AkuManiMani said:
I do not ascribe to Cartesian dualism.
You might not
consciously subscribe to it, AMM, not many people these days do. But it could still be that you are modelling the inner world of the brain in accordance with how the outer world of the organism appears to function, creating a false isomorphism.
This is exceptionally common, even amongst distinguished scientists, as Dan Dennett has long pointed out.
On the surface it would seem that what I've been proposing reflects Descartes in some way. Well, I reject dualism [and other pluralisms] mainly because of the interaction problem. Descartes posited that mind and matter were fundamentally different things -- if that were the case then there would be no way for mind to affect body and
vis versa. For there to be interaction between entities they must have a common basis. This is why I think that some variant of monism must be the most accurate ontological description of reality.
At the same time, there must be a way for there to be real differences and distinguishability between entities [i.e. functional plurality] otherwise existence would be an undifferentiated continuum and we would not exist to talk about it. Most of the monist ontologies I'm aware of pick some arbitrary category [like mind, matter, 'spirit', etc..] and extend that category to encoumpass all other entities. I think that this is counterproductive since it needlessly blends categories and causes unnecessary ambiguity.
Several months back, when I was expressing my view of metaphysics I was told by a forum member [I've forgotten who] that what I was describing was a kind of neutral monism. I looked into the subject and found that my views are most similar to
dialectical monism. When I distinguish between objective/subjective, quanta/qualia, or
WaI/WaS I'm not referring to separate 'substances', as Descartes did. What I'm referring to are complementary relations. What I'm thinking of deviates quite a bit from what Descartes ever dreamed of. I'll attempt to elaborate what I've been thinking up below.
In the conception that I'm drawing upon, I don't see 'mind' and 'matter' as being in dialectical relation to one another. It seems to me that the mind is as vertically objective as the atomic matter of the body. Being veridical, in principle, the mind should be objectively observable. In my current formulation [
at least the bit I bothered to write in my philosophy term paper >_<] I see the mind as being an emergent 'metasystem', or abstractive layer, of the body. What we call conscious experience is just the 'inside' subjective perspective of a mind [it's
WaS correlate]. Even then experience, as such, does not occur unless the mind is in a specific range of states. When in such states, we are able to perceive sensory impressions and mental constructs as being qualities.
If I remember correctly, I think earlier you used the analogy of there being a light turned on when we are conscious. I think that's an apt analogy. To continue w/ the metaphor, the object(s) of our most focused attention would be the most brightly illuminated while those more on the periphery of our attention would be the most dimly lit. The areas of our minds which contain elements we can be directly aware of constitute the domain of the conscious mind [
CM]. The portions of our minds that we are never directly conscious of would be subconscious [the parts which involve unconscious drives, instincts, autonomic regulation of bodily functions, etc.].
Farther outside of the range of the conscious mind lies the unconscious domain; the general organismic mind [
OM] of the body proper, with each 'module' of it organizing the operations of various bodily systems [such as the immune system]. There aren't any absolute divisions between the specialized modules, since they are dynamically interconnected, but they can be distinguished by their distinct functions. In this conception the conscious mind which is a relatively small subset of the general mind of the body:
(Organismic Mind (Neural Mind (Conscious Mind)))
In this scheme, the concept of 'mind' is more general than a mere function of the brain; it overlays the body in general. The
OM is the general organizing factor of the material substrate of the body while the conscious mind [or
CM] specializes in operating the gross functions of locomotion and deliberation.
AkuManiMani said:
As near as I can discern, atm, the realized capacity for subjective experience is the conscious experiencer.
How I see it is....
perceptions are the result of the brain "framing" incoming information, ie...
there is a monitor.
Experience is the result of it further framing it in terms of subject-object relationships, ie...
I am seeing the monitor.
I can buy that there is a realized capacity for emotional and cognitive response. As a Strong AI fan I would actually call this "the soul." But, thinking the way I do, I'm struggling with the notion that there is a capacity for subjective experience, and that this is the experiencer.
I think I can agree with the general idea of information being 'framed' by the brain. I just suspect that it only becomes 'experience' within the domain of what I'm calling the conscious mind, and only then when the capacity is sufficiently stimulated during dreaming and waking states. To put it more simply, the
CM is the stage [or global workspace] and consciousness occurs when the stage lights are running and the actors are in role -- except in this conception, there is no audience but the light being reflected from the elements on stage.
AkuManiMani said:
An analogy for my conception would be to view consciousness like a taunt string. The various patterns of vibration along the string are what we call experience. There is no need to invoke observers within observers in an infinite regression. All one needs to do is define that base media of qualitative experience and you've found the conscious observer.
So, you're saying the neural substrate of brain processing is the conscious observer?
Nick
Dunno for sure. I doubt it's the neural substrate, per se, however. I think the neural substrate is what generates and maintains the capacity of the
CM stage; its only conscious at a specific range of physical states. Its part of the reason why I suspect that consciousness is a range of states undergone by the endogenous field of the brain; sensations would be perturbations of that field generated by the electrochemical activity of the neural substrate.
Of course, this is all just inference on top of speculation on top of inference. Its just an idea, but I have a strong hunch that it in some way matches reality.