Yes, but what are words except visual scribbles and sounds? If you say you think in your language, then you are essentially saying that you think in visual scribbles and sounds. How did you even learn a language without already thinking in visual imagery? How did you see the scribbles and the pictures associated with them without having the ability to see? How did your mind know that these scribbles represented the object in the picture next to them if your mind didn't already engage in representations - of understanding that what you see is a representation of what is external to your body? It seems that we delude ourselves into thinking that what we see is real, or how the world really is.On a YouTube video Stephen Pinker claimed we think in images. I know I think in words and live with a constant stream of language. How could Pinker know what I thought in? Considering he has no direct access to my mental states? Is he just going by analogy to his experience. — Andrew4Handel
Everyone that poses this question seems to ignore the fact that we all live in a shared world and the shared world is where the consistency comes from. We may both experience different colors than each other but we always experience the same color when the same wavelength of EM energy interacts with our eyes. This is why we can still communicate about what it is we experience and understand each other. We couldn't understand each other if we didn't consistently experience the same thing when looking at the same thing every time. I believe that we do see the same colors because we share so much of our DNA. We are members of the same species. Geneticists haven't found a part of our genetic code that creates color in our minds that could be different from individual to individual, like the color of our eyes are.In a trivial case we could both agree that the car is red but I could be perceiving as blue and that is my red. I may perceive the colour as jarring and garish and you may experience it as soothing. — Andrew4Handel
But then why do I experience having control of certain aspects of my body. My legs don't start walking unless I will it. There is top-down processing happening, and it seems that there is also bottom-up processing going on as there are things that happen in consciousness that will did not precede in making it happen - like breathing. But consciousness is where I'm aware of this stuff happening. Could it be said that I could be aware of these things without being conscious? If so, how?As I said, the ego - the conscious mind - the 'I' that speaks, the 'I' we address in other people (unless we are trying to manipulate them by going around the 'I' altogether) is just one of those functions. We tend to think of it as the SUPREME function, but it isn't. It's just the Front Office. It's the Public Relations Department. The 'conscious mind' does not manage the brain, the mostly invisible brain manages the conscious mind. The conscious mind is often the last one to find out what it is going to do next, paradoxically. It's a paradox because we think the conscious mind is 'in charge'. It's not. — Bitter Crank
I'm not sure where you are getting your information about what happens when we are unconscious either. The only place you could be getting it is from your consciousness! How is it that you know anything if you are never conscious? When have you learned anything while being non-conscious, or unconscious?I'm not sure where you are getting your certainty about what happens when we are unconscious. — unenlightened
It seems the other way around to me - that you aren't understanding me and it's obvious because you didn't reply to my whole post (cherry-picking). You keep talking about what appears in consciousness (edge-detection) and saying that it is an non-conscious process. When I'm conscious - and only when I'm conscious, do I detect edges. You can try to detect edges when you are asleep. Good Luck.But you are continuing to disagree with me about a distinction I have made without understanding it. Edge detection is non-conscious, I am saying, like a brick is non-conscious. 'We' may or may not be conscious of a brick from time to time, in the background or the foreground. Part of the process of seeing a brick is detecting its edges, but 'detecting the edges' does not itself see anything, nor does the brick;I see the brick by amongst other things, detecting its edges. All of which, I don't think we disagree much about. — unenlightened
Again, how do you know that the unconscious is willful and aware? In what way? It can't be aware in the way that we are when we are conscious because that would defeat the purpose of consciousness. If the unconscious is active, willful, and aware, then what use is consciousness? Consciousness must solve problems that the unconsciousness can't or else it would have never evolved in the first place.But then I want to talk about the Freudian unconscious, which is not so-called because it is like the brick or the automatic process of edge-detection. On the contrary, it is active, wilful, aware. But it is called the unconscious because the 'I' or 'we' that pontificates is unaware of its existence and active influence. This is the controversial bit.
