• Nice little roundup of the state of consciousness studies
    Did you read the article that this thread is about? Do you have any idea of what the issue being discussed is?Wayfarer

    What was it you said about being condescending?

    Yes I read the article and a variety of things have been discussed. Are you trying to gaslight people into thinking that the subject of the thread is what you say it is?
  • God and the Present
    I think you equivocate. Neural networks of AI are said to be "trained". But we weren't talking AI, we were talking about biological neurons, involved in a person reading.Metaphysician Undercover

    Would you elaborate on how it is that you think I am equivocating?

    Perhaps the article, Neuroscience: How to train a neuron will help.
  • Nice little roundup of the state of consciousness studies
    OK, I should have written 'excludes consideration of the first-person perspective....'Wayfarer

    But neuroscience does consider first person perspectives and is learning much about them. You can Google "neuroscience first person perspective" and see for yourself. Instead you are making up stories about a science you don't demonstrate much understanding of.
  • God and the Present
    Yes, similar to that, but not quite the same. An individual is trained, a person or some other being. We do not train a part of a person. I find that to be an absurd usage of the term to say that a person trains a part of one's body, like saying that a man trains his penis when to have an erection and when not to.

    Anyway, it's off topic and I see that discussion with you on this subject would probably be pointless, as you seem to be indoctrinated.
    Metaphysician Undercover

    Dude, it's just a matter of the vocabulary used in discussion of neural networks. It has a fairly specific meaning in that context. You may be closed minded towards looking into the subject and developing an understanding of how training is used in the context of that subject, but don't mistake whatever your hangup is, for me being indoctrinated.
  • Evolutionary Psychology- What are people's views on it?
    Understandable, I think understanding human motivation and the human condition is valid. I do it all the time. Evo-psych basis for things is harder to prove.schopenhauer1

    Science doesn't prove things. In many cases science can provide pretty overwhelming evidence in support of a theory, but that isn't sufficient to consider a theory proven. Psych theories are certainly less accurate than theories about things which are much less complex than human beings, but that's not surprising.

    I personally use psychology to tune up my intuitions about myself and other people, while taking it all with a grain of salt.
  • Evolutionary Psychology- What are people's views on it?
    Eek, that doesn't seem like good science.schopenhauer1

    No, it's not science. It's just living in the world and paying attention.
  • Why should we talk about the history of ideas?
    Absolutely. The thing about psychological theories is that everyone has them, you have to have, otherwise your strategies when interacting with others are random. We don't just throw darts blindfold when deciding how to respond, we have a theory about what our actions/speech is going to do, how it's going to work. That's a psychological theory.Isaac

    Exactly. Furthermore, it seems worth pointing out that everyone has one, but some are based on looking into the evidence and some aren't. (Not that I need to tell you that.)

    If psychology fails, it is its methodology that's at fault, not it's objectives.Isaac

    "If psychology fails" to me, seems a question that would come out of an excessively dichotomous way of looking at psychology. I'd think a more relevant question is whether there is progress in psychology. From my perspective its pretty undeniable that progress is ongoing in psychology. We are fantastically complex creatures though, so of course progress takes time.
  • Why should we talk about the history of ideas?
    Have a great trip! We'll be here when you get back.Srap Tasmaner

    I'm not leaving until Saturday, and now I'm done with trip prep for the day. So perhaps I'll get somewhat caught up with responding to you before I go.
  • Evolutionary Psychology- What are people's views on it?


    I take it seriously, on the basis of looking at a lot of the relevant science. I've also made many empirical observations of my own. I've been testing my intuitions on the subject for a long time. Furthermore, I make use of my understanding that we are social primates - including here on TPF. Sometimes subtly and other times not so subtly.
  • Why should we talk about the history of ideas?
    thread where I'm pissing on the law of non-contradiction:Srap Tasmaner

    Yeah, just did some pissing of my own. I need to throw my Kindle in the toilet now, and try to break my TPF addiction.
  • Aristotelian logic: why do “first principles” not need to be proven?
    The LNC however does affirm that it is not possible to hold a belief that A with .90 probability while at the same time holding a belief that A with .10 probability.javra

    This looks like magical thinking about the LNC to me. Humans aren't binary logic machines.
  • Why should we talk about the history of ideas?
    Something else I want to bring up for consideration, is that issues in communication are not so simple as being a matter of differing sets of intuitions. Another important factor is variation in the constellations of cognitive strengths and weaknesses people have.

