-Wll there is a way for accurately representing how someone should philosophize or reason whether he is a scientist or not. This is what it means to systematize a field of study by !This, in no way is an accurate representation of how a scientist philosophizes. — Metaphysician Undercover
First of all there isn't such a thing as "A" scientific method. Science have many methods but that is a different topic.The method of philosophy is not the same as the method of science, so when a scientist philosophizes, that scientist may or may not have some training in philosophy. — Metaphysician Undercover
A Scientist can escape the first 3 steps of Philosophy. So its more probable for a philosopher to be bad in philosophy than a scientist. But still dudes like Hoffman show that when our auxiliary assumptions are polluted we are capable for really bad philosophy and interpretation of facts in general.so when a scientist philosophizes, that scientist may or may not have some training in philosophy. — Metaphysician Undercover
I think you are confusing Chronicling with the ability of a scientist to contract metaphysical frameworks based on the available facts. The ONLY training one needs to do philosophy is to reason correctly, obey the steps of the philosophical method and challenge his preconceptions.And if the scientist has some training in philosophy, the degree of training will vary from one scientist to another. — Metaphysician Undercover
-No this is not what pseudo science is. Theoretical frameworks that ignore the principles of Methodological Naturalism while using obscure language and questionable data. This is what pseudo science is and like in the case of Pseudo philosophy their advocates won't correct their claims even when they are exposed."Pseudo science" on the other hand is the inversion of this, when someone without proper scientific training makes an attempt at science, without applying the appropriate scientific method. — Metaphysician Undercover
-Its obvious that I am not the confused one here. Hoffman promotes a Death denying ideology as "science" and the only argument he has is "I got a mathematical model".That you confuse these two is evident from the fact that you switch from pseudo science to pseudo philosophy in the course of your post. You don't seem to know what you're talking about. — Metaphysician Undercover
From a scientific perspective the concept of proto-consciousness is also closed not because we don't understand it but because Logic (Parsimony, Null Hypothesis, Burden of Proof, Demarcation etc) and current data render the idea..."not even wrong"(Wolfgang Pauli).From my perspective, this OP is closed.
I don't have a clear view on what Penrose and Hameroff mean when they mention proto-consciousness.
Thank you for sharing your opinions! — Eugen
-You are talking about a claim saying that particles posses a specific High level feature. That needs to be demonstrated independently from the aesthetics of other claims. You need to demonstrate it by explaining how a world would look where particles do not posses that ability and then point to a methodology capable to falsify your claim. Can you really do that?By showing the alternatives are worse. — bert1
Yes they are conscious states with different qualities (intensities) We can quantify them by measuring specific metrics in brain function. By doing that we can introduce our theories in the real world, produce Meaningful Predictions, Accurate Predictions and Technical Applications resulting to the improvement of different conditions.The examples you give are of differing content of consciousness, from unfocused and fuzzy, to sharp, or something like that. They are all conscious states. — bert1
I study Neuroscience....OK, how do you know that? — bert1
-Fundamental for survival? Sure, but not fundamental in a mystical way(ontology of reality). Maybe you can explain what you mean by the term " conscious is fundamental". That would allow a good conversation.Mark himself, although he provides an interesting epistemology, believes consciousness is fundamental. — Eugen
ok thats good to know. So your point was that consciousness is a property of particles. How can you demonstrate that?I don't think they are magical. — bert1
Well in science we have ways to quantify our conscious states. Anil Seth explains the metrics of the quantification processs.No, consciousness is not quantifiable. It does not admit of degree. X is either conscious or not, there is no middle. — bert1
No more magical than saying particles have mass or charge. It's just another property of matter. — bert1
↪bert1
I don't think they've got agendas. I think their brains simply look for alternatives, it's natural. Maybe they're right and we're wrong. Maybe we're biased, who knows? — Eugen
-Actually the study of a biological phenomenon is by definition a job for science. After all Science (Natural Philosophy) is nothing more than Philosophy with a empirical methodology on naturalistic principles.(Methodological Naturalism)they deflect the topic into the scientific realm — Eugen
-Strawman. Science is, currently the most credible way we have to produce and to verify the quality of our knowledge.science is all-powerful — Eugen
-Shifting the burden and poisoning the well fallacy...plus its the statement is contradictive.c. science hasn't proven yet that consciousness is fundamental, therefore we shouldn't believe that — Eugen
-Therefore Methodological Naturalism...meaning that you accept a claim AFTER it has been verified to be true without making up invisible realms and agents.therefore, materialism must be true — Eugen
-So you are suggesting something that resembles magic ...but you have issues with the label used ?Like Nickolasgaspar keeps mentioning magic as if I've been pushing it when I've never actually mentioned it. — bert1
I don't really understand your question so I think an Academic Mooc on consciousness is the best way to find your answer.I'm trying to get clear in my head what you think the relationship is between the experience of smelling a rose and what happens in the brain. Is the experience the same thing as events in the brain, which we simply call smelling a rose? Or is it a product of events in the brain? Or something else? — bert1
I see, so you have observed the emergence of consciousness. Is that right? Consciousness is nothing other than certain functions of the brain, and if you observe these functions working, you observe consciousness. Do I understand you? — bert1
Emotions (reasoned in to feelings)are the basis of our conscious state (Mark Solmes- Theory of consciousness). A stimulus caused by a particle (odorants) triggers our brain to interpret the meaning and implications of that external cue (our brains have evolved as predictions machines elevating our chances of survival /Anil Seth).OK, the words 'result,' 'enabled by,' 'formation,' suggest something other than an identity with function. Could you clarify? Is the feeling we get when we smell a rose the result of a neural function? Or is it the same thing as a neural function? — bert1