So this is why Freud was interested in dreams, because when 'we' are unconscious, the unconscious is still awake and active. — unenlightened
Let me see if I can show it to you, because it is significant. When you look at the screen, various processes occur that interpret the scene, most of which happen automatically. There is, for example, an 'edge detection' process that identifies shapes that form letters; these are combined into words, and sentences and the significance is grasped. Most of this, most of the time is non-conscious automatic processing, rather like one's fingernails growing, such that one is aware of the screen 'speaking' and not much else - Unenlightened replies to Harry Hindu. — unenlightened
The model I have been thinking about lately is that "consciousness is one function among many equals". Most of what goes on in our brains is invisible to us. Not only is 'edge detection' invisible, but so are the detections of horizontal and vertical lines, shape, color and texture recognition, face recognition, phoneme identification, and so on. Proprioception is another of many always on, always background operations. I have zero knowledge of how my brain assembled the sequence of words in this paragraph, or coordinated finger movements with the flow of thought. — Bitter Crank
Interesting language here; id is 'it' as distinct/opposed from/to ego 'I'. That is to say that the unconscious is other than myself - the self I am conscious of.
I want to lose weight, but it wants to eat. I want to be calm and reasonable, but it wants to bite babies... Have you ever found yourself in an internal conflict? (This is no form of argument, but an appeal to relate talk to experience.)
I think there has been some confusion in this thread between non-conscious and unconscious. Stuff you don't have to think about, and stuff you have no access to is not 'the' unconscious of Freud. He is talking about a division of awareness. 'It' is a foreigner disrupting your life and frustrating your ambitions. 'It' is the inner arsehole. — unenlightened
...says someone who isn't up to par with the latest attempts of scientists (not physicists, but neurologists and psychologists) to explain consciousness. They are preliminary explanations no doubt, but philosophy by itself hasn't advanced our understanding of consciousness beyond any preliminary stages since it began addressing it thousands of years ago. As usual, we need a different view to understand something better. Thinking about it like we have for the last few thousand years (like it's some special, magical, supernatural property or thing) hasn't gotten us anywhere.It's not in the business of trying to 'describe consciousness'. What it describes is the motion of objects. It's amazing the number of people who don't seem to get that. — Wayfarer
http://www.webmd.com/eye-health/amazing-human-eyeMaybe I should have simply asked How do we See?, not What does it Mean to See? — SteveKlinko
All this means is that physics hasn't described consciousness - yet. It doesn't imply that consciousness has some special quality about it that allows it to be untouched by science. That would be an description of consciousness that isn't based on any facts. It's most likely that consciousness simply hasn't yet been defined correctly.
It's simply not fact. Physical things are describable by physics - up to a point - conscious subjects are not. This fundamental misconception invalidates everything that comes after it. — Wayfarer
What it means to see is that you are using light as a source of information about the world. We know this is true because we don't have any information about the world when there is no light. Actually, the only information we have is that there is no light symbolized by our visual field covered in black.But what does it really mean to See? — SteveKlinko
I don't see how talk is transcendent. Talk, or text in our case, are simply sounds, or scribbles, that we have attached meaning and value to. How and why we attach meaning and value has to do with our goals as individuals and as members of the same highly social group.This summarises what seems to be Simmel's argument well: valuation is a naturally-occurring phenomenon. And yet our talk about it seems transcendent. — mcdoodle
I didn't ask WHAT the vantage point was, I asked WHERE it was. My point was that this vantage point is within the same world (and therefore part of it) that money as just pieces of metal and paper are.The (to Simmel, transcendent) vantage point is the human one: we reflect on value. Crows are bright creatures, for instance, but their conversation, as far as we know so far, does not rise to a caw about the value of one's latest stash or cache. Once we are capable of reflecting on value, how does that change our valuations? — mcdoodle
They clash when our goals clash. Our immediate and long-term goals go hand in hand with the values we assign to things. The more something helps us achieve some goal, the more valuable it is.And, the crunch: what happens when the valuations we articulate to ourselves clash? Enter 'value theory' of one kind or another. Simmel thinks money is both wonderful and terrible, for it enables us to compare the value of any single object (including the abstract) with any other via the intrinsically valueless intermediary of money, and this is its glory and its horror: it makes universal valuation seem easy, and it demeans the value of everything by turning our finest achievements into monetary value.
