Patterner
Dawnstorm
How Does a Thought Cause Another Thought? — Patterner
J
I'm still trying to figure out what the topic is. — Dawnstorm
so far, this discussion looks to me like a solution in search of a problem. — SophistiCat
Do we need to analyze thoughts in terms of causation? — SophistiCat
Patterner
Well now that's two lines in the sand. Is it two different thoughts? Or is it one compound thought?The only line I'd draw in the sand would be: We mustn't talk as if we already understand this issue, or as if there is no issue. — J
You think? I intentionally looked for an example that I didn't think is memorized. I don't know that people memorize addition the way we do the Times Tables. It's also more involved than counting by 2s. And not as thoughtlessly easy as adding 1 or 2 to any number.Another problem: 5+7=12 is usually just memorised, — Dawnstorm
I haven't thought about this before, but I'm inclined to disagree. I don't see how something we are thinking short isn't, but definition, a thought. And even if we're talking about counting by 2s, which most beyond whatever age can do easily, without any sort of calculating, do we not have to think to do it?Take "7+5". In what ways is that even thught? If I read "7+5" and think "12" then I might just cover this with a stimulus-response model without ever invoking the concept of "a thought". — Dawnstorm
Either is a decision. Which sounds like a thought to me.Take "432 + 493 = 925". If you were to see "432 + 493" and you recognise this as addition. You may solve, or you may shrug and walk away. These are two responses: do any of those involve thought? Is shrugging and walking away less of a thought than mumbling "Who cares?" and walking away, because the latter includes language and the former doesn't? — Dawnstorm
I don't see how it's possible that it's not thought. Photons can hit our retinas without us really seeing it. We don't notice everything in our visual field, and wr sometimes don't notice things dead center in our visual field. But if you notice it enough to decide you are not going to do the math, you're thinking about it.Is the recognition of addition already thought, given that it's implied but not expressed in either reactions? — Dawnstorm
It seems like running to me. Running happens. It's a process. And you go for a run. Thought happens. It's a process. And you have a thought.And if thought happens is there anything you could usefully demarcate into "a thought"? — Dawnstorm
Dawnstorm
You think? — Patterner
I intentionally looked for an example that I didn't think is memorized. I don't know that people memorize addition the way we do the Times Tables.
It's also more involved than counting by 2s. And not as thoughtlessly easy as adding 1 or 2 to any number.
Well, even if it's not the best example, I'm sure we can find one that is net memorized, but is easy enough that the majority of people would add it up sticky and reading, rather than shrug and walk away.
I haven't thought about this before, but I'm inclined to disagree. I don't see how something we are thinking short isn't, but definition, a thought. And even if we're talking about counting by 2s, which most beyond whatever age can do easily, without any sort of calculating, do we not have to think to do it? — Patterner
I don't see how it's possible that it's not thought. Photons can hit our retinas without us really seeing it. We don't notice everything in our visual field, and wr sometimes don't notice things dead center in our visual field. But if you notice it enough to decide you are not going to do the math, you're thinking about it. — Patterner
It seems like running to me. Running happens. It's a process. And you go for a run. Thought happens. It's a process. And you have a thought. — Patterner
I do not believe driving, or walking through a crowded store, on "auto-pilot" is done without thought. We certainly relegate such things to the background. Sometimes so much so that we have accidents. And, not dwelling on any moment, nothing makes it into our long-term memory. But I have to believe there is some thought involved. — Patterner
J
If causation language is biased towards world 1, then how should we model thought, if we want to focus on world 2. Does that seem like a fair