I don't think it is. I don't think any evidence has been offered, except brain reactions to the environment. Of course, since the brain works on a stimulous-reaction basis — Alkis Piskas
I don't blame you. :smile: It indeed looks like "materialism", etymologically at least, refers only to matter. But don't forget that materialism, as a philosopy was develped in ancient times, even the term itself was not yet used. (Re: Archimede's Atom and Greek atomists - Democritus, Leucippus, etc.).I was confused because the word “material” seems misleading in that it suggests only the set of things that have mass/matter (which I and many think to be synonymous with materials). — Benj96
No, no. It was not erroneous at all! I just made a remark that you had to connect "physicalism" to "materialism" so that people won't think you are talking about something different than materialism, which is still today the prevailing term. On the other hand, the term "physical" is much mor commonly used in a lot of contexts, e.g. physical universe/world, physical laws, physical vs non-physical, physical attraction, and so on.That’s why I used the term physicalism (even if erroneous) because it seemed not to depend on matter being the only way something can exist. — Benj96
Don't listen to rumors! :grin:I have heard theories that the brain could be a sort of “transmission tower or receiver” that has the capacity to condense and accelerate the properties and abilities of the environment at large that exist anyways - a sort of sluggish, slow and inefficient awareness. — Benj96
You can say that again!In this way the brain doesn’t generate consciousness — Benj96
I'm not sure if we can as "as we know it" ... I have started to believe that everyone has a different definition. description and view of the term.The theory sort of suggests that consciousness as we know it ... — Benj96
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