Thank you for those kind words. To refute an argument you must understand it, and to refute it to the proposer's satisfaction (or otherwise), you must understand it from their POV. This is why it's so pointless to interpret another's words to your own preference and then argue against that interpretation, it's a straw man. True, people could express themselves more clearly and precisely - but of course, they're only human.
*nods*
I'll take that as a 'yes'
*nods*
I don't understand exactly what you mean by 'observable entity'. can you clarify? It sounds like 'objectively verifiable entity', but this would surely exclude qualia.
Hehe. You're on to me.
Yes. If you recall, earlier I stated:
The distinctions are not arbitrary but logically, and necessarily, follow from the reality. I
stated much earlier in this thread that qualia and quanta [subjective experience and objective existence, respectively] are
complementary aspects of reality. Objective reality is veridical which means that, by definition, it can be
observed. Observations themselves are, by definition,
subjective and are necessarily
qualitative; however, the act of observation itself has objective reality as well.
Qualia aren't just
observable; they are the fundamental basis for
observation. Without observation -- without
perception -- there is no knowledge, there is no
science.
AkuManiMani said:
... The general idea that has been coming together in my mind is that all observable entities [even atoms and 'fundamental' particles] are all just emergent processes of more fundamental constituents.
I can see that we can describe physical objects as being composed of other physical objects, which are likewise compositional (is it turtles all the way down, or is Planck the limit?), and that these parts are interact dynamically, and their interactions over time can be called processes, and emergent, because the behaviour of the composition is not related to the individual behaviours of its constituents in a simple way...? is that what you meant? if so, what was your point?
While I was pointing out emergent properties my actual point is a good deal more radical than that. I'm saying that even what we think of as physical objects are just as virtual as any metaphysical abstraction.
Of course, there's a bit more to it than that. For the past couple of semesters I've been piecing together my own little ontological framework, as I find most of the conventional ontologies a bit lacking >_>
AkuManiMani said:
On the other hand, I think it would be also justified to consider such entities to be as ontologically real, in their own right, as the basic process(es) that give rise to them.
OK, but for what values of 'real' ? They are conceptual entities, not physical entities. At a conceptual, metaphysical level, they may both be abstractions with common properties, but at the physical level (that is our context in this discussion) I think you're making a category error if you attempt to equate the two - they are qualitatively different.
I'm saying that there is no absolute division between what we consider physical and metaphysical. I'm saying they exist on the same continuum. Mental objects are as objectively real as 'concrete' objects.
AkuManiMani said:
One example that I like to use is that of words. Words are symbols that are used to convey concepts and meanings which are, by they nature, abstract entities of a sort. Words are words regardless of the nature of the media upon which they are conveyed [for instance, as a pattern of sound waves, a hand written text, engravings, electronic displays, etc..]. They have an objective reality that has causal relevance to actual physical events yet they themselves are not physical objects, per se, in the conventional sense.
I don't see the utility of this analogy here. You seem to be comparing different levels of abstraction of qualitatively different concepts and trying to draw a conclusion that has meaning at a physical level...
Oh ho...I'm not just using it as an analogy... >:}
It's not necessary because [quale is] not a scientific concept, so there's no scientific understanding to be advanced.
I pointed out to
Dancing David earlier that modern science [i.e. the modern scientific method] is a
technology developed by Enlightenment era philosophers. In other words, science is a philosophical tool for systematic knowledge acquisition. In other words, science is an
applied philosophy.
The purpose of science is the cumulative advance of knowledge within an ever evolving conceptual framework. 'Matter', and the domain we call 'physical', are just the starting frame of reference upon which natural science began compiling the human knowledge base. 'Matter' and 'physical' are just words used to describe a particular category of extant entities -- not the absolute measure and basis of reality.
As mentioned earlier, anything that has objective reality is, in principle, observable in some fashion. If it is observable it falls within the domain of scientific inquiry. Thoughts, and other mental objects, have objective reality. We base our
physical action off of the perception
mental objects -- meaning they have veridical consequence upon the physical world and, by extension, physics. They are well within the domain of scientific inquiry.
Memes are abstractions for modeling the spread of imitative behaviors, so arguably part of social & behavioral science, but qualia is a philosophical abstraction, not scientific...
