Zeuzzz
Banned
- Joined
- Dec 26, 2007
- Messages
- 5,211
Two things are obvious:
You've never kept chickens
You've never had a greenhouse.
So it's just you.
Nurse! He's up again!
Two things are obvious:
You've never kept chickens
You've never had a greenhouse.
So it's just you.
To expand on this point, can anyone give a possible reason why the subjective experiences people report in such "+5 level" altered states of consciousness seem to be so similar?
To expand on this point, can anyone give a possible reason why the subjective experiences people report in such "+5 level" altered states of consciousness seem to be so similar?
The same possible reasons why people who have their eyes closed and their eyeballs pressed on seem to report such similar experiences.
The same possible reasons why people who hold their breath until they are about to pass out seem to report such similar experiences.
That's a cheap shot. Or maybe not.
Are no experiences profound, even though sane and scientific types often speak of the profoundness of certain altered states of consciousness?
Yet, you may have a point. Snark free, even. I'm not sure.
You'd need to ask yourself.
A description of extreme nausea, I suppose, would be fairly similar amongst various experiencers of nausea. Same with orgasm, or extraordinary pain.
Yet,
and yet...
Nurse! He's up again!
~snip~ there's no evidence consciousness is anywhere in the universe but in the brain.
Please remember this when you ask why a computer can't be conscious.
The same possible reasons why people who have their eyes closed and their eyeballs pressed on seem to report such similar experiences.
The same possible reasons why people who hold their breath until they are about to pass out seem to report such similar experiences.
I was talking about that universal cosmic consciousness nonsense. There's also no evidence a computer cannot be conscious. In fact, a full simulation of a brain would undoubtedly be conscious. Why wouldn't it be?
It would not have free will and the ability to do any more than it was programmed to.
That's true. In addition to the usual hardware and software, you will need to wire in one "free will and the ability to do more than it was programmed to" bean.
Can you explain this sentence more clearly?
A simulation of a brain does what it is programmed to do. That is, it does the same thing as a brain.
Who programmed the brain?
And what is the source code?
In that case just read the documentation.
Your brain was programmed?
This doesn't hold water to me.
There's a difference between poking some-ones closed eyeball with a finger, poking them with a red hot poker or poking them with an acid coated toothpick.
Totally different classes of drugs (tryptamines, ergoline derivatives, opioid analgesics, NMDA agonists) each with completely different Ki value binding affinities to totally different receptors each seem to produce extremely similar effects when +5 states are reached.
Thus such similarities can not be explained by typical neurochemistry.
It's called a paradoxical stimulus because the usual stimulus for the rods is visible light, not pressure.I know, that's why I brought it up.
Go ahead and press on your eyeball. Seriously.
If one didn't know how the functron filters in the first stages of the visual processing system worked, they might try to attribute the similarity in patterns that *all people* see to some universal consciousness.
However once you know how those work, it is obvious that "oh, they are just malfunctioning" and that causes the patterns and furthermore that since the circuit is the same in all humans, so is the pattern.
That's true. In addition to the usual hardware and software, you will need to wire in one "free will and the ability to do more than it was programmed to" bean.