Well that's how I read it. — mcdoodle
Ok. I see your point. I believe I was created by my parents. After all, my appearance, shape and function all seem to resemble certain aspects of their appearance, shape and function more than any other thing I have encountered.Yes, these are possibilities, but they are not alternatives to whether or not you have a creator. In other words, you must have either no creator or a creator. Whether or not you were created in an infinite stream of causation or by a single being which is the first to exist doesn't change the fact that you were, indeed, created (or vice versa). — Javants
Understood. I wouldn't consider it a God if it didn't have any prior intention in creating me. But I have limits and functions. My limits and functions must say something about what created me.That's a very good point, but for the purpose of this debate, having something which creates you does not mean it is a God based on the fact alone that it is affecting your life by allowing it to exist. For example, hypothetically, we could have been created by some freak natural phenomena. Even though that phenomena has created us (and thus has the effect of allowing us to act), it cannot really be considered a 'God' because it has not had any further affect on our lives besides causation. — Javants
This is where I'm going to disagree. If there is infinite causation, or a loop of causation, then there is/was no nothingness. There has always been something.It is equally impossible for our minds to grasp infinite causation as it is something coming from nothingness. As you said yourself, "causation could continue forever in both directions". Just because we can't comprehend it, does not mean it necessarily did not happen (although we have no real way of knowing). — Javants
We can assume, firstly, that you exist. If you perceive a world, you must exist, as otherwise you would not be able to perceive that world ('Cognito, ergo sum'). We can now deduce that there are two possibilities:
That you have a Creator. Something has caused your existence, which could be either a deity, natural phenomena, etc.
That you do not have a Creator. It is inevitable that the first thing to ever exist could not have come from any preexisting thing, and thus must have come from nothingness. As such, you have no creator. — Javants
An important thought seems to be left out here and that is any effect some "God" would have on my life includes me being created. Every thing I do would be the result of being created by this God. The actions of my children are somewhat caused by me for they would never do the things they do if I had never created them with my wife.That Creator is not a God. That which created you is something which has no interaction with you in your life. This is known as Inactive Causation, and hence, a God does not exist. — Javants
If we can't rely on logic and our knowledge because something might be different five minutes from now, then doesn't that place a major emphasis on our observations - in order to acquire that new knowledge? I mean if we already possessed all knowledge, then what use would our senses have? — Harry Hindu
You could base your faith in contiguity on observation if you have a functioning crystal ball. — Mongrel
Just as our senses are an evolved trait that presupposes that things aren't always the same and that the world is dynamic and we need to be constantly updated with information about the state of the world.I think that our predilection for expecting and behaving as though the past is a reliable guide for the future is essentially an evolved trait--"hard-wired" if you will, into not only human, but also the vast majority of the animal kingdom that have much neurology. We are automatically predisposed simply to imitate, a very efficient and successful way of learning to negotiate our way around the world. And imitation presupposes that what has worked previously will work again. — Brainglitch
The problem of induction zeroes in on our faith in contiguity past to future. Even if we knew that X has always been true until now, that knowledge would not logically support the conclusion that X will be true five minutes from now.
Logic is not the basis of this faith. Obviously it isn't observation. So what is the basis of it? — Mongrel
What is the consensus on the wavelength associated with grey, white, or burgundy?There isn't a Platonic Form, there's consensus on the wavelengths associated with colours when an object absorbs light and reflects light back. — Benkei
True, but there are millions of different combinations of colors triggered by millions of different combinations of the strengths of the signals coming from the rods and cones in our eyes. It's no different from creating millions of different colors from just varying degrees of the three primary colorsHuman eyes can see millions of different shades of colour. This is not because there are millions of different wavelengths between 400 and 740. — Metaphysician Undercover
Don't we need some consistency between individuals as well? This consistency gives us what some people call inter-subjectivity, which in some cases it is argued, qualifies as objectivity. It's interpretation. If we all agree as to the meaning of a particular word, then that word has "objective" meaning (in the sense of inter-subjective), though it might not have an ideal objective meaning in the sense of an independent Platonic Form. The independent Platonic Form could allow us to theoretically judge the inter-subjective meaning, if we had access to that Form.