    I have visuo-spatial strengths, and often I have the experience of thinking, "How can you not see that?", because it is difficult for me to imagine what it is like to lack the visuo-spatial abilities I take for granted. On the other hand I have weaknesses in processing speed, and would be a horrible umpire, with people yelling at me, " How can you not see that?"

    So an aspect of communicating skillfully for me, is to develop some sense of where an individual's cognitive strengths and weaknesses lie. With at least some sense of an individual's cognitive strengths and weaknesses, I can try to capitalize on the strengths of the individual and work around the weaknesses to improve communication. Perhaps we all do this subconsciously to some extent, and pragmatically we don't tend to have much other option than to go with our intuitons on such matters. I just wanted to point out this complicating factor, because I'm a complicator and that's what I do. :wink:
  • Why should we talk about the history of ideas?
    "Okay, everyone, you all need to move back now, that's it, move on back now, DON'T GO IN THE WOODS!" Just ever so slightly lost his cool as this grizzly ambled toward us, it was awesome.Srap Tasmaner

    That is awesome.

    I just got the bear spray I ordered last Friday. I'm hoping we get to see grizzlies in the wild. The Lamar Valley in Yellowstone, has been called the Serengeti of North America. Spending at least one day there watching wildlife is part of the plan. Yellowstone (and Grand Teton NP) is so huge that I suspect two weeks isn't going to seem like enough time.
  • Why should we talk about the history of ideas?
    That's actually not bad, and less hand-wavy than I thought.Srap Tasmaner

    It's very good. I love the way you are off and running with this.

    I do plan on responding to your earlier posts in a more in-depth way. However, I spent all day yesterday on the forum, and my 17 year old son and I are going on a two week tent camping road trip to Yellowstone next Saturday, and I have a lot of organizing and packing to do. (I don't suppose you live somewhere between Indiana and Wyoming? It would be fantastic to be able to talk to you in person. Although I do like forum style communication a lot, because it allows for input from a wide variety of perspectives.)

    Anyway, I'm going to have to limit my forum time for awhile, and clearly you are well setup to do a lot of very productive thinking without further input from me.
  • God and the Present
    It's not appropriate to say that a neural net is "trained". Nor is it appropriate to say that a neural net performs word recognition.Metaphysician Undercover

    I don't know what you mean by "not appropriate". I take it you are expressing disapproval. However there is a large community of people in AI and neuroscience who see things differently than you do, and provided human civilization doesn't collapse, thinking in such terms is going to become more and more a matter of common knowledge.

    To me it sounds like you are saying something like, "It is inappropriate to talk about riding in a car, because riding is something which is done on a horse, or in a carriage drawn by a horse.

    So I'll just say that your post is an attempt to simplify something very complex and the result is a gross misrepresentation, and leave it at that.Metaphysician Undercover

    Absolutely, it is an attempt to simplify something enormously complex. Certainly it is simplistic and open to misinterpretation by people who don't educate themselves on the subject.

    Here is one way people who want to know what is going on in the 21st century can educate themselves.
  • Aristotelian logic: why do “first principles” not need to be proven?
    As I said I see it not as being a presupposition, but as a recognition of something necessary to thought and discussion.Janus

    I think you are likely correct to see it as a matter of recognition. I was discussing my ideas on that with Srap here.
  • Why should we talk about the history of ideas?
    I wanted to provide a social explanation for reason, but leaving it more or less intact -- and this is the aporia that Lewis ran into, that he couldn't directly link up the convention account of language to the model-theoretic account he was also committed to.Srap Tasmaner

    I don't know what you had in mind regarding a social explanation for reason, but I do see there being a very strong social explanation for reason, in that logic is deeply tied in with our use of language. I speculate that logic becomes a matter of undeniable intuition as we are grasping the relationships between language about reality and reality itself. Because our intuitions about logic develop alogically when we are young, as recognition of patterns in how language relates to facts about the world, by the age we start thinking 'metalogically', those intuitions have the 'feel' of apriori knowledge.

    That is very much a matter of intuitive speculation though, and not something I feel equipped to make an evidential case for. So please point out any holes that might seem obvious to you.
  • God and the Present


    I expect this to sound like a strange request but... Please see here for an explanation as to why, not knowing you at all, I would find it difficult to explain. There is an important sense in which I need to know my audience in order to communicate with any meaningful degree of success.
  • God and the Present
    I think that what it reveals is that the process is noy like we think it is. And I guess that's why we have different opinions about it, no one really knows how they read.Metaphysician Undercover

    Hmm. I see it is as revealing that the process is a lot like I think it is.

