and there are a couple of ongoing experiments working on that.

How is gravitation exerted through a vacuum? is it subject to the speed of light?
 
Last edited:
Last edited:
I might be missing some of the nuance.
Well good! That's actually my major point here--that there are nuances aplenty, and we need to be careful before we make strong claims or conclusions based on experiments. What we need to do is take inventory, so to speak. Create maps. Figure out where we are; figure out what things are involved, what the things that are involved actually are, and so on.

And we can do that with experiments as well.
It probably revolves around the word "decisions" and the way you are distinguishing parts.
Alright, I'll propose an exercise here. Back to the cups.

Arrange two cups on a table--one on the left, and one on the right. Sit in front of the cups, and at your own whim, decide to lift one of the two cups, reach out, and lift that cup. But before you move to lift the cup--before you even start moving your hand--say out loud which cup you're going to lift.

Now there are three things about this exercise that are interesting that I'll make note of. The first thing about it is that we are holding off on causing our hand to move until after we report a "prediction" of which hand to move. The second thing is that we always lift one cup, or the other, but our hand doesn't go towards the middle. The third thing is it's possible to do; that is, we can report with near perfect accuracy in this scenario which object we'll lift before we lift it.

The first illustrates a distinction that can be made between two kinds of things--the commitment to a particular goal, and the initiation of action. The commitment to a particular goal is what I mean by "decision". The act of "triggering" the choreography is what I mean by "initiation of action".

The second I don't you have issue with, but it illustrates that a commitment to one goal or the other has been made.

The third illustrates that whatever thing is doing the reporting has "inside information" as to whatever decision has been made; in particular, there's no reasonable way for the thing doing the reporting to report the correct goal so often other than for it to be aware of which goal is the correct one (it's not sensing the movement, since by design, there is no movement; and since in practice, it is indeed possible to do). Or, alternately speaking, it senses which decision has been made before the action has been initiated.

So here:
Suppose I snap my fingers. There is the decision and nerve impulse which leads to the finger snap, but at some level, there are muscles, nerves and cells which I do not consciously control -- the snap happens as a result of some mixture of both. I cannot say that my fingers decide to snap on their own, but neither can I say that I control or decide every detail of what happens. My reporting of the event will consist of what I am aware of and at some level, I cannot be aware of what's going on.
...we're mainly talking about initiation of action, and it's unclear whether or not we're talking about the act of making a decision. In the Libet experiment, no decision is being made--only an action being initiated. And that's way too simple to say anything.

Is this clearer?
Because I do not think of the mind as something that decides in any sense other than a muscle "decides" to contract when it is stimulated, I don't agree that there are different parts doing different things.
We almost never reach between the two cups. It's always picking up the cup on the left, or picking up the cup on the right.
I also do not have a strong sense of decision making.
I agree. Many of the strange notions people have about what they do are based on some theory about themselves that they formulate, not on sensations. It's fairly easy to get people, upon just paying attention to it, to admit that their decisions seem to come from an "abyss".

But you do have certain senses--a sense that you own an action, a sense that you have control, etc. Those sensations are very nuanced too, as things such as particular disorders of control (alien hand syndrome, delusion of alien control, etc) suggest.
That was on my mind, but also I was thinking about the difference between a kind of armchair musing and going out to see what can be seen through a microscope. I did imply that all of metaphysics fell under that misrepresentation and I'm sorry that it was misapplied to you specifically.
Well, what I'm proposing isn't so much armchair musing as it is taking careful inventory. Experiments can help you do that, but assuming things are simple and looking at simplified setups will only lead you astray. Libet experiments, for example, do convey something interesting, but there's so much going on here, you need to ensure you understand what the pieces are before you make particular conclusions.
I sometimes forget whom I am arguing with.
That's an admiral trait actually.
I wanted to work from the biological/physical and reach consciousness/mind instead of starting with what I think needs explaining. It's not the only way to work it and certainly our own experiences are what drive us to search in the first place.
I suggest rather that we find and categorize the nuances, add them to our dictionary, and see where that leads us.
 
Last edited:
Sounds interesting. So you asked a perfectly legitimate question, one which the professor praised, in fact, and you were teased for it. Since it's fun to speculate, I wonder if that interaction set the tone for you in years to come.

Not likely, I was teased far worse for many other things, for example, I was accused of being one of the kids from the "village of the dammed/the Midwich cookoos".

At any rate, you *did* get an answer, the only true answer. "We don't know at this point." That's your answer. It's the only answer and many, many people on JREF have given you the same answer over and over again.

Pixy gave me a different answer yesterday, something like there is no beyond the universe, its self contained. I will be asking him to explain that.

Now perhaps you are left wondering "is that all there is" and are dismayed at the thoughts which arise?

No, far from it I have 40 years of contemplation to fall back on, a number of ace cards and a joker. I am encountering more of a language problem here than intellectual challenges.

I have ideas to contribute which no one may understand or take seriously, that is the dilema.


1. Math, logic, and knowledge are figments of the human imagination which best explain the processes that we can see (detect, become aware of, whatever).

My point was that math,logic and knowledge are human 'creations'

2. Seems like a false dichotomy to me, but maybe I'm reading it wrong.

Not quite right on your get out clause:

"sorry, we don't know, maybe we'll know someday"

"there's no point in basing decisions on or formulating hypotheses about things which cannot be tested for"

HTH
Maybe it is best that each party define their own get out clause's as they no them best;)
 
accepted, I was letting edge down gently. I sensed some impolite responses to his position on the way.

What? So why are you still on that? Didn't you just ask PixyMisa again to elaborate on that same point?
 
