But aether and space-time aren't the same thing with different names, Aku. There's very little in common between them.
I said that what was in common between them was an attempt to describe the media thru which light propagates. I also
specifically pointed out that
AkuManiMani said:
Every object/process, by simply existing, is an expression of some quantity. But, in the context of some conscious entity, the quantities take on qualities.
That's the bit I have issue with. I think that we simply like to think of it that way. It's a relic of the olden ways of thinking. But if you stop to think about it, when you hit your elbow somewhere, do you feel a quality ? Or are you simply responding to stimuli ? Once I focus on the experience, I honestly can't see qualities. That's a huge chasm to cross if we're to speak the same language.
I think that's a reasonable objection. There is a longstanding habit of considering perception as somehow being distinct from physical activity or response.
I'm not saying that perceptions are not responses. When it comes down to it perception is a
class of response. What I'm proposing is that there must be a specifiable media which is
responding to stimuli by producing what we call perceptions. I'm not saying that experience is not a 'behavior' or response; I'm saying that there must be a very specific class of physical interaction that generates experience and that if we determine what this specific class of interaction is we will have found 'consciousness'.
The problem with qualia is that they are pretty much defined as the cause of consciousness but they only exist in relation to it. As I said above, I'm still yet to accept their existence (even in a non-dualistic kind of way) and you'd have to explain how they can possibly arise, from what, and what they're made of.
I'm not sure if I would personally defined them as the
cause of consciousness. I've been giving the feedback all of you have provided some serious thought and I think I have a means to atleast frame the problem in an intelligible way.
I've decided to consider the 'mind' to be a process/entity generated by the brain. Consciousness would be a state of the mind. Qualia could be considered as perturbations in this state which, together, make up what we call experience. The first major step would be to physically determine what the 'mind' is. Once this is done -- if it can be done -- I think we will have a workable model of consciousness w/o having to invoke dualism.
AkuManiMani said:
The simple answer that its 'just information processing' tells us nothing; all physical objects and events are information processes.
But they don't necessarily compute i.e. categorize the information.
I think that the criteria is still a bit too broad. All living things, and artifacts made by living things, are expressions of computation of some sort or another. As I pointed out before, computational processes still go on in a subject even when they are not conscious. This has led me to the conclusion that intelligence [i.e. computation] is not necessarily the same as consciousness. Its become clear to me that there must be some more specific physical requisite for consciousness than just general computation. It seems that it is a specific class of physical state that is generated and maintained by atleast some organisms for limited periods of time [such as when we are awake].
AkuManiMani said:
If every even, object, and process can be reduced down to discrete quanta it stands to reason that perceptions can likewise be broken down into more basic elements.
Only if you assume that consciousness is not a process but a thing.
But there is no absolute division between process and 'thing'. All objects have both a particulate and wave nature. Physicists have even reduced elements of sound down to quanta called phonons. In the conception I'm considering mind is a collective process/entity generated by the brain and consciousness is just a state of this process. If mental elements like ideas and memes are able to propagate within a population, and memories persist long enough to be repeatedly accessed then it seems to be more than justified to consider the mind to be a 'thing'.
AkuManiMani said:
Hate to break it to yah, but such arguments are, by definition, doing philosophy.
Uh-huh, but we don't have to get to sophistry in the process.
No, we don't. But you're still a philosopher in my book
Okay so it's not "dysfunctional" per se. So ?
Meh...Its a bit of a side issue but I just wanted to use synesthesia as an example of a natural experiment which shows that perception of stimuli and stimuli are not the same thing.
AkuManiMani said:
If one were to break sensations down to their basic components, what would they consist of?
That's exactly what I'm asking.
That's the question every researcher in the field worth their salt should be asking themselves. Honestly, I don't know that answer to that question either and I'm intensely curious as to what it is. What I DO know is that the
blasé attitude of
"we already know -- its information" to be rather counter productive and antithetical to scientific inquiry. Well,
duh! Of course it's information. But, in order to meaningfully advance in this area, we must attain a more specific answer than that.