    Trained neural nets can have a lot of 'fault tolerance', which is easy to say, but not so easy to explain. Anyway, as skilled readers we have neural nets that have been effectively trained at word recognition and automation of that recognition so that we don't need to consciously recognize each letter. I only need my trained neural nets to reveal the word in my lexicon that has the closest pattern match that also fits semantically with what I had already read.
  • Why should we talk about the history of ideas?


    I just bought the book, after looking at the Amazon description. But I've had a lot of time to think about this sort of stuff on my own. I do see some wisdom in you waiting awhile to develop your own view a bit more, in order to be better able to critically evaluate the book.

    I will say, that what I read of the book's focus on human interaction, matches up well with my view. In fact, in discussions of free will, I've often referred to myself as an interactive determinist. The interaction part is important. Anyway, I could go on about this at length, but I'm hopeful Mercier and Sperber will give me tools for communicating about it more effectively, so I'll hold off for now.

    And I'm glad Gibson bolted from Bladerunner because I loved the uniqueness of his vision.
  • Why should we talk about the history of ideas?
    Not everything can be made explicit.Srap Tasmaner

    Feeling some poetry...

    From The Prophet by Kahlil Gibran, On Teaching:

    No man can reveal to you aught but that which already lies half asleep in the dawning of your knowledge.

    The teacher who walks in the shadow of the temple, among his followers, gives not of his wisdom but rather of his faith and his lovingness.

    If he is indeed wise he does not bid you enter the house of his wisdom, but rather leads you to the threshold of your own mind.

    The astronomer may speak to you of his understanding of space, but he cannot give you his understanding.

    The musician may sing to you of the rhythm which is in all space, but he cannot give you the ear which arrests the rhythm nor the voice that echoes it.

    And he who is versed in the science of numbers can tell of the regions of weight and measure, but he cannot conduct you thither.

    For the vision of one man lends not its wings to another man.

    And even as each one of you stands alone in God's knowledge, so must each one of you be alone in his knowledge of God and in his understanding of the earth.
  • Why should we talk about the history of ideas?


    Very very insightful, and you are recognizing things that I only recognize as making a lot of intuitive sense, as a result of you having put things in your own words. It's so cool that your background knowledge allows me to communicate with you about such things, with such productive results.

    I suspect I'll have more to say after I've had some time to reread and cogitate more on your response, but I wanted to say that much for now.
  • Why should we talk about the history of ideas?
    I want to bring your views into alignment with mine, and that's why I make arguments in favor of my belief.Srap Tasmaner

    I have an atypical perspective on communication and strategies for communicating and I don't know how likely it is that I can convey much understanding of it, or that others will be able to make use of it. However, I'll give it a shot.

    It seems that for me an aspect of being on the autism spectrum, is a lack of a model for 'the generic person'. This manifests as me tending to be very quiet IRL around people I don't know, because I tend not to see clear ways to express myself without some specific knowledge of the other person's way of looking at things.

    I think an aspect of how I have learned to cope with autism is to be somewhat hyperattentive (in some regards) to what individuals say, and what that tells me about how that individual thinks about things, and (to some degree) what 'subconscious hooks' in their thinking I can make use of in conveying things to them. IOW, to have much ability to communicate fluently with someone I need to know something about how they specifically are likely to connect the dots.

    For example, because of our exchanges in the past, in talking to you I can refer to Capablanca as making use of the subconscious/intuitive hooks of other expert chess players, to convey an understanding of a particular endgame, by setting up the relevant chess pieces in a particular way. An aspect of communication for me is a sort of planting of seeds in people's subconscious, such that an intuitive recognition might occur at some point. I see it as analogous to Capablanca setting up the chess position. If you had not written the things you did about Capablanca I'd guess that I wouldn't be writing this, because I would not know how to convey what it is I'm trying to convey to you.

    Inasmuch as I'm talking about a communication strategy, I'll point out that it is often a long game strategy where I'm not expecting to have much impact on a person's thinking in the short term. In many cases I don't have much expectation of seeing results, because I'm relying on the other individual's life experience to fill in the 'intuitive dots' and perhaps result in an epiphany at a later date. I don't even expect people to recognize that I've set them up to have whatever epiphany they might have.

