The assumption that all behavior is ultimately neurophysical may be called the Standard Model (SM) of neurophilosophy. Yet, in the years since David Chalmers distinguished the Hard Problem of Consciousness from the easy problems of neuroscience, no progress has been made toward a physical reduction of consciousness. This, together with collateral shortcomings Chalmers missed, show that the SM is inadequate to experience. I outline the logical prerequisites for reduction and show that they are missing from the SM. Their absence is traced to representational problems implicit in: (1) The Fundamental Abstraction of natural science (attending to the object to the exclusion of the subject); and (2) The limits of a Cartesian conceptual space. Adding pre-Cartesian concepts allows us to construct an integrated representation bridging the dualistic gap. In particular, Aristotle’s projection of mind provides a paradigm integrating intentional and physical operations. — D. F. Polis
Does the Hard Problem reflect a failure of the reductive paradigm?
Reductionism assumes that to know the parts is, implicitly, to know the whole, but Aristotle showed in Topics IV, 13 that the whole is not the sum of its parts, for building materials are not a house.
Explanations of why "you can't get there from here" are common and occur before it becomes clear how to get there from here. — Fooloso4
Consider forming a judgement, one of Churchland’s propositional attitudes. If we are aware of feeling a stone, we can abstract the concept <hard>. Then, being aware that the identical object elicits both <the stone> and <hard>, we link these concepts to judge <the stone is hard>, giving propositional knowledge. The copula, <is>, betokens identity – not between subject and predicate, but of their common source. Indeed, ‘a is b’ is unjustified if a is not identically an object which elicits <b>. This judgement requires the power to actualize intelligibility – first in becoming aware of the stone in an inchoate way (tode ti = this something), and then in abstracting a physically inseparable property. Thus, abandoning the Fundamental Abstraction allows us to explain phenomena beyond the scope of the SM
Thank you. I look forward to your further comments.An excellent essay. — Paine
I am glad we are of like mind.I agree with this too. — RogueAI
I see some problems here. First, matter is not self-organizing. It is organized by laws of nature, which are logically distinct from the matter whose time-development they control. Those laws are immaterial, for it is a category error to ask what they are made of. Second, knowing what matter can become is insufficient to say what it will or does become. The matter that composed the primordial soup could become a brain, but that does not mean that it will, any more than a pile of building materials will become a Swiss Chalet. Finally, even if we could predict which atoms of the primordial soup will come to compose my brain, that does not reduce consciousness to a physical basis. As I note in the article, physics has no intentional effects, and consciousness is the actualization of intelligibility -- which is an intentional operation.Although a heap of building materials is not self organizing, matter might be. If so then to have sufficient knowledge of the parts is know the ways in which they can form higher orders of organization, including organisms that are conscious. — Fooloso4
I do not argue or believe that.it is quite another to argue that there has always been wholes such as human beings. — Fooloso4
I did not just "declare" the failure of reductionism. I showed why it must fail -- first in biology, where physicists (I am one) ignore the very data that biologists (such as my brother) study, and second in the intentional realm, where we do the same thing. If you think I am wrong, it would be helpful to say why my arguments fail. I am not proposing that you accept my views on faith.Declaring the failure of reductionism seems premature. Explanations of why "you can't get there from here" are common and occur before it becomes clear how to get there from here. — Fooloso4
Then you should be able to use it to outline how consciousness can be both causally impotent, and reported by those who experience it. Didn't the causal efficacy of Jupiter's moons play an essential role in Galileo's reports of them?It's too early to claim that the "Standard Model" fails. — Banno
I suggest you reread the text. "The copula, <is>, betokens identity – not between subject and predicate, but of their common source. Indeed, ‘a is b’ is unjustified if a is not identically an object which elicits <b>.""The rock is hard" is not an identity. It's not "Rock = hard". Nor "Rock ≡ Hard". — Banno
I would not dare say "only." There may well be other approaches, but I have yet to find one in ancient or modern authors, and I have read many of all persuasions. I only say that it can be so remedied.If I've understood the article aright, the mooted failure of the "Standard Model" supposedly can only be remedied by a return to Aristotelian concepts of the mind. — Banno
Why would you say that? Can't we type-replicate introspective reports to reach general conclusions, as we type-replicate any other kind of observation?2. Realize that subjective experience from the first person perspective cannot be scientifically investigated — Wolfgang
