One thing I would like to know myself is when and how the physics of biology leads to the sensation of red. If you happen to know that it would be great.
Again, if you want to, you will have to use the terms as they are used in neurology, not in common usage.
Sensation is defined as the processes in the sense organs, except for the vestibular sense which is an amalgam of kinesthetic, cochlear sensations and visual perceptions, and maybe more as well. It is sort of a perception in that sense rather than a 'sense', in strict terms.
Perception is the brain events such as the creation of the visual field or the auditory field.
Sensation is the actual biochemical processes in the sense organs, perception is the complex processing in the cortex regions.
Of course, some do not even know what the sensation of red
Again it would be helpful to use the defined terms as they are defined. The
sensation of red is many different events in the retina of the eye, it involves the triggering of certain photoreceptors, and the not triggering of other photoreceptors, the mixing of saturation between the color receptors and the the brightness/contrast of the rods. In this case I think you are likely referring to what would be termed 'visual perception'.
means because they will make it all about mechanics and nowhere about sensation itself (which is my main point, but if you want to talk specifics of certain models I am all ears).
Again it seems you are talking about teh actual process reffered to as perception. the 'sensations' are more like set values of interaction bits which are also analog amalgams of different photoreceptors.
No we do not at this time know why we perceive the seven/three major 'colors' as opposed to stippling , crosshatching or other possible ways that the 'colors' could appear to us.
However there is no reason that I am aware to think that it is anything other than biochemicals and neurological events.
Which is why I ask you, what else might there be?
I could be wrong that a neurological model does not already exist that gives the correlates of consciousness, but are we not still supposed to be trying to figure out what NCC's are, or did I miss a memo or something?
And I asked you specifically, what else would there be that could not be explained by neurological process.
they are not 'correlated' with consciousness, they are consciousness as far as we can tell.
What data is there that might indicate anything else? That I have seen there is nothing at this time that is not 'conscious' or exhibits 'consciousness' that does not have a neurological structure of some sort.
Or is this a framework question in disguise? Doesn't matter. I will let the relevant scientists do their job on this one. I will let you know when they have any kind of answer to the questions I am pondering here. For the moment, as far as I can tell, they are not there yet.
That is not what asked you at all, and you pointedly ignored my question.
"When consciousness is finally figured out it will probably be nothing anyone is expecting is my guess."
Is exactly what YOU said.
So other than neurological events, what exactly do YOU think consciousness might be?
I and most people 'expect' consciousness to be neurological events in biochemical neural networks.
So please answer what do YOU think or expect that consciousness might be other than that?
(Aside from whether non biochemical neural networks could be built.)