By the way - do you think that this creator could alter the value of Pi or have chosen a different value for Pi? Do you think that this creator could decide that right angled triangles don't conform to the Pythagorean Theorem after all?

Well thank you for deciding what we would answer before we have a chance to answer.

Very thoughtful of you I am sure.

But really you don't need to bother.

Because the only get out clause anyone needs is to point out the illogical nature of your claim.

By the way, since you are agreeing with edge, do you agree with him that there was a time when there wasn't any time?

Apologies,

I was trying to ward off edge.

I mentioned a couple of replies I had received, which from my perspective, were effectively get out clauses.
Others accused me of having get out clauses beforehand.

I am not usually so scathing of the other side in a debate, it is something I have picked up here.

I have no argument with edge, it is unlikely I would be in agreement with his position, as my position is quite different.

Regarding pi, I see your point, I have at no time claimed that this creator would exercise its omnipotent power, thus pi would not be or need to be changed.

Time, well I don't claim there was a time when there wasn't any time. Time and space are requirements of finite existence.
 
What? So why are you still on that? Didn't you just ask PixyMisa again to elaborate on that same point?

I was pursuing a line of argument with Pixy about math and logic already, I would like to continue, while also discussing something with Robin.
Sounds reasonable to me.
 
So you agree that there is no need to "adress" infinite things if we don't know they exist, right ?

My point in this thread is it is worth addressing infinity in relation to physical reality. As from my position a finite existence on its 'own', without some infinite component is a paradox.

In the known universe there appears to be evidence of something like this.
 
Why would you call it light?

I wouldn't, I was asking you if light can exist without photons.

Why would you presume that?

From the observation that logic and math exist only in the minds of humans here.

No conundrum; merely incoherence.

You posed this question not me

By gravitons, as I just said.

Is there evidence of gravitrons? how do they operate is it like light which moves through a vacuum?

Does gravity operate at the speed of light so as not to invalidate GR, or is there evidence of this?
 
If I judge it correctly then most people here regard materialism not as a metaphysical position, but merely as a description how the world (as far as we know it) works, inferred from the evidence we have. It is not a statement about what *really* exists at the fundamental level (this may be unknowable or even a useless question to ask). Correct?
Sort of poll twenty peopel get twenty answers, do yo always paint with such broad brushes?
I would be fine with that if this really were the case.

But I doubt it:
I ask myself how certain statements about the world that seem to be made frequently by materialists follow straight from the evidence with as little interpretation as possible (especially no metaphysical speculation).

-"There are only material things."
Unless you believe in dualism, the appearnce of material objects is all we have.
Physics makes statements about specific things we can observe/measure. In what way does physics state which kind of entities exist or do not exists?
And: What are numbers (and their relations) - on which physics depends - if not immaterial entities? They exists in no specific time, location and don't have physical properties either. But they DO exist, because we can refer to them.
they are contructs of beings apparently made of matter.
What kind of evidence suggests they don't exist, except if we already presume only physical things exist?

-"The brain produces consciousness."
Which physical theory can distinguish if the brain produces consciousness or vice versa? And how?
Do you have evidence of consciousness absent a brain?
It's true that consciousness *as far as we can access in any conclusive manner* manifests only in close relation to activity in the brain.
But it's equally true that brains can just be observed if consciousness is present.

-"Consciousness dies with the brain."
As far as we know consciousness is strongly related to information patterns.

It is true that the kind of information patterns that correspond to our mental activity have been found, up to now, only in the brain. But this is not proof that this can not be otherwise.
When you present evidence of consciousness absent a physical substrate come back. Russel's Teapot
Maybe other matter encodes information that are related to human consciousness that we have no access to at the moment.
maybe, physical substrate?
The pattern may occur in our future (on a computer) or in a form we cannot decode yet or in a part of the universe that is too far away to be observed (for example simulations of humans on computers of an alien civilization).
As the brain dies we may find ourselves in a environment where a continuation of our consciousness is encoded in a different form than a biological brain.
Um and how exactly would that work, any known data or theories, Russel's Teapot?
Nothing in physics makes this impossible:
The universe is full of fractal repitition and variations of similiar information patterns at the scale where we can make observations. For example there exist countless stars and galaxies that are very similar in their structure.

Because in restrictions in our ability to observe small-scale patterns that are far away we cannot now for sure if this is the case with the smale-scale patterns like the structure of our brain or cells or technology.
Excuse me, Russle's teapot?

You do know that the fine structure constant is teh same where ever we observe spectra?

And that physical substrate?
But we have no reason to assume that these patterns cannot repeat or appear in other variations in other parts of the universe.

It is very possible physically that the universe is infinite, in which case there will be exact replications along with tiny and big variations of patterns of all kinds.

Also we find variations of similar patterns in very different environments (for example many patterns in our enivronment are approximately repeated in our modelling of them or the form of some galaxies are reminiscent of processes in our atmosphere).

Therefore we cannot expect that the pattern of our consciousness is exactly localized in one particular brain, because there may be many brains or other structures where there are patterns that correspond to our mental states are encoded.
You finger is not the moon, speculation is wonderful, have you read Harry Potter or Lord of the Rings? Maybe The Color Purple?
Currently we have simply no way of saying how information patterns that are relevant for human consciousness are distributed in the universe and so we cannot say what happens with us when our physical brain seems to die to outside observers.
What hidden processes do you think you are talking about?
Also, if we embrace the theory that relates mental states to computations in the mathematical sense (which is very compatible with our observations), we are not localized in any part of the universe, because we really live in an computational (non-physical) world and the physical universe is an appearance emerging from the structure of computations. So minds that are described by computations are primary rather than a physical world that gives rise to minds.

Sorry bud, computations don't whiz around the universe.
 

Back
Top Bottom