That the material we find ourselves in is a construct, an artificial substrate, or vehicle enabling the appearance/experience of a being/s. Being artificial, their existence is artificial and when they cease to be, what ceases to be was not real, but a construct.
Likewise this is also the case for the soul (for want of a better word), but in a more subtle way. This is a simplified version of the idea. — Punshhh
think we can interpret this as saying that it's precisely the patterns that can be said to significantly exist, rather than matter without form. — jamalrob
According to the theory, you can not be destroyed because, as a pattern, you don't exist.
I can buy that, but my explanation is probably quite different to yours. — Punshhh
Your first and last sentences here are examples of confusing dimensional levels. I recognise that you don’t see the world this way, but this is where you fail to see that your theory is an over-simplification, so it’s worth getting your head around it. — Possibility
You keep constructing the result of DNA information in your mind as if it already exists. — Possibility
There seems to be a contradiction here. You have been arguing:
1. Everything is information. (Monism)
2. Emotion is not information. (Dualism) — Possibility
Saying DNA is the dominant brain would be like saying the bible is the ‘dominant brain’ of Christianity, so to speak. — Possibility
Do you include your own consciousness within that consciousness, or in external relation to it? — Possibility
Emotion IS information - there is no ‘as well as’ and we need to stop making this distinction. It isn’t helpful. — Possibility
So what fundamental difference can be between us and another ''superior'' creature? — Eugen
I simply don't see another extra-step. If the reality is infinitely complex and complicated, we can already state that, so in a way, we comprehend that. — Eugen
Too many properties = no identity - this is a complicated one — Eugen
The hard problem of consciousness is how do you get from matter to experience — Eugen
But in Hoffman's theory, the hard problem disappears. — Eugen
So I guess that the ability of abstraction is a fundamental one, not only a matter of quantity. — Eugen
But is it also qualitative? Do they have something ''extra'' — Eugen
I get that everyone is trying to say to me that other people exist, but how do you know? How does anyone know? — Darkneos
The DNA ‘in action’ is part of the relational structure in a living system. Without this relation, the process would not occur, and the DNA would meet none of the requirements for life — Possibility
I do agree that whatever constitutes your concept of ‘+emotion=’ underlies the very structure of life and also enables consciousness, but I disagree with how you constitute this concept only from what is unreasonable within a system — Possibility
Life arose with the potential for consciousness — Possibility
most molecular structures don’t form living organisms and most living organisms don’t form a ‘self’. — Possibility
DNA as a molecular structure is biased to be ONLY in relation to a living system. Otherwise, it is biased to NOT BE. Your answer is ‘to be’ because you only relate to the question as a living system. But objectively speaking, DNA as a conceptually isolated molecular structure is indifferent, and at the most fundamental level of existence, any answer to the question of ‘to be or not to be?’ is random. — Possibility
But in regard to limits, how would my analogy ant-man would stand in his view? — Eugen
I'm pretty sure that the reply I heard to this stance on the matter is that such a stance is not "known" it is a leap of faith to assume others and an external world. — Darkneos
I'm just looking for help. The prospect of being cosmically alone is really depressing. — Darkneos
I think I’m starting get a picture of how you’re viewing this. — Possibility
So in the end, it’s pointless arguing about whether or not DNA is ‘alive’ in a discussion about consciousness, because the +relation= in the equation DNA+relation=life needs to be expanded out if you hope to relate consolidated DNA to the equation: life+emotion=consciousness. — Possibility
There is no such thing as a p-zombie gene - this is an example of a false binary. — Possibility
The concept ‘information’, for instance, can refer to the process (relation) as well as the result (consolidation). But if ‘information is fundamental’, then which of these are we referring to? And which of these is ‘emotion’? — Possibility
What is to be said for the foreign tissue cells themselves? — Benj96
What does that have to do with it??? The truth is the truth. Emotion, bias etc are immaterial. — david plumb
No, DNA is information for living. There’s a difference. DNA by itself is a biochemical molecular structure - its capacity for life is purely relational, in the same way that energy’s material capacity is purely relational. Saying that DNA is alive is like saying that energy is directly observable - you’re referring to the capacity of a relational process as if it is the result. — Possibility
1. The relevant information in any physical system is finite.
2. You can always obtain new information on a physical system. — Pop
It’s worth exploring Kant’s aesthetics to recognize how this develops from the pleasure of engagement to a non-conceptual, disinterested delight, allowing ‘free play’ between our faculties of imagination, understanding and judgement. — Possibility
I can not think of a solution. But I am hopeful.
Is consciousness the key? It certainly seems to be at the forefront when we consider philosophy. But a lot of cognitive research seems to support the ancient notion that we are actually ruled by our emotions. So maybe emotions are the key. Meanwhile, perhaps we can take as a temporary purpose that we not destroy ourselves or our earth. — flaco
Well that opens a whole can-o-worms. For those of us who view humans as devices to propagate genes, our purpose is to propagate genes. Can we transcend that particular purpose? Can we come up with a new purpose "in a non self interested way" until we understand how our brain, conscious and emotional, is processing information about our world? — flaco
But further, and this should bother anyone here who has read even a modicum of ethics, even if our behaviour is best explained by genetic imperatives, the question remains open: Ought we do as our genes say? — Banno
DNA is not alive. It is a molecular structure, organised in such a way that the potential of the information it contains renders a living system. Its informational structure has a qualitative aspect that manifests only in relation to another DNA structure, under certain conditions within a system that will supply the required resources. — Possibility
1. The relevant information in any physical system is finite.
2. You can always obtain new information on a physical system. — Carlo Rovelli, ‘Reality Is Not What It Seems’
It’s worth exploring Kant’s aesthetics to recognise how this develops from the pleasure of engagement to a non-conceptual, disinterested delight, allowing ‘free play’ between our faculties of imagination, understanding and judgement. — Possibility
In the OP you're speaking about intellect, not consciousness. This is a very common approach in the West but it gets us nowhere. It is this sort of thinking that reduces consciousness to information processing, which is the claim that all the mystics of all time were deluded and fraudulent. Well, maybe, but it's a massive speculative leap that seems entirely ad hoc. . . — FrancisRay
Once you are good at this and see the distinction clearly, you can start to inform one from the other and develop a more subtle understanding of yourself, the world and your place in it. — Punshhh
To learn the truth. — FrancisRay
Nothing exists that is biased to NOT be. Everything expresses a bias simply by existing, which is contingent upon a binary relation to non-existence. The essential element for any kind of organising is relation - without it, there is no qualitative information, no structure - this argument applies to all existence. — Possibility
A ‘bias to be’ could be observed in a living organism as consolidation (living by maintenance) OR as relation (living by adaptability) - but it’s really BOTH. — Possibility
Apparently I don’t. Are you saying that protein synthesis and immune response are examples of self-organisation at an intracellular level - with no connection to the [extracellular ]system structures except through pain-pleasure? — Possibility
There - did you just experience red in the shape of your name? That probabilistic experience is quantified and constructed by the website’s code. It’s just a hashtag and six number/letter combination. — Possibility
Again with the logic. Bias at the level of consciousness is a complex, five-dimensional algorithm within a six-dimensional structure of relation. This is the ‘logic’ of it. — Possibility
But I think a six-dimensional structure of information, with qualitative-quantitative duality, accounts for both in a surprisingly elegant way. — Possibility
There is no such thing as a selfish gene.
— creativesoul
That is correct.
— Kenosha Kid — creativesoul