Sure, we are maximally similar to other human beings, but we are also similar to rocks in a whole load of ways. We still need a principle to tell us when we can make the inference and when we can't. Do you have a way to decide? — bert1
It doesn't follow that all subjective experiences are dependent on a functioning brain, for example. A rock's experiences are presumably similarly correlated with its own internal processes. We have not discovered what it is about brains that entails that only brains can have experiences, and nothing else can. — bert1
Influences are not the same thing as causal determinants.
To what extent is it 'valid' to say: Their forms are different, but in essence they are both just marble. — rachMiel
Let's say you've got two blocks of pure Carrara marble. One is carved into an exquisite sculpture by a master artist. The other is left untouched.
To what extent is it valid to say: They are simply different forms of marble. — rachMiel
Personally I think that all thinking is involuntary - that they are induced within cause and effect. — raza
For example, prior to the work of Maxwell and Hertz, electromagnetic radiation was non-physical, but became physical as a result of the knowledge that they generated. — johnpetrovic
While studying this question I ran across Parfit who argues, roughly, that human thoughts (where our math, morality and fiction are developed) map to physical entities in our mind through neuron patterns and such, and thereby exist in the ontological sense. Although these concepts would not exist in the universe without minds, that fact makes them no less real than sun rays, which would not exist without suns. — Read Parfit
Once we grant thoughts themselves an ontological status, the next question becomes, can we apply objective criteria to the claims expressed by these thoughts? — Read Parfit
How are the concepts expressed in the rules of Math, different from the concept of Pegasus? — Read Parfit
What is a mental state? — Banno
Is it just experiencing Mental phenomena such as beliefs, desires, intentions , and sensations? — Banno
Is it analogous to a physical state? How - what do mental and physical states have in common that makes them both states... That they only last for a limited time? — Banno
A simple question - what is the neurological basis for the subconscious or unconscious mind? — EnPassant
(It is questions like this that convince me that neurology is not going to explain what the mind is.) — EnPassant
emotional motivations that are not understood by the conscious mind. Sometimes people act without understanding their motivations. That seems to be a kind of unconscious mind. — EnPassant
How deep/close is the relationship between an object and its most fundamental building block?
Let's say X is an object and Y is its fundamental building block, where any part of X could be broken down entirely into Ys (but no further).
Does it make sense to say: "X is really just Y" ? — rachMiel
1. So do "you", as the thinker, voluntarily generate a thought? — raza
2. If so, how and why do you do this? — raza
2a. Do "you", as the thinker, generate an involuntary thought? — raza
4. If not, what DOES generate an involuntary thought within "you", the thinker? — raza
5. If "you" the thinker does NOT generate an involuntary thought, does it still not remain that an involuntary thought is still being regarded as a "thought"? — raza
6. If an "involuntary thought" is thereby a result of thinking then what or who is the thinker of it? — raza
7. Is the thinker of an "involuntary thought" you (the "thinker" of thoughts)? — raza
Personally I think that all thinking is involuntary - that they are induced within cause and effect. — raza
All you have done here is used a category as a point on a spectrum. "Passive" is merely a point on a spectrum, the entire spectrum being "action". — raza
What is interesting is that people, maybe you included, identify themselves as a thinker of thoughts.
However, As we have established, thoughts are involuntary — raza
What is it, though, that is surviving? — raza
All these survival applications will still be involuntary because it will involve acts that were generated by thoughts which involuntarily arose. — raza
My argument is that one is what is occurring.
It is impossible to be one without what is occurring and it is impossible for there to be any occurrence without one. — raza
Trying to find a label or box for myself is not something which interests me.
My words are my words. — raza
What do you mean "act upon"? Surely a thought perceived is always "acted upon". The act could be a dismissive action. — raza
Are arising thoughts therefore "nonconscious brain states" due to the fact they arise involuntarily? — raza
Thoughts arise involuntarily, do they not? — raza
Only either immediately or if it has been kept on ice.
Is a detached ear still an ear if it is re-attached surgically onto a leg (just to maintain blood supply to it)?
My point is about the use terms used to represent what is actually occurring rather than merely symbolic language.
