What is the conscious mental experience that I have every day and every waking moment of my life?
Exactly what qualia are you referring to?
Is obscurity allowed now?
Well, as above shows nicely, you've just contradicted yourself.
I'm not sure what you're claiming
Perhaps it's better to take this slowly. Our respective positions are very different, and that seems to be on a foundational/fundamental level. Right now, I'm just wanting to ensure that I am aiming at the right target, so to speak. So, I ask...
Exactly what qualia are you and other proponents of the hard problem saying that reductive physicalism cannot account for?
Not a single mental event is explained as actually produced by brain states nor could it be explained in that reductive physicalist manner. All they can do is point to another correlation (or causation) between mental and physical states which doesn’t further progress the physicalistic explanation of qualia.
Without appeal to obscurity, reductive physicalist approaches can account for qualia at least as well as any other position.
I would argue better than, especially if obscurity is unacceptable.
There's a need for you to elaborate on exactly what counts as qualia, for that is precisely what any approach is supposed to be taking account of
The position you're working from and/or arguing in favor of presupposes that there is a distinction between biological machinery doing it's job and so-called 'subjective' experience.
I'm also quite unsure of the invocation of 'mechanical awareness', in terms of AI or something akin. I've not likened experience to that, nor would I. It's a red herring. Unnecessary distraction.
Exactly what qualia are you and other proponents of the hard problem saying that reductive physicalism cannot account for?
There isn’t a proof, per se, only an internal affirmative logical consistency.
Yes, I could elaborate on the rationality justifying the categories, but to do so is a foray into the seriously transcendental, which may be a different idealism then is represented in the theme of your thread.
By materialistic I don't mean the materialism worldview.
By materialistic I mean the mind obeys space-time.
1. the duality of mind (spacetime) and 2. the non-duality of non-mind (spacetime-less)
I mean that you simply cannot express it fully since systems of thought will always be limited.
And yes in different periods of human history it has to adapt and evolve to make sense.
So, if you find a philosophical term that combines both these two kinds of philosphical views, I would be much obliged!
However, Eastern philosophers, as well as Western ones who have borrowed elements from Eastern philosophy, as I have already mentioned, talk a lot about metaphysical subjects but they almost always offer a detailed description of as well as examples for them
Yet, "obscurity" and lack of explanation for me means lack of real undestanding. And this holds for both physical and non-physical things.
Yes, I know that. Yet, it does not explain what "consciousness" is. This was my point.
But there are a few I know that have descibed this quite well and in a plausible way.
Still, I can safely say, as general description, that consciousness is perception
So, you agree there is a mind-independent world, you just don't agree that it is physical?
I have no argument with that since the definition of 'physical' derives from how things appear to us: tangible and measurable.
I think Kant's claim that we don't know what things are in themselves stands
Saying that things are fundamentally mental is an example of the same kind of category error, because 'mental' is a term denoting how certain phenomena: thoughts, feelings, volitions and so on, seem to us. That is to say they seem to be different than the objects of the senses in that they seem intangible and are not measurable.
meaning that the former can be reductively modeled in a mechanical or causal way, and the latter cannot, which makes it seem as though there will always be am unbridgeable explanatory gap.
I have never heard a convincing argument that this gap can somehow be crossed by an explanation that holds together on both sides of it
In Chalmers own words, from "The Hard Problem of Consciousness":
This example works against your claim. If I am anesthetized I do not dream. Signals in the nervous system are blocked.
The question of why and how biological functions give rise to experience has everything to do with science!
Blocking such inquiry because it does not fit your metaphysical assumptions is the metaphysical, that is, conceptual problem.
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we should not exclude the physical organism out of some metaphysical conviction
but if your metaphysics excludes scientific inquiry then it is a dead end. It is embodied minds that we must deal with, and so science is not merely a "supplement".
The question of being is a philosophical question, but that does not mean that science, which deals with actual beings, is excluded from ontological inquiry.
Right, we don't experience that the world is physical, our experience includes things that are physical.
How is the data transmitted to us if not physically?
He argued only enough to suit the overall purpose. All he needed to do in justifying a systemic conclusion (the possibility for human empirical knowledge), is demonstrate the necessity of a certain set of antecedent conditions. It’s just a simple “if this then that” logical construct.
I launched a discussion "You are not your body!"
he talks so much about "in consciousness" and I have never found a piece of information about what he thinks/believes consciousness is.
Then, he maintains that the "self" is an illusion. But then he connects it to the "ego", i.e. the "constructed self", which of course is an illusion. But then I have never heard from him describe what the individual himself, as a unit of awareness, i.e. the "I" or "YOU", stripped from any additives, is. This is certainly not an illusion!
