if I engage in an argument with you, then nothing physical has passed between us. — Wayfarer
Those are the activities of the mind. And insofar as that effects the body, for example in psychosomatic medicine or by causing neurological changes, then that is 'top-down causation'. — Wayfarer
They don't. Not without breaking fundamental laws of physics. You're positing a system which defies the laws of physics - despite being well within the purview of physics ("causing neurological changes" - a physical event). If something defying the laws of physics isn't reason to look elsewhere, then what is? Are you seriously suggesting that "It seems that way to me" is a stronger argument the "It is consistent with all the laws of physics"? — Isaac
this word has no clear meaning to me. — Olivier5
What I believe is that the mind is perfectly natural, and that it exists for a reason. It does things. That's why we have one. Same as for your nostrils, your hair and your feet: you have them for a reason, they serve a purpose. — Olivier5
I believe the purpose of the mind is to integrate information from all sources to support decision making. — Olivier5
So to me, the idea of a thing (the mind) having no effect on other things is simply impossible. The mind as you describe it (a dead-end of causality) appears to me a logical impossibility. — Olivier5
Given that we agree there, what’s your stance? Epiphenomenalism? Something else? Are you a dualist in the first place? I’m curious. — khaled
When certain neurons are firing and we want to minimise the surprise in the hidden states (we don't literally know which neurons are firing) we create a model which we call thoughts — Isaac
You can remove a persons nostrils or feet. And they will have a lower chance to survive. But you can’t remove a mind. — khaled
[Minds] don’t have a cost. — khaled
Logical? Again, cause and effect is not a logical principle. — khaled
You can lose your mind. You can also temporarily suspend its operations. It's called sleep. — Olivier5
Why do you think people have to sleep? — Olivier5
It could be that minds suck up a lot of energy, or something else that gets depleted after a while, needing restauration. Sleep may be the price to pay for minds. — Olivier5
Otherwise how do we know it exists? — Olivier5
So, the word “anger” had a different meaning before neurology? — khaled
This might not be exhausted by the label we give to some predictive model — Isaac
Definitely not to rest our minds, but our brains and bodies. — khaled
you can’t remove JUST the mind. — khaled
can imagine a pebble in space that is still and so far away from anything that it’s effect is negligible.
If such a pebble existed we would know it exists by seeing it. — khaled
Our bodies can rest without sleeping — Olivier5
Our brain, maybe, possibly because sustaining a mind is a very tiring thing. — Olivier5
Comatose people, brain damaged people etc. — Olivier5
And thus this pebble would have had an effect on us, since we saw it. — Olivier5
You can't move things to long term memory without sleeping for one. — khaled
Brain damaged people are an example of removing the mind without changing the brain? — khaled
These things you move to long term memory when you sleep, do they have a mass, a volume or a number? — Olivier5
Take the laws of physics for instance. They have no mass either, so by your criteria the laws of physics are not physical. — Olivier5
Who said anything about not changing the brain? — Olivier5
I meant you can’t remove JUST the mind. You can’t create a philosophical zombie. — khaled
Plenty of physical changes happen when you sleep. You can’t remove the mind without making these changes. — khaled
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