Isn't this the same with colours? Seeing is a mode of interpretation as well. There is an inter-subjective meaning of "red" which provides us with the common meaning of the term. Benkei appears to be claiming that there is a truly objective "red", an ideal definition of red, and even to know this Platonic Form, through science. It is suggested that we should judge our inter-subjective interpretation against this Form. But I think Benkei derives this ideal in a faulty way. There may be such a Platonic Form of red, but Benkei has not described it. — Metaphysician Undercover
Of course it does, that is if you want to remain consistent.Yes, volcanoes, quakes, tornadoes, etc. are natural. So, what? That doesn't imply we shouldn't classify dangers to the environment into the categories man-made and natural. — TheMadFool
Like...?Your replies are sometimes loaded with a lot more subjective value statements than they are objective viewpoints. — Bitter Crank
Well, it is kind of hard to pick up on humor without being in person. There are those that resort to character assassination when they don't have an argument to make, You must be one of those that veers off topic and tries to make light of things when they don't have an argument to make.Your sense of humor is a pit pinched as well. My comment on the Chinese was clearly self-deprecating. — Bitter Crank
2) They are an instrument of Russian state media.
Counter: Wikileaks has had 100% publication accuracy and always has, even before the alleged association with the Russian government. They have released documents implicating both Democrats and Republicans since almost a decade ago. Do you not like accurate news? — discoii
No. It's driven by China driving down the costs of labor and allowing it's people get paid next to nothing for the work they do all in an effort to steal manufacturing power from the US.Actually it makes a lot of difference. A Dutch invention could be exported and used by other countries, for instance. A county can inspire others for demonstrating that co2 reduction and growth are possible (oh wait, the USA and China did exactly that).
And the amount of pollution China creates is largely driven by market demand in the West. So "blaming" them as solely responsible in a global economy is a bit silly. It is global warming after all. — Benkei
Volcanoes, earthquakes, tornadoes, wildfires, etc. aren't biological in nature either, but they are still natural. You are making a distinction that isn't really there. New non-biological elements are made naturally inside stars. How is that different from the things that humans make? As I said before, we put CO2 in the environment just by breathing.You seem to be saying that climate change is natural because human beings are, well, natural and that all this fuss about man-made climate change is barking up the wrong tree.
However vehicles, factories, nuclear powerplants, etc. are not in any form of biological relationship with the ecosystem. There is not even a hint of it. The relationship (if you can call it that) between man-made artefacts and nature is a one-way street and it's jammed with garbage trucks loading tons of toxic pollutants.
Therefore, there's a significant difference between man-made artefacts and natural things. This difference has major consequences for the enviroment. — TheMadFool
Re-read that post again, Bitter - the part where I mention value statements. Does that give you the right to eradicate all termites on Earth? Who has the right to exist, termites or humans?I thought I had agreed with you that humans are a part of nature, and therefore, what they do is "natural". But just being natural isn't in itself always good. Termites are natural too, and if they infest your house, it will eventually collapse as they eat--and weaken--the structure. — Bitter Crank
Uh.. You do realize that the Chinese govt. filters and controls what it's population sees on the internet, don't you? You need to go there to spread your message, but something tells me that you only care enough about the environment to preach to those that need to hear it the least, and only if the environment (termites) doesn't affect your life.My sublime thought is available to the Chinese via the Internet. I am sure there hang on every word. — Bitter Crank
Actually, it makes what every other country needs to do worthless. What good is it for every other country to do something when the world's largest populations and polluters are doing nothing to very little?That's fallacious reasoning. Just because China is the worst polluter doesn't absolve every other country from doing what needs to be done. — Benkei
This is like saying that a star burning hydrogen and helium to make other heavier elements in it's core is purely solar and we shouldn't be confusing this with the "natural" production of these elements. Stars are polluting the universe with these heavier elements. Coal is made naturally by natural forces, and because humans are natural, steel is also produced naturally. Shit and piss are produced naturally. CO2 is produced naturally by every organism that breathes oxygen.Man is certainly part of nature, and our activities are "natural" for us. But using the term "natural" here confuses factors outside of human activity (like solar radiation) and activities that are purely human, like burning coal to make steel. — Bitter Crank