So a metaphysical theory can never be wholly because of the nature of "theory".
The way our mind works is materialistic which means dualistic
and it can only explain something within space-time meanwhile the fundamental reality must be beyond space-time /or spaceless-timeless
The truth that is spoken is no longer the truth.
Subjective Idealism and solipsism aren't ideas
but a tautological understanding that the meaning of all propositions is ultimately reducible to whatever is perceived or thought in the first-person at the end of the day.
Naturalism isn't an idea
Naturalism isn't an idea, but an understanding that the meaning of inter-subjectively valid propositions, such as those concerning the properties of natural kinds, cannot be identified with particular thoughts and experiences of the first person.
So i don't consider Naturalism and solipsism or idealism to be incompatible per-se
"Being is perception" is an unavoidable tautology of non-representational idealism that is necessarily appealed to whenever an observer interprets a physical proposition in terms of his personal experiences
"perception is representation" is an unavoidable tautology of naturalism
for universalising intersubjective semantics in an abstract fashion that isn't dependent upon the perceptual judgements of any particular observer.
Taken together, "Being is Perception" and "Perception is Representation" don't necessarily imply that "Being is Representation", as is often naively assumed by materialists, if one understands these principles as referring to different and non-overlapping aspects of semantics.
If there are many minds and many mental states, and they are not connected with one another, then how to explain the unarguable fact that we experience the same things in the same environments?
I don't deny that the way we perceive things is peculiar to humans because our brains and perceptual organs are constituted in the same ways, and in ways more or less similar to animals. But other animals, judging from their behavior, perceive the same things we do in the same locations that we do, which suggests that there are real structures there, which are independent of being perceived.
The hard problem is only a problem for physicalists if they presume that consciousness is not physical
The subjective "feel" of conscious experience is not available to third person observation, so it is not the business of science to explain it.
Why should we think that everything whatsoever can be explained in terms of physical models?
Could you put the "hard problem" in question form please? The question needs to have an acceptable answer, by my lights. So, if you could formulate a question that has a potential/possible answer that you would find satisfactory, it would be super helpful. I want to make sure we're on the same page.
Glad to hear names like Kastrup coming up in this medium!
It's the first time since about two years ago when I joined TPF ...
So I would llike to know where does "What are your thoughts" refer to.
From a few replies I read from other people, they don't seem to have such a "problem". But I have!
It is merely a claim. It is not a theoretical or metaphysical issue, but an actual practical one
Your metaphysical assumptions are an impediment.
This is nonsense. First, Aristotle's physics rests on its own metaphysical assumptions. Second, if you want to hamstring science by requiring it to adhere to the authority of Aristotle, you are too late. If Aristotle were alive today his physics would look quite different.
So, first you fault science for smuggling in metaphysics and then appeal to metaphysical theories.
The fact of the matter is that advances being made in neuroscience do not get tangled up in metaphysical questions of substance monism, dualism, pluralism.
Speculative ontology is not something I take seriously beyond its limited entertainment value.
I am arguing that the claim that the universe is experiential in essence is, as I said, not something we experience or know.
So….anything I said find a place in your analytic idealism?
What they fundamentally are is just a separation of molecular structures.
What fundamental thing or substance is it that you mean isn't defined?
Every prediction Einstein made has been verified in a number of different ways, so what does that tell about a mind-independent world?
What is it that you are trying to convey?
We are a limited species in our perception, in order to let us function better for the existence we have.
Our mind does not represent anything accurately.
In reality, however, these objects are not anything in themselves, outside of our interpretation of reality these objects blend together and are just formations of accumulations of matter through entropic processes
I think that arguments that try to distinguish reality from our perception in a "do a tree fall in the woods if no one is observing it" way, is rather an error from how our minds functions
It is simply that emergent consequences form when a complex system reaches hyper-complexity
The key here is that instead of looking inwards to try to understand these emergent properties, we need to observe other places where complexity exists and see such behaviors over time.
If we agree that there aren't any religious and supernatural aspects of reality, then we are part of nature/reality and we function the same as all other organic matter around us.
In relation to what I wrote above, our consciousness is a hyper-complex ecosystem that is self-aware of being such and this self-awareness is part of the emerging abilities out of this system.
If it is true that physicalism...can't explain consciousness then it is not a hard problem but an impossible problem. It then follows that it is not a problem at all.
Or the question then becomes 'is there any alternative to a physical explanation'? and of course the answer would be 'no' sinve the so-called hard problem specifically calls for a causal, IE physical, explanation.
One statement that I think we both agree on in layman's terms is that the perception of a 'thing' is real in itself, and that the perception cannot exist without the perceiver.
If one only "knows" ideas because there are only ideas
and if each mind is an idea
then all minds are properties of each mind
I see. You're advocating immaterialism (which entails solipsism), not (just) panpsychism.
