Belz...
Fiend God
*blink*
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You are aware that this is a public forum and that potentially any english-literate person in the world can read that nonsense you've posted, right..?
Hurts, doesn't it ?
*blink*
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You are aware that this is a public forum and that potentially any english-literate person in the world can read that nonsense you've posted, right..?
I'd say hes about as qualified to speak on computer programing as you are to speak on philosophy of mind. You clearly have no idea what you're talking about on the matter of consciousness. Glass houses, son.
That thing that happens to you between waking and sleep.
I don't think that's what he's assuming. I think he's just got so little idea what he means by the term that he shifts between definitions without even noticing.There you go, again, assuming that "consciousness" ceases to exist when you sleep.
You have spent your lifetime in a language community that speaks of "sensations", "images", "feelings", etc. as nouns. You can sense things; does that mean that there is a thing called a sensation, with its own existence? You can see things; do you see images of things? If you consider that you would rather doubt the thing than the image, and thus say that you cannot see a thing but only its image, one wonders how you see the image. Do you see an image of this image? Or an image of that image of the image? Our language treats processes as nouns, but that does not magically make them exist separately from the processes.
Looking at the computer screen, as per your example... the screen is termed the distal stimulus; its corresponding excitation of the retinal cone cells is a proximal stimulus. This bleaching of photopigments begins a chain of reactions, processed to some degree at each step, from the architecture of the retina itself to the multiple throughputs which respond differentially to edges, wavelengths, past associations, faces, motion, and a dozen or more separate characteristics. There is no place where an image exists.
We can, through psychophysical testing, even demonstrate that what most of us think of as a rich tapestry of visual experience simply does not exist. It is illusory--there is something there, but what it is is not at all what we describe. One problem with consciousness researchers is that they tend to take our verbal descriptions of conscious awareness as bedrock (as Interesting Ian always did--does anyone remember the colored cube thread?), and sets the task as one of describing this fictional consciousness. When we fall short, as we must, our explanations are seen as inadequate or even denying basic human experience. No. We are describing and explaining what is there, and are under no obligation to describe what is not there. To trot out my old analogy again, it is enough to describe the rotation of the earth; we need not describe how the sun actually climbs a stationary sky in order to explain a sunrise. Our language speaks of sunrises and of minds; both are prescientific vocabulary. The things they refer to are real and meaningful, but we do not have to accept the historical explanation.
Again you try and change the point, in effect (whether conscious or not) you are simply trying to evade the fact that the evidence shows that your assertions are not correct.
Guess againFunny, I thought you had an opinion on this matter. I guess not.
Really? I'll throw out all three copies of Hennessy and Patterson and let you tell me about it, shall I?Guess again
You don't know what you are talking about
Why not?This is not the thread to discuss the issue
Whatever floats your boatReally? I'll throw out all three copies of Hennessy and Patterson and let you tell me about it, shall I?
Are you being obtuse on purpose?Why not?
AkuManiMani said:I've already presented it. The very fact that ALL the significant operational functions of the biology take place at quantum scales [i.e. cellular and sub-cellular scales] is evidence enough to establish the plausibility of the hypothesis. In fact, given what is already known about the brain, is seems extremely implausible that QM scale processes would not have a cogent effect on the neurological function of the brain and organism as a whole.
Not even remotely.
As Tegmark pointed out, the time scale of neural events is removed from that of quantum coherence by thirteen orders of magnitude.
Unless you can show real, hard, direct evidence, I'm very much afraid that Tegmark's thirteen orders of magnitude trumps your baseless speculation.
In physics, coherence is a property of waves, that enables stationary (i.e. temporally and spatially constant) interference. More generally, coherence describes all correlation properties between physical quantities of a wave.
When interfering, waves add together to one big wave or destruct each other to a lot of smaller waves, depending on their relative phase. Two waves are said to be coherent if they have a constant relative phase, which also implies that they have the same frequency. The degree of coherence is measured by the interference visibility, a measure of how perfectly the waves can cancel due to destructive interference.
[....]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_coherence#Quantum_coherence
It's physically impossible.
Quantum mechanics is a set of principles underlying the most fundamental known description of all physical systems at the microscopic scale (at the atomic level). Notable among these principles are both a dual wave-like and particle-like behavior of matter and radiation, and prediction of probabilities in situations where classical physics predicts certainties. Classical physics can be derived as a good approximation to quantum physics, typically in circumstances with large numbers of particles. Thus quantum phenomena are particularly relevant in systems whose dimensions are close to the atomic scale, such as molecules, atoms, electrons, protons and other subatomic particles. Exceptions exist for certain systems which exhibit quantum mechanical effects on macroscopic scale; superfluidity is one well-known example. Quantum theory provides accurate descriptions for many previously unexplained phenomena such as black body radiation and stable electron orbits. It has also given insight into the workings of biological systems.
[...]
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Quantum_mechanics
There you go, again, assuming that "consciousness" ceases to exist when you sleep. I don't know about you, but a lot of stuff happens, that I'm quite aware of, when I sleep.
]
QUANTUM MECHANICS!! 
In a super-duper coincidence, I just happened to print out this paper by P. Davies about an hour ago to read this evening:
http://cosmos.asu.edu/publications/...on trivial role in life' BioSystems paper.pdf
~~ Paul
QUANTUM MECHANICS!!
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Pixy and Six7s, I think that you both know that this is a semantics issue, unless Six7s believes that there is no software which can preform computations(which I would highly doubt).
A computer can be defined a few different ways, latching onto one definition thereof, and calling someone out on a strict technicality based on that definition, may be a little lame. =p
Pixy isn't wrong.
Software can't ever perform computation on its own. Hardware is always required. The form of the hardware is immaterial (except that it can't be immaterial).
Dude.
It is a semantics issue.
Drop it.
Pixy and Six7s, I think that you both know that this is a semantics issue, unless Six7s believes that there is no software which can preform computations(which I would highly doubt).
A computer can be defined a few different ways, latching onto one definition thereof, and calling someone out on a strict technicality based on that definition, may be a little lame. =p
Pixy isn't wrong.