Now you are making a value statement and values are man-made. Who is to say that what is right for humans is right for the rest of nature? Who is to say that humans deserve to continue to exist? I'm sure if lions had their way, there would be no competitors, like hyenas, for resources. Hyenas would be extinct. I'm sure that we'd want to eliminate every virus and dangerous bacteria from existence. Do we have that right?You are right, though, that many people wrongly locate human activity above or outside nature. But just because we "act naturally" doesn't mean what we are doing is beneficial to ourselves in the long run. — Bitter Crank
Actually, I think that the concept of "nothing" is probably the most accurate concept we have. Nothing is easy to imagine. It's simply a complete absence of everything. You seem to be confusing the concept (or mental model) of nothing, which is something, with an objective nothing. There is no confusing what nothing is. There is no skewing the concept of nothing. If you think of a total absence of everything, including time, then you have successfully thought of and modeled nothingness in your mind.Everything in the mind is a concept; this includes our understanding of non-existence. Yet it feels to us that what we think of when we observe in our minds the concept of non-existence somehow accurately reflects what non-existence is in actuality, but where is the evidence for this?
In other words, for most of society as naive realists or materialists it feels intuitive to think that when you die there is nothing (probably inferred from self-awareness stopping during sleep), but "nothing" is just a concept in the mind. YOU nor any man have any guarantee that you know what nothing means, nor what infinity actually is. — intrapersona
When I look at your brain, I experience a model of your brain, not your actual brain. My model isn't precise (it's a model after all). My model appears to have a shape, color and orientation relative to the location and orientation of my eyes. I associate these kinds of properties as being "physical". But your brain isn't a physical thing. It is a process - a changing, dynamic system that can only be modeled by my brain in an incomplete fashion and only using the information my senses have access to (Your neurons are too small for my eyes to pick up so my model of your brain is like a mushy glob of biological tissue). So if my model represents certain aspects of your information processing, then how are they not the same, especially if that is all I have access to is my model, not your actual processing of sensory information?I'm not sure what you're saying here. If you're only saying that consciousness depends on brain activity, then Chalmers would agree. He's a property dualist, after all, not a substance dualist. All he's arguing is that consciousness is not identical to brain activity (or any other physical thing). — Michael
Easy. Ask them if they noticed that they ran out of the house in their underwear. If they didn't then they weren't aware of what they were wearing, but were aware of where they were going. They weren't fully conscious because a normal person that is fully awake would notice this. What I'm getting at is what is present in conscious as it relates to what is out in the world. The more of the world that is represented in the mind, the more conscious a person is.How do you know that the people you claim to be fully conscious are fully conscious? Because of their behaviour? Then you're begging the question. — Michael
These questions don't make any sense. It is simply the case that the movement of the p-zombie's body (including the movement of the lungs and vocal chords) is causally explained by the laws of physics and prior physical states of matter. This must be true for the physicalist, as the physicalist doesn't allow for non-physical causes. The issue, then, is whether or not we can conceive of this situation without conceiving of this person having first-person experiences. Chalmers claims that we can; that we don't need to imagine that there's anything that it's like to be this person to imagine the purely mechanical series of causal relations that the physicalist must say actually explains the behaviour (e.g. electrical activity in the central nervous system).
As I alluded to above, your reasoning only works against the possibility of p-zombies if human behaviour cannot be explained by physical causes alone. But then you're accepting the conclusion of the p-zombie argument; consciousness isn't physical. — Michael
The definition of insanity is doing the same thing over and over and expecting the same result. How can something be "physically" identical to me and still not be conscious like me. That is no different than defining my maternal twin as a p-zombie.No, the definition of p-zombies literally means that they are physically indentical to a conscious being and, therefore, exhibit the behavior of a conscious being. You could say that they are inconcievable, but that is the entire debate. — Chany