I understand this point, but how is this semantically different from just saying that reality is independent of observers? A tree is going to be what it is no matter if we observe it or not
Why introduce mind and mentality?
Mind and mentality imply an observer, which always leads to the question of, "Then what is the observer?" You have an outside entity which needs explaining. Is it also just a mentality? If a mentality can have a mentality, what does the word even mean at that point?
If being is reality, then all of reality is being.
I think I just need a better definition of "mentality" and "mental".
I agree, but this isn't any different from a physical reality based model. Reality exists independently of what is observed
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I suppose this really asks us to break down what "physical" means, as its only been implicit. "Physical" essentially means there is an existence independent from our observation.
As noted, this eliminates infinite meta self-observation
You exist as a physical being. Despite your lack of observing yourself, you still exist physically in the world.
our mind does not float, it is located within your body
What is real is not perception-independent. What is real is what exists, and does not need to be perceived to exist.
I am not sure I agree with this assessment. Science uses falsification to test hypotheses by trying to break them. When they cannot be broken, what is left is considered scientific fact. This does in fact describe what certain things fundamentally are.
How could this be falsified? Destroying the brain and still seeing green
It is a common mistake to believe that the hard problem is claiming physicalism cannot link brain states and consciousness together.
What I am open to is seeing if you can prove that physicalism cannot link the brain and consciousness together.
The answer a physicalist gives is, "Because our attempts to disprove this claim have all failed". Neuroscience does not assert a theory that we are to buy into. It asserts a theory that we cannot buy out of.
What struck me immediately was that the OP presupposes that the purportedly "'Hard Problem' of Consciousness" refers to an actual problem, particularly for reductive physicalism. I think that that presupposition is based upon an ambiguous inadequate idea... regarding exactly what counts as being a problem. If there is no problem to begin with, then the entire exercise is moot.
Consciousness is emergent. As such, it is - as we know it - the result of millions of years of evolutionary progression
There is no "aha!" point or moment in time that can be pointed at, and then it can be said "here it is!".
The reductive physicalist can identify and thoroughly explain how all sorts of 'the parts' commonly associated with conscious subjective experience work physically(See Dennett's Quining Qualia).
It's akin to the physicalist pouring hundreds of thousands of grains of sand onto the floor and pointing at the result, while the opponent says... that's not enough to count as a pile of sand.
So the problem with Kastrup is the problem I have with Schopenhauer's metaphysics. Why is there so much involved in this "illusion" of the representation (physical) from the monistic Mind? I don't know. Why should it be so complex if it is some sort of unity?
Even if it is unity individuated into an "alter" of disassociated parts, why should these parts be the complexity that it is?
Why would it take on this complexity rather than simply being a simple physical aspect?
Let's take the known seriously at least, and take that where it leads us, to perhaps a plurality.
I guess I can try to counter-argue this point and say, time is the main factor of why we think of plurality. If everything started as a unity (singularity), then time makes it seem as if things are not a singularity. So the multiplicity is not a multiplicity in at least one point in time (the singularity). But then why is that point in time the only one we are focusing on? Not sure, maybe someone like @Bob Ross wants to chime in.
The fact that we cannot now explain consciousness does not mean that there is not a physical explanation.
According to the Standard Model of Particle Physics there are fundamental or elementary particles of matter.
You are assuming that there is mind, but what do we know of mind that is not based on our mind? You are arguing that our consciousness cannot be explained unless consciousness is fundamental and irreducible
Based off of our experience you infer that reality is essentially experiential.
Put differently, based off the human mind you infer that there is mind itself.
The best theories do not misuse Occam's razor. Monism is not better than dualism or pluralism simply because it seems simpler to have one thing rather than many. Unless the theory can explain the whole of reality in terms of this one thing then Occam's razor does not apply.
is not something we can experience but it is also not something we know. Whether it is something that can be known is questionable.
But now it seems that in order for there to be experience there must be us or something like us. If so, then prior in time to such animals the nature of reality could not have been experiential. There was nothing capable of experiencing.
In order for Kastrup's assertion to qualify for a theory of reality it must explain how animals like us, capable of experiencing, came to be in a universe like ours full of things to be experienced.
I've heard something similar to this before. Its sort of a "God observer of reality" idea (does not necessitate a God). I've seen this type of thought as the idea that if we could have an observer that could observe and comprehend reality, that would be the true understanding of reality.
Isn't reality itself the substance the God observer observes, while the entire rational interpretation of it all can be known about that substance?