No. You'd have a WORD, "é", composed of a single phoneme. Phonemes have no meaning, in and of themselves.
Not only that. Words, sounds, markings -- w/e -- have no meaning outside of what we give to them. If one decides to make a
phoneme in reference to
phonemes then it is so.
Actually I think the whole point is to determine HOW the world is, not WHAT.
So you view science as being more a search for
process rather than
substance?
Only if qualia exist and have anything to do with consciousness. I don't agree that they are required, and scientists in the field seem to agree.
The term 'qualia' isn't in reference to any new entity. It directly refers to our
actual perceptions of the world -- i.e. our consciousness. Would you stop quibbling with me if I just started using the terms 'perceptions' or 'private behaviors' in place of 'qualia'? Regardless of the vocabulary you choose to describe consciousness, the fact still remains that perception of stimuli still needs more rigorous scientific explanation. What is logically wrong with the proposition that perceptions must break down to basic elements or calling such elements 'qualia'?
If you had used "private behaviours" it wouldn't mean the same thing, because the term doesn't imply some sort of behavioural "particle". So, yeah, it's more than just the word.
If even light and sound can be broken down into particulate quanta, what makes you think that 'private behaviors' would be exempt?
Now you're just being dishonest. I said "These people are experts IN THE FIELD WE ARE DISCUSSING". Neurology and computer sciences exist, no ? Those are our best options to study the nature of consciousness, so what I'm asking is why YOU think that YOU know better.
I already pointed out that there are plenty in the field who recognize that we don't know what consciousness is yet. Its interesting to note that the claim that we already know what it is comes more from computer scientists than actual neuroscientists. Me pointing out that we don't know what consciousness is yet is not a claim from superior or special knowledge; its a clear and obvious fact. Those claiming that we DO know what consciousness is or have a sufficient working model of it have yet to demonstrate such. You don't need to be an 'authority' to apply your own critical thinking.
AkuManiMani said:
I'm just going off of the scientific knowledge that is readily available in any library, on the internet, and in schools.
Yes, that's so much more convincing.
Especially since the sources of those materiala are the very same authorities you're appealing to.
That's because, AS WE'VE SAID already, the ONLY way to detect consciousness is through behaviour. You can't "detect" consciousness with a radar. So we observe and note that another human, for instance, acts as we'd expect if he/she were conscious. Once the same occurs with a computer, there is no reason, aside from dogma, to reject it as non-conscious.
When you asked me how I knew that you were conscious I replied that I didn't. I said I could only infer from your responses and make a tentative guess. You then pointed out that outward behavior is not necessarily indicative of conscious perception:
Belz...:
You have no evidence that I have qualitative experiences, specifically because those are NOT required for my behaviour, and are undetectable even in principle.
The simple fact of the matter is that if one has perceptions of the world, they are conscious. Being as how perceptions are
actual events -- the very cornerstone of empiricism -- they are necessarily veridical and should, in principle, be discernible by some objective means. This means that, if one has real scientific knowledge of what consciousness is, they should be able to
objectively determine whether an entity is conscious and, if so, have some reasonable idea of what those perceptions would
be like given a specific stimuli --
without having to rely on inference. To claim otherwise it to suggest that consciousness is supernatural -- i.e.
fundamentally outside of the realm of science. I do not believe that there is any
actual phenomena that, in principle, lies outside of the ream of scientific inquiry. Any inability to scientifically investigate a phenomena would be practical -- not in principle. Conscious perception is an
actual phenomenon so, in principle, it should be objectively discernible by some means.
Right now there are practical limitations to our ability to scientifically understand consciousness and objectively determine whether a subject has perceptions; we are forced to make guesses and inferences. But, being as how conscious experience is an
actual phenomena, in principle there must be some means of objectively studying and understanding it. You may not realize it
Belz, but your position on this matter is fundamentally
unscientific.