Why would it be impossible to speak about consciousness if it were an epiphenomena? — Daniel Sjöstedt
Yes. — Daniel Sjöstedt
Is your view that there is something immaterial about consciousness?
Or that there is at least something about it that does not follow the classical laws of mechanics? — Daniel Sjöstedt
The point I'm making is that your 'skeptical' hypothesis isn't really skeptical enough since you are naively assuming that objects like human brains and machines that transmit electrical signals can exist independently of perception. — lambda
Of course consciousness has parts. When you close your eyes, you are still conscious but have removed part of the conscious experience. People who are deaf, or have lost feeling in certain parts of their bodies have also lost part of their consciousness. When you lose part of your consciousness, you lose part of your awareness of the world. — Harry Hindu
I think you overlook a crucial detail. AI isn't a computer like your laptop or even a supercomputer for that matter — TheMadFool
Yep. Its from a speech — Mongrel
Interesting article (and comments afterward) about dissolving the ego. Disregard the psychedelic aspects if you wish for a purer description of the process. — 0 thru 9
Rupert Sheldrake's morphicgenesis theory does depend upon a hierarchy of morphic fields — Rich
There is no need to have boundaries. Individual minds are analogous to waves in the ocean, distinct but part of. Mind and body are a seamless continuum of substantially, the continuum that stretches from quantum to atom to molecules. — Rich
What the realization of no self is, is that the "self" you once thought you were basically isn't there at all. So people just call it "no self", when in actuality there is still an experience there which you could aptly call a self or more appropriately "higher self". — intrapersona
Harris simply bites the bullet and acknowledges that he can't claim any responsibility for his own intellectual achievements. He is even handed about that. If people can't be held morally responsible for their bad deeds -- since they're mere puppets being moved around by the impersonal forces of the universe -- then they can't either be given any real credit for their positive accomplishments. — Pierre-Normand
So, Harris's ethics (as expounded in The Moral Landscape) boils down to the affirmation of the intuition -- which he believes to be a self-evident a priori truth -- that it would be ethically good if all of the epiphenomenal "selves" being generated by biological brains in the universe were somehow being caused to have happy thoughts and pleasurable feelings. This is quite sophomoric, really. — Pierre-Normand
This is why he also is pushing an utilitarian theory that has as its sole foundation the imperative to increase human "well being" regardless of the values people may endorse. — Pierre-Normand
Harris' has come from a background in buddhist meditation where it is observed through meditative practices that your sense of identity is basically an illusion. — intrapersona
I have a lot of objections to the linked essay, but I assume it's given here more for illustration and not as a focal point for us to critique specifically. — Efram
we can't say so certainly whether a computer would be capable of experiencing qualia, for example. — Efram
.They freely consented to abide by those instructions and to push a button at a randomly chosen time. — Pierre-Normand
So I am a brain, my brain (or my body), I can understand that but in this case, why am I that brain in particular ? — Julian
Could individuals thrive without understanding that which would enable them to do so?", in which case I would argue they couldn't because they would no longer hold the mastery needed to advance themselves. — Noblosh
But they all reject, or at least deeply question, the fundamental tenet of his life's work: — Wayfarer
I think Dennett is exaggerating in saying that in the past the best minds could understand almost everything. Perhaps it might have been true regarding the sciences, but not also literature, the arts, history, philosophy, metaphysics, languages, and so on. And even if a very few of the very best minds could understand "almost everything"; what import could that have for the rest of 'ignorant' humanity? — John
you and I, — Dawkins
Interesting – so you think the current form of our dreams is different than our caveman ancestors? Do you think our caveman ancestors believed their dreams to be real? — woodart
What are the benefits of lucid dreaming? Is there a downside? — woodart
Artificial Intelligences and aliens can sit there and declare they are humans until hell freezes over. Their beliefs do not make it so. — Bitter Crank
I might like to believe that I am a god, but telling everybody that I am a god isn't going to make it so, just because I believe it. — Bitter Crank
By postulating that consciousness is a fundamental feature of the universe, rather than emerging out of simpler elements, integrated information theory is an elaborate version of panpsychism. The hypothesis that all matter is sentient to some degree is terribly appealing for its elegance, simplicity, and logical coherence. Once you assume that consciousness is real and ontologically distinct from its physical substrate, then it is a simple step to conclude that the entire cosmos is suffused with sentience. We are surrounded and immersed in consciousness; it is in the air we breathe, the soil we tread on, the bacteria that colonize our intestines, and the brain that enables us to think.
The Φ of flies, let alone of bacteria or particles, will be for all practical purposes far below the Φ we experience when we are deeply asleep. At best, a vague and undifferentiated feeling of something. So by that measure, a fly would be less conscious than you are in your deep sleep.
A Cartesian-style homunculus is out of date — darthbarracuda