If I understand what you're going for here, its the idea that the "sun-in-itself" only has identity because of rational beings. Let us imagine a child who looks at a picture and see a sun in a sky. If the child has never been told that there is a sun and a sky, would the child necessarily see the sun and sky as separate? We identify it as separate, and so it is. But without a rational being doing the identifying, would the concept of the sun and the sky exist? Would there really be a separation, or would it just be a blend of atoms?
If I have this right, this still does not eliminate the sun as an existence if an observer did not exist.
If "being" is reality, why not just call it "being" instead of reality?
In which case, why not simplify it to state that reality is what exists regardless of our observations, or our being, while what we know about reality is a combination of our rational identifications that aren't contradicted by what exists?
Under analytical idealism, the entirety of reality is fundamentally mind and is thusly conscious: not just animals. — Bob Ross
Analytical Idealism is not a form of pansychism. Furthermore, could you please elaborate on why you think such? — Bob Ross
Explain why you have not just contradicted yourself, Bob. Thanks.
I don't have much substantive to offer here, but I wanted to compliment you on a well written and clear OP. You obviously put a lot of thought and effort into it.
but I adopt the Kantian principle of there being innate categories and functionalities of the mind which are not simply given but which the mind brings to experience.
Yes, it seems to me that 'panpsychist' arguments (e.g. analytical idealism) consist of appeal to ignorance / incredulity, hasty generalization and compositional fallacies.
Does science suggest that there was mind experiencing itself experiencing?
Or that there is something experienced that is not experience? That there is a difference between experience and what is experienced?
There is a logical leap from our being experiential to the universe being experiential. We have no experience of the experience of the universe or of it being experiential. It seems to be a form of anthropomorphism. The ancient assumption of like to like. Microcosm and macrocosm.
This is still within the world of human experience.
It is the best because the best theory must be reductive?
That there must be a single something that is fundamental?
We have no experience of something fundamental.
So if I understand this correctly, reality is the total abstraction of an observer
Isn't this just solipsism?
Because this seems to run into the problem of multiple beings each having a separate, and often times conflicting representation of reality.
If the observer is doing the abstracting, what is the observer? Is that also an abstraction of itself? In which case, what is it?
For example, if I abstract that I can fly, but fall and shatter half of my body, while I am in the hospital I have to find an explanation for why my abstraction failed.
They cannot understand what it is like to experience a green pen from your point of view.
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This is where we run into the hard problem. How do we objectively handle personal qualitative experience when it is impossible to know if we can replicate it on ourselves? Is what I call green your qualitative green when you see the waves that represent green? So far this seems impossible.
No, we know you're going to see green when a green wavelength hits your eyes and the proper signals go to your brain.
The fact that everything you experience is from your brain is not questioned in neuroscience at this point, only philosophy.
What is it like to be a fire for example?
Just because we don't understand all the mechanics to the exact degree in a system does not invalidate the overlaying mechanics that we do understand about that system.
qualitative experiences being linked to the physical brain
it is that a physicalist method cannot account for what it is like to be the thing experiencing that qualitative experience, because it is purely in the realm of the subject having the experience
We cannot objectively know through the mechanics of stimulating the brain what it is like to have the experience of that brain, as we can never be that other brain.
Check out brain surgeries, or the case of the color blind painter who had brain damage that removed his ability to ever see or imagine color again
First of all, very few people actually believe in "materialism" meaning, that very few people think that all we are bits of matter that can be reduced to tiny particles and that emotions are just chemicals.
But mental properties couldn't be explained by these mechanical properties, ergo dualism.
Lastly, we know so little about personal identity and how it actually works, that it just makes no sense to say objects in the universe are "disassociated complexes" of a universal mind
One little grain of sand, or one little atom is conscious sounds odd.
Sounds like neo-Schopenhauerian metaphysics.
Isn't it the modern scientific paradigm that everything is relative to something else?
Even the core of spacetime functions on relative terms.
So can someone even claim that something is something in itself?
Everything in the universe has some connection to each other, energy transfers, everything is entropic
There are no notions that something that is just what it is, separate from everything else.
My position is that our consciousness emerged from a simple evolutionary origin of adaptability.
But in essence I think that the notion in science that everything relates to everything else is fundamental for the universe, maybe even beyond, and that specific definitions of objects core definition of being are made-up by us to be able to communicate better about reality.
I then think that our mind, consciousness and cognition needs to be viewed as an emergent phenomena based on an analysis of its original evolutionary function and how our advanced form of experience and self-awareness are emergent factors out of these fundamental evolutionary functions
If the nature of reality is essentially experiential does this mean that prior to experiential animals there was no reality
Given our limited experience how can we move beyond our experience to something prior to it?
What do we know of subjectivity beyond the personal and interpersonal?
Is it? In what way is this claim an explanation? Does it merely assert the very thing it is to explain?