An ear attached to a leg is no longer an ear. It has lost it's "ear" function. — raza
An actualist. An observer of what is obvious. No physical thing exists if it is not perceived. — raza
The entire body is in the same "location" to exist. Remove the head the body also dies and vice versa. — raza
Are you therefore saying "mind" refers to will? — raza
Is a severed human arm still an arm or is it a piece of human meat? — raza
A non conscious brain state? You mean a dead mind or brain? — raza
Yes. One phenomena. Brain and mind, not brain and then, over there, a mind.
Just as a living body is essentially a body-mind. — raza
A thing (as in “every thing”) does not exist unless it arises within the mental. — raza
What must be the case in order to successfully lie to yourself?
Simple enough question. But hard to answer. — Moliere
Mind and brain, however, is an idea. A mental construct. — raza
They cannot be distinct from each other in any scientific way. — raza
Hence the contradiction above. — raza
We are drifting off topic a bit, However, I would agree with the 'both realities' idea, however I suspect that what ultimately differentiates the two, is that one is temporal and the other is not. — Marcus de Brun
Epistemology is all about certainty, not “Truth”. — Kaiser Basileus
we are assuming a temporal external reality independent of the individual consciousness. — Marcus de Brun
Where is trauma located? Does it lies in the brain which affects the mind or does it lies in the mind which affects the brain? — WhiteDreams
If trauma lies in the brain, and hypothetically, the mind can be a tangible object which can be transferred to a different brain, will the scar of trauma still be there together with the mind? — WhiteDreams
If it is so, vice versa, then if the tangible mind is transferred to a traumatize brain, say, a brain with PTSD, will the mind acquire PTSD too? — WhiteDreams
Are there 'ever lasting truths'? If given enough time, will all truths as we know them today ultimately become fallacy? — Marcus de Brun
“Experience” is mental only? What is therefore beyond the “mental”? — raza
“Experience”, in my view, is electrical. Some call it “chemical”. — raza
But I do not see where a boundary lies where “mental” is on one side and something else on the other. — raza
So what is the “something else” which apparently isn’t “mental”? — raza
What is it that is being aware of the pc? A “mental” something? — raza
I say the language is accurate “I am sitting at my pc” because it is accepted as the appropriate form of sentence structure for disseminating that information.
Just because it is accurate in that way does not mean that is what actually occurred. — raza
I therefore state that what “you” are during the “at the pc” experience is the entire experience thus it’s content. — raza
The “brain” engaged with the pc is, in effect, being also the pc. The pc is, during that experience, imbedded in the “brain” (for context, “brain” as awareness). — raza
But a super special kind of mental phenomena. — Srap Tasmaner
If you want to pick out some of your beliefs and call them "knowledge", you do that by saying something about the connection between those beliefs, the mental phenomena, and the content of those beliefs, what the beliefs are about, and what the beliefs are about is not (necessarily) mental. — Srap Tasmaner
"I don't know that my experience of sitting at my PC writing is not an illusion, but I know that I am currently having an experience of some kind."
I question that you're really being honest with yourself here. I bet you really do believe that you are actually sitting at your PC writing, and that is not an illusion. Your issue is that you can't prove it, so you feel as if you ought to be skeptical of that. Please consider this. — Relativist
It is not at all irrational to believe that the world of experience is actually a reflection of the actual world. I suggest that this is actually a properly basic belief because it is innate (no one had to convince you of this through argumentation), self-evident, consistent with a rational world view, and the presence of such beliefs is consistent with everything else we believe about the world (e.g. it's consistent with natural selection). It would be irrational to abandon this belief solely because of of the conceptual possibility that it is false. You should not abandon a belief just because there is an epistemic possibility of it being false; rather - a belief should only be abandoned if it is rationally defeated - i.e. you acquire a new belief that contradicts this innate belief, and you have more reasons to believe the new belief true. — Relativist
I would say that normally we do know that it's not an illusion. However, I maybe using the word know differently from you. What I mean, is that we are reasonably sure that such-and-such is the case. I don't have to know with absolute certainty to make the claim that "I know..." Furthermore, if you don't know that you're sitting at your computer doing X, viz., having that experience, then how would you know that you're having any experience? We can be reasonably sure that our sensory experiences generally don't mislead us, if this wasn't the case, then we couldn't be sure of much. — Sam26
Furthermore, if you don't know that you're sitting at your computer doing X, viz., having that experience, then how would you know that you're having any experience? We can be reasonably sure that our sensory experiences generally don't mislead us, if this wasn't the case, then we couldn't be sure of much. — Sam26
Are the quality of an experience and its content related? — Srap Tasmaner