The same argument could have been put forward for the concept of 'hereditary elements' about a century ago. Memes are a
protoscientific concept, atm, just as genes were. 'Hereditary elements' [aka genes] were, and
are, necessarily inferable entities because of the observable replication of traits from one generation to the next.
Memes are also necessarily inferable because of the observable replication of behaviors and beliefs between individuals. These, in turn, have physical consequences upon the world -- they are, in principle, veridical objects. The thing is that mental constructs like memes cannot replicate or exist without the
conscious perception of living subjects. People mentally
perceive and incorporate physical behaviors into their repertoire. They
perceive and accept beliefs and propositions which, in turn, shape their behaviors. Memes are mental [i.e. subjective] entities but they have
objective consequence upon the world. Subjective perceptions are
necessarily qualitative and, presumably, they can be broken down into more basic elements. These elements are what some call 'qualia'.
I expect he is waiting for a clear, unambiguous, formal definition of what you mean by them, rather than a dictionary definition or vague description. It seems to me that many of Pixie's responses are intended to get the other party to think through their concept enough to provide a formal (scientific) definition of it, and in doing so, discover that it has little or no (scientific) meaning or value.
Dude, if a
dictionary definition is not formal then the term 'formal' is meaningless. I every single post I've used the term in a manner consistent with the definition -- THIS definition:
qua⋅le: a quality, as bitterness, regarded as an independent object; a sense-datum or feeling having a distinctive quality.
As I've already said, qualia aren't just empirical phenomena; they are the very basis of empirical observation. The statement that they have no scientific meaning or value is probably the most
absurd claim I have ever heard. Without qualia the IS no science. Period.
You have a habit of dropping his qualifiers and/or adding your own qualifiers when you paraphrase his statements, e.g. his use of 'such a field' (where 'such' referred to an EM field that could carry consciousness and influence neurons) became any EM field when you accused him of contradicting himself ("you assert that there is no way for the brain to generate EM fields"), and where his description of the measurable brain wave activity as simply 'noise' became 'all just incoherent noise' when you wanted to scoff - and many other instances. That's not accurate representation, it's misrepresentation, it's annoying and a waste of time.
If that is the case all he had to do was state
"It is not possible for the EMF of the brain to be the carrier of consciousness". My argument was,
and is, that consciousness may be carried by the EM field generated by the brain. For him to simply state
"no such field exists" when he meant
"It is not possible for the EMF of the brain to be the carrier of consciousness" is not only lousy communication - but factually incorrect.
Perhaps is
Pixy actually bothered to
articulate himself instead of spewing out one liners and single word reposes we wouldn't have the problem right now.
And another thing.
Pixy defined information processing as 'awareness' and self-referential processing as 'consciousness'. These are the same definitions he used a year ago, and hes still using them now. At no point did I misrepresent his position. If you believe I did feel free to provide the exact post in which I did so.
No, it's mocking. A straw man argument is an informal fallacy based on misrepresentation of an opponent's position, which is what you've been doing.
I stated that the endogenous field of the brain is possible the carrier of consciousness. For him to claim that I'm arguing for a 'magical-faerie-field' is not only mocking but a direct misrepresentation of my argument -- i.e. a
strawman.
Regardless of what you want to call it, it was still inappropriate; if he wanted to have a civil discussion with me he should have been civil. Why should I be singled out for retaliating? If
Pixy, or anyone else, doesn't want a caustic barrage of insults then they shouldn't pick a verbal fight with me. I suspect that the only reason why you're focusing on me is that I'm more adept at wielding words as weapons than
Pixy is.
AkuManiMani said:
However, based on reasons mentioned above, I still maintain that I find the EM model of consciousness to still hold some plausibility.
Despite there being no evidence whatsoever for it, no requirement for it, no plausible mechanism for it, and what little evidence there is for EM influences on the brain suggesting that it is many orders of magnitude away from feasibility? That's not a very scientific approach - as the saying goes, 'Keep an open mind, but not so open your brains fall out'
LOL!
No, no, no. I need you to keep your brains in. How else are you going to be able to provide the criticism I need to strengthen my postulations?
Anyway, I've already admitted that I'm basing my position off of logical inferences and circumstantial evidence. Is it possible I'm wrong? Of course. Am I going to concede just because there are a bunch of people who really, really,
really disagree? Not a chance.