Consciousness is not physical in the sense that the objects studied by physics are. It cannot be defined using concepts such as mass, energy, momentum, charge, and extension. While we can say that thought depends on the brain, that does not mean that it is a property of the brain. Thought also depends on adequate blood flow and respiration, but it is not a property of the heart or lungs. So, dependence of y on x does not make y a property of x.Consciousness is a property of the individual, more precisely, of the brain. — Wolfgang
That would be what I call "medical consciousness." It is not what my article is about. I am discussing the subjective awareness -- that which makes the merely intelligible actually understood.Biologically, consciousness can be described as the orientation performance of a (central nervous) living being. — Wolfgang
We agree.So whoever tries to explain consciousness physically commits a category error. ... Conclusion: the hard problem of consciousness is a chimera! — Wolfgang
That is not my position.Chalmers accepts consciousness as fundamental and universal. — Fooloso4
It is organized by laws of nature — Dfpolis
... knowing what matter can become is insufficient to say what it will or does become. — Dfpolis
Finally, even if we could predict which atoms of the primordial soup will come to compose my brain, that does not reduce consciousness to a physical basis — Dfpolis
If there were no laws of nature in reality to describe, then the descriptions of physics (call them "the laws of physics") would be fictions. Further, the laws are not invented, but discovered, and you cannot discover what does not exist.Are you claiming that those laws are not simply descriptive? That matter is somehow made to conform to laws that exist prior to and independent of it? — Fooloso4
We agree. It is informed by the laws of nature.it does not become whatever it becomes haphazardly and randomly. — Fooloso4
Neither does it rule out the possibility that the physical system has the capability for consciousness. — Fooloso4
Chalmers doesn't endorse any particular theory of consciousness. — frank
Toward this end, I propose that conscious experience be considered a fundamental feature, irreducible to anything more basic.
For present purposes, the relevant sorts of mental states are conscious experiences. I will
understand panpsychism as the thesis that some fundamental physical entities are conscious: that
is, that there is something it is like to be a quark or a photon or a member of some other
fundamental physical type.(1)
In this article I will present an argument for panpsychism. Like most philosophical
arguments, this argument is not entirely conclusive, but I think it gives reason to take the view
seriously. Speaking for myself, I am by no means confident that panpsychism is true, but I am
also not confident that it is not true. This article presents what I take to be perhaps the best
reason for believing panpsychism. A companion article, “The Combination Problem for
Panpsychism”, presents what I take to be the best reason for disbelieving panpsychism.
The source of the concepts <This rock> and <hard>. — Dfpolis
If you mean he declares it true then you are right, but he does endorse it in the sense of give support to it. — Fooloso4
Toward this end, I propose that conscious experience be considered a fundamental feature, irreducible to anything more basic.
If there were no laws of nature in reality to describe, then the descriptions of physics (call them "the laws of physics") would be fictions. — Dfpolis
In other words, when you say "physical" do you mean to include intentional realities such as knowing, willing, hoping, etc.? As "physical" is used in the context of physics, intentional realities are excluded. — Dfpolis
So, to say that a purely "physical" system can preform intentional operations, you have to redefine "physical." — Dfpolis
At this point some are tempted to give up, holding that we will never have a theory of conscious experience. McGinn (1989), for example, argues that the problem is too hard for our limited minds; we are "cognitively closed" with respect to the phenomenon. Others have argued that conscious experience lies outside the domain of scientific theory altogether.
I think this pessimism is premature. This is not the place to give up; it is the place where things get interesting. When simple methods of explanation are ruled out, we need to investigate the alternatives. Given that reductive explanation fails, nonreductive explanation is the natural choice.
Although a remarkable number of phenomena have turned out to be explicable wholly in terms of entities simpler than themselves, this is not universal. In physics, it occasionally happens that an entity has to be taken as fundamental. Fundamental entities are not explained in terms of anything simpler. Instead, one takes them as basic, and gives a theory of how they relate to everything else in the world. For example, in the nineteenth century it turned out that electromagnetic processes could not be explained in terms of the wholly mechanical processes that previous physical theories appealed to, so Maxwell and others introduced electromagnetic charge and electromagnetic forces as new fundamental components of a physical theory. To explain electromagnetism, the ontology of physics had to be expanded. New basic properties and basic laws were needed to give a satisfactory account of the phenomena. — Chalmers, Facing Up to The Problems of Consciousness
Both, I guess. He has not presented a theory to explain consciousness, but he is saying there could be one.
Isn't that what is being sought after or abandoned as a hopeless cause? — Paine
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