-It doesn't have to do with personal preference. It has to do with the need to Demarcate Philosophy and Science from pseudo philosophy and nonsense.....that's all.If you do not like this idea that is your choice. Not liking something should not really be a singular guiding principle when tackling any complex problem. — I like sushi
Then why are you disregarding both on your reply to me about Penrose? His thought is based PURELY on logic and known physical mechanisms. — I like sushi
-I am a Methodological Naturalist. Methodological Naturalism(MN) is not a Philosophical Worldview but an Epistemic Acknowledgement. My claims end where my ability to observe and verify ends. My current accepted Scientific knowledge is Tentative and based on what we can currently observe and falsify. That limits me within this realm forcing me to reject any indemonstrable realms or agents.These are philosophical positions. You haven't escaped into science. — bert1
My panpsychism is the conclusion to a bunch of premises. I just haven't given them here. I have done so at length in the past on this forum, and everyone is bored of me doing so, apart from you, so maybe I'll do it again just to annoy everyone. No right now though I don't have time. — bert1
Of course it's not wrong. If you generalize a quality just because of your condition its a text book fallacy.Being conscious can only be evidence of the ability of a biological process(you) to be conscious. — Nickolasgaspar
No, that's wrong. — bert1
"I'm arguing from the specific (me) to the general (everything). That's a different fallacy, no doubt, I'm sure someone will point it out in a minute. 3....2....1.... — bert1
Agency needs to be demonstrated not assumed. Your premises need to arrive to the conclusion...not to start from it.Luckily for nature it's agency is still there regardless of what we think about it. Yay for realism. — bert1
Special pleading is a fallacy....how about digestion...why don't you argue about that, after all we find neurons in our guts...Sure, in many many ways. Just not with regard to consciousness. — bert1
-No you won't find Panpsychism as a conclusion in a since publication of neuroscience. TryI won't accomplish anything, I'm too puny and my dick is too small. But there is plenty of support for panpsychism across fields, including neuroscience. — bert1
It depends from your definition of "Consciousness".1) 'Consciousness' is not vague — bert1
-Again you will need to define consciousness and what vagueness has to do with the phenomenon.2) The structure and function of systems generally thought to realise/cause/be (pick your verb) consciousness are sufficiently complex to be highly vague. — bert1
-I am not sure that you use the word "consciousness" in a meaningful scientific way....but to be sure, I will have to listen to your definition.3) Therefore there is unlikely to be non-arbitrary way to decide at what point in the development of these systems consciousness emerges. — bert1
-Its a fact that conscious states emerge from the function of the ARAS and the ability of the Central Lateral thalamus to introduce content to any stimuli that has met the threshold of attention, by connecting to areas of the brain responsible for Logic, memory, symbolic language, emotions,pattern recognition, prediction etc.4) It is far more likely that consciousness does not emerge — bert1
-Consciousness is a state, its real but it doesn't exist as an entity on its own. It;s the emerging result of an on going process like life, digestion, combustion. When the conditions are right they just manifest in reality.5) Nevertheless consciousness exists (I know it does in me, that's the datum of evidence) — bert1
-I am not interested in Philosophical worldviews.There are three possibilities: eliminativism, emergence or panpsychism
All of these are problematic.
Eliminativism is false because I am conscious.
Emergentism is false for a number of reasons depending on the version of it. E.g. functionalism is false because it has no answer to 'Why can't that happen in that dark?'
Panpsychism is the least problematic and is the only theory standing, even though that has problems too (the combination problems most famously).
Therefore, provisionally, panpsychism — bert1
Penrose always says the Universe is not conscious, but that proto-consciousness is a fundamental property of it. Now I'm a bit confused.
1. What is proto-consciousness?
2. How is proto-consciousness differentiated from matter?
3. What is the difference between consciousness and proto-consciousness? — Eugen
I don't see how to make sense of this.
If we decide that something is true on the basis of some observation, and subsequent observations show that it is not true, then we were wrong.
Our observations do not generally change what is true, but what is believed. — Banno
I will read his comments and if his reasoning is based on the principles of Methodological Naturalism then he will be appreciated.You two should be friends. — bert1
-I don't understand your point because you are saying that you aren't anything more than two abstract concepts (Chemisty or space).Actually, I don't think I'm anything more than organic chemistry, except maybe space as well. — bert1
-You are committing a logical error. Your position SHOULD be induced by your premises. Its shouldn't be your conclusion product of a tautology.But as a panpsychist I think all chemistry is conscious. — bert1
Being conscious can only be evidence of the ability of a biological process(you) to be conscious.My evidence for this is that I am conscious. — bert1
-I can not find any earlier comments of mine in this thread so I don't think your comment is relevant to my thesis on the subject..at least I don't understand your point. If not, please elaborate.I don't think you've quite grasped the point about non vagueness. Your brain farts and such are experiences and therefore do not constitute states that are indeterminate as to whether or not they are conscious. — bert1
meaningless made up conceptsEmergent property dualism — bert1
-I am sure it was not my fault = ).Well, hello again Mr Gaspar! I hope any exchange between us, can be more fruitful than it has been in the past. — universeness
The part I have underlined, confirms for me, that after the big bang, we moved from a situation of disorder, everywhere in the universe, and due to the homogeneous nature of the universe at that scale, that disorder, 'evolved' into the 'relative' 'order' of the galaxy clusters we observe today. — universeness