    I've seen plenty of evidence for the effectiveness of this style of communicating in changing people's intuitions to some degree, though I'm not going to present the evidence because it would be too much like presenting psychological case studies of people I care about. Besides, if things work as I think they do, I think it likely that you will develop a recognition of how this style of communicating can be effective without anything additional from me.
  • God and the Present


    and I have both been frequent posters on another forum for a long time. So I replied to him:

    1) with the assumption that he had relevant background knowledge about my perspective that I didn't need to elaborate on.

    2) with knowledge of his specific background that led me to think a succinct response might be sufficient.
  • God and the Present
    Where you live is, in part, your perception of that light right now.Ø implies everything

    Right. My point was that there are complicating factors, in translating between an external world scientific reference frame and one's subjective seeming reference frame. Do you agree?
  • Why should we talk about the history of ideas?
    I suspect other members might have a very different impression of my tendency to politesse...Isaac

    LOL

    If you have any particularly edifying examples, I'd be interested in taking a look. (But maybe PM?) I have autistic standards of politesse myself, so to me you seem fairly circumspect.

    People don't like psychology as rule. I think there's something immediately offensive about someone claiming to know how you think.Isaac

    It does seem to be an acquired taste, and some psychologies make acquisition much less likely. Still, there are those times when you can lead someone to a more accurate understanding of their own nature and change the rest of their lives for the better.

    I'm more keen to just learn how different people respond to interrogation, that's my wheelhouse really (one of them, anyway). How people defend and attack beliefs in a social context - the rules of engagement, the tactics, the impacts... that sort of thing.Isaac

    This has been a big interest of mine for a long time as well, albeit from a strictly amateur and eclectically educated perspective in my case.

    It's a rare thing that a thread addresses this directly as this one has, but really, there's more meat to found on the ones that are talking about something else.Isaac

    I think I know what you mean. People behave in more informative ways in other contexts.

    That said, if you have a specific question, I'm happy to risk it, but fair warning, the answer will be about narratives and won't mention Freud once, unless in place of an expletive.Isaac

    I'm really enjoying participating on TPF, and I've already received a warning for bringing up a psychological topic, so perhaps later in a different context.
  • Why should we talk about the history of ideas?
    That's a shame, because what was an interesting conversation we here having seems to have fizzled out...Isaac

    Do you think the fizzling might be somewhat a consequence of excessive politesse on your part?

    I suspect that as a psychology professor you have insight into the topic of the OP that you haven't brought up in the thread. (And I understand there may well be ethical standards for someone in your position, and abiding by such standards requires limiting what you say.)

    Thoughts?
  • The awareness of time
    Semantics?Pantagruel

    Or frame of reference, which I suppose is pretty close to the same thing.
  • Donald Trump (All General Trump Conversations Here)
    Yet Trump claimed that the only way he could lose was if the election was stolen. How could he possibly know that? He couldn't. It wasn't a belief, it was a strategy.GRWelsh

    :up:
  • Nice little roundup of the state of consciousness studies
    Of course, the subject of neuroscience is the human brain, and humans are subjects, but that it not the point at issue.Wayfarer

    The point I was addressing was the falsity to your claim that, "I agree with Chalmers, on the grounds that objective physical sciences exclude the first person as a matter of principle."

    It seems that went over your head, but now that I am pointing it our more explicitly, can you recognize the falsity of that statement you made? Do you recognize that you are not well qualified to speak of "the principles of science"?

    The bet which was the subject of the OP was placed in 1998 between David Chalmers and Kristoff Koch as to whether a neurological account of the nature of experience would be discovered in the next 25 years.Wayfarer

    People make dumb bets. If I had been there I would happily have bet ten cases of wine on Chalmer's side. Even a stopped clock is right twice a day, and Chalmers was right on the occasion when the bet was made.

    BTW, people use "OP" here in a way that I haven't been able to clearly grasp the referent of. I think of "OP" as an acronym for "original post" referring to the initial post in a forum thread/discussion. However, some people use "OP" in ways that clearly do not fit with my understanding; your usage for example. What I consider to be the OP wasn't about the bet. It was about a "Nice little roundup of the state of consciousness studies"... ..."Over at Vox Future Perfect."

