This article aims to show that if we assume two things as given, that of an interactionist view point and the theory of evolution by mutation and natural selection, it follows that there is a particular moment in time I label the initial alteration.
If the atoms in the brain continue to exhibit the exact behavior you would predict via physics — Francis
It does not follow that a system being a purely physical process, that the behavior of the system can necessarily be explained. It may require a greater understanding than is currently possessed.If the atoms in the brain continue to exhibit the exact behavior you would predict via physics given their mass, velocity, charge ect.. then you could explain the behavior of said organism simply knowing these things. This does not appear to be true for humans ... — Francis
I'd correct that to oneness to the mind and body, or rather, oneness to system and processes of that system. A brain is just part of it, and in isolation, doesn't have the attributes of which you speak.A simplistic definition of Monism is that it attributes a kind of oneness to the mind and brain.
I don't think Wu is using 'consciousness' in the same way you are, which is 'something separate to which a connection must be made'. Not sure. Maybe he is.The Neural Correlates of Consciousness or “the minimum neuronal mechanisms jointly sufficient for any one specific conscious experience.” (Wu, 2018) The Neural Correlates of Consciousness reference the set of objects in the brain which give rise to consciousness but does not exactly mention the reaction of the brain to consciousness.
Unimportant. If they're already connected to a mind, the question is how they went from a physical creature obeying physical law to one that isn't. The answer is how the chimp got there, not how some common ancestor of the chimp evolved into us. All this is moot if you can actually locate where the violation occurs, in which case one can simply backtrack, looking to see which being have such a mechanism and which don't.it is safe to assume this creature also had a primitive mind and experienced Qualia (the name given to single instances of subjective experience). So how did we get from these organisms to humans today?
Yes, exactly, but still with the questions above.Meaning, there was a first time the behavior of matter in the brain of some organism in our evolutionary past was altered from its behavior that would be expected if it were behaving purely by the conventions of physics and chemistry.
Please don't discount this. There are non-brained things that potentially qualify. There are undoubtedly aliens which don't have anything resembling Earth biology. This is irrelevant of course in a pursuit of how it came about in Earth biology.From an interactionist standpoint, the only alternative to this conclusion is that the initial alteration in the behavior of matter happened before organisms developed brains.
Did it take place more than once? (plenty of examples of parallel evolution)Some questions that could be asked are: In what organism did this take place? How long ago in our evolutionary history did it take place? What objects in the brain were involved? How many objects in the brain were involved?
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