But the suggestion is, it was changed by an act of thought. — Wayfarer
we should expect to see some movement or other in the brain that has no detectable cause (because it was caused by the mind). This is an empirical claim not a philosophical one. One that I haven’t found any evidence for and plenty of evidence against. — khaled
What makes sense’ is an idea, not anything physical. — Wayfarer
The brain as an object is an entirely different thing to an embodied brain. Neuroscience and philosophy are different disciplines. — Wayfarer
Of course, you might then say that ideas are neuroconfigurations, — Wayfarer
We look at all such questions through ideas, we have to have an idea to even decide what is ‘physical’. That is the sense in which the ideal precedes the physical, although I don’t expect you would agree. — Wayfarer
Well, first, in response to 'intentional actions changing neural configurations', that was a reference to a famous experiment whereby measurable changes were observed in subjects brains, due to their imagining that they were practicing piano scales. No actual piano! But the field of research in neuroplasticity has many such examples. A popular books on it (one I'm meaning to read!) is Train your Mind, Change your Brain. — Wayfarer
Scientific method works where it can objectify, quantify, and predict. Those are the fundamental elements of the method, which are universal in scope - they can be applied to anything. Correction - to any object, or collections of objects, or observable systems. Phenomena generally, let's say, with which we have a subject-object relatonship. — Wayfarer
ps//and, yes, magic might indeed be part of it :gasp: // — Wayfarer
Well, obviously; as Searle pointed out, I decide to raise my arm, and the darn thing goes up. — Banno
physical events effect mental events — Banno
and vice versa — Banno
They're not in doubt — Wayfarer
intentional actions can change neural configuration — Wayfarer
According to materialism, this ought not to happen, all of the causation should be from matter up to mind, not from mind down to matter. — Wayfarer
If you have a feeling, you have a feeling. Materialism just argues all those feelings are creations of neurons interacting. They are still feelings. — GLEN willows
If a feeling isn't a part of the brain, what is it? If it's a separate thing, NOT part of the brain, but can affect the brain, how does that occur? — GLEN willows
Well, no. It's the fact that we can all talk about the same thing. It's the fact that we all share a public world which is the basis of commonality. — Banno
Morality is a sense, like a sense of humour. Expression of this sense is opinion, but that doesn't mean morality is just glorified opinion. If you hear and joke and you laugh; you didn't decide to laugh. It's not merely your opinion that it's funny. It's the same with the moral sense. If you see something that's wrong, you don't decide that it's wrong. You feel it. You give expression to that feeling it becomes an opinion - but the feeling that something is wrong, isn't you forming an opinion. — counterpunch
So causal interactions can take place between material and immaterial entities. — Bartricks
If a physical event can cause a non-physical event, why can't a non-physical event cause a physical one? — Bartricks
Seems entirely arbitrary to believe that — Bartricks
Doors can only be pushed. They can't be pulled. Dammit. I'm stuck in my study. — Bartricks
Anyway, must go to bed now — Bartricks
given we have equally strong evidence for the latter as for the former. — Bartricks
That would be.....Question Begging. — Bartricks
So, if your brain....material thing....causes a 'mental event'...an 'event of the mind'.......then.......wait for it......wait.......you have a material thing, causally interacting with an immaterial thing.
Which you think doesn't happen. — Bartricks
Must be good being able to do that - being able to just think all these contradictory things at once. I spend ages trying to avoid doing that. — Bartricks
Right. So when I decided - a mental event - to raise my arm, and my arm raised, what happened there? — Bartricks
Your view must be that it was pure coincidence that my decision to raise my arm was followed by my arm raising. — Bartricks
And when I eat food and feel satisfied, that feeling was just coincidental. — Bartricks
Or do you, perhaps, believe there was causal interaction after all? — Bartricks
No new energy coming in. — Bartricks
You're getting it for free. — Bartricks
Scorn, not refutations is all you have offered. You have much to learn. — Bartricks
Well, you just stipulated that the laws apply to physical things alone. — Bartricks
What's your position - are you a materialist or an immaterialist about the mind? — Bartricks
If you're not, then you're with me. — Bartricks
Yes — Bartricks
Well one of the things that it does not make sense to ask of the mind is "How much kinetic energy does it have"? Because "energy" applies only to physical things. Just like shape and color. It makes no sense to say anything non physical gained energy.
It's exactly like saying "Fear weighs 20 pounds" — khaled
Note, this is also what would happen if the mind is your brain, right? So, either way the answer is 'yes'. — Bartricks
But you haven't shown a violation of the laws of conversation. There's no violation. — Bartricks
energy transferring from A to B — Bartricks
1. If one's mind is a sensible object, then it makes sense to wonder what colour, shape, smell, texture or taste it might have.
2. It does not make sense to wonder what colour, shape, smell, texture, or taste one's mind has
3. Therefore, one's mind is not a sensible object. — Bartricks
It's just that B isn't sensibly detectable. — Bartricks
check out Jose Gusmao Rodriguez's article "There are no good objections to substance dualism" in the journal "Philosophy". — Bartricks
and this causes your brain to signal you finger to push the button on the remote? — GLEN willows
Now, what in that picture is inconsistent with the laws you mention? — Bartricks
mind is a nonphysical substance with no connection to the brain, because a non physical thing couldn't have a connection to anything physical? — GLEN willows
I don't dispute the laws you mention. I want you to show me that they are inconsistent with a premise in my argument. — Bartricks
Where's your argument for this? — Bartricks
That's not my argument. That's just a question. — Bartricks
No, that's just you being confused and begging the question. It's what you do. — Bartricks
Yes, well on your scheme no matter how many times I give an argument for immaterialism about the mind it will never constitute evidence in support of the thesis. — Bartricks
1. If one's mind is a sensible object, then it makes sense to wonder what colour, shape, smell, texture or taste it might have.
2. It does not make sense to wonder what colour, shape, smell, texture, or taste one's mind has
3. Therefore, one's mind is not a sensible object. — Bartricks
and appears causally to interact with sensible objects. — Bartricks
But it just as clearly interacts with the brain. — Bartricks
and good evidence that the mind interacts with radically different objects such as the brain — Bartricks
You seem to think that's a bad word Lol! — GLEN willows
We already discussed what material substance means. — GLEN willows
But regardless, you said love is real like a TABLE, which you can touch. Can I touch love? — GLEN willows
And if love is real like a table, then it must have material substance, right? — GLEN willows
Why? We didn't understand science back then, let alone neuroscience, so we made up words to describe what we were feeling. — GLEN willows
Saying we know qualia are part of the neurochemicals of the brain (which I think is clearly proven by the fact that altering the chemicals. or operating the brain, changes the qualia) — GLEN willows
doesn;t mean we know exactly how it works. — GLEN willows
When you say something is real, what do you mean? Real like a table? Real like a unicorn? Real like a character from a book? — GLEN willows
What more can be said? — GLEN willows
I feel like we're repeating ourselves here. I've admitted that there are feelings, qualia, that we experience. I've admitted no one knows quite how it works, including you. — GLEN willows
Do you believe words like "hope" and love" describe real things? — GLEN willows
Nonetheless, any materialist would admit we don't know exactly how qualia work. — GLEN willows
There is no direct proof of where they are in the brain. But they are in the brain. — GLEN willows