    Have you read the original Chalmer’s paper?Wayfarer

    I haven't read this thread closely enough to know what paper you are referring to. Can you provide a non-paywalled link?
  • God and the Present
    If someone reads a passage very quickly, and mixes up some words so that there is misunderstanding, can this really be called reading it?Metaphysician Undercover

    I don't see any good reason to look at it in black and white terms. I don't see reading as defined by not making any errors. Consider the varying interpretations people have of literature. Do you think all people who read a piece of literature have the same interpretation? Does it seem likely that lexical errors play a major role in the variance of interpretations?

    If you read the article, it's all a hoax anyway, there was no such research.Metaphysician Undercover

    Yes, I read it and found the additional text samples interesting as well. Regardless of the hoax, it is still interesting to consider what text samples like that can reveal to us about our thinking.
  • Nice little roundup of the state of consciousness studies
    But physical sciences don't exclude the first person as far as I can tell.
    — wonderer1

    There is the presumption that their findings are observer-independent i.e. replicable by anyone, They’re ‘third person’ in that sense. It’s an implicit assumption.
    Wayfarer

    I suppose I should have asked where you draw a line between physical sciences and ~physical sciences, and why?

    Neuroscience certainly is a physical science, and doesn't exclude the first person. Do you disagree?
  • God and the Present
    I checked your link. Notice that each letter still needs to be there. Luke says reading occurs as a temporal order, I disagreed. Your link seems to support my position.Metaphysician Undercover

    Maybe we just experience it differently. It is clear to me that I have no need to be conscious of every letter in order to grasp the intended content. My brain yielded pattern recognized words, largely despite the 'brokenness" of many of the words. I can't say that I know what it is like for you though. I thought you might recognize that you didn't need to be conscious of every letter to understand the content.

    Would you say that for you it was like solving a sort of logic puzzle to determine the following content?

    mixed-up-letters2_web_1024.jpg
  • God and the Present
    am very sure that I am conscious of each letter in each word, or else I would misread the word. Are you sure that you are not conscious of each letter in each word?Metaphysician Undercover

    I'd ask you to look at the following link.

    https://www.sciencealert.com/word-jumble-meme-first-last-letters-cambridge-typoglycaemia
  • The awareness of time
    If you perceive an event unfold, like an arrow being shot at a person, if you are really fast it is possible to "intercede" in the future of that event.Pantagruel

    Right. I think that an important aspect of what our minds are 'evolutionarily for' is interceding in events in the future, so presenting a model with representations of the future to our minds is what our brains do. So us having multiple possible futures being represented in consciousness makes intuitive sense to me. However, I see that as different from consciousness being in the future.

    Does that make sense?
  • The awareness of time
    Personally, I am exploring the idea that, while objects may have a temporal position, consciousness actually has a temporal "size." Objects are three dimensional and moving through or in time, as it were. But consciousness actually exists in the past, present and future, has actual temporal dimension. An intuition.Pantagruel

    I'm not caught up on this thread, so apologies if the thread has moved on.

    I do think there is interesting scientific evidence for consciousness being 'clocked' to some extent, at brain wave frequencies. So there may be a temporal size along such lines.

    I'm more skeptical that consciousness 'exists in the future'. I think our brains are continually modelling and updating their modelling of the future. This is what allows us to catch a ball flying through the air, even though our sensing of a moving ball's position is continuously time delayed. So I think it makes sense that it seems that our consciousness exists in part in the future.
  • Nice little roundup of the state of consciousness studies
    ...the processes of one's unconscious mind (its synthesizing of information very much included) are fully irrelevant to the issue of what is factually being consciously experienced...javra

    If you want to stick your fingers in your ears and say, "La la la, I can't hear you.", then I don't have more to say. If you change your mind this article on visual cortex filling the role of the 'mind's eye' might be worth a look.
  • What is the Nature of Intuition? How reliable is it?
    [irony]It hasn't happened yet. I'm curious to see what it would feel like.[/irony]T Clark

    Have you seen that TED Talk? If not, I get the impression that you would appreciate it.
  • What is the Nature of Intuition? How reliable is it?
    Knowing what knowing feels like is a big part of that.T Clark

    Do you know what being wrong feel like?
  • Nice little roundup of the state of consciousness studies
    When I visually imagine a table, I see the table from one singular perspective (rather than, say, from 12 different perspectives simultaneously).javra

    That depends on the circumstances. If you are visually imagining a table, due to your eyes being directed towards and focusing on an illuminated table, and you have the binocular vision typical of humans, then you are seeing the table from two different perspectives and your brain is synthesizing what you imagine to be a table seen from a singular perspective but with a depth which is due to the binocular origins of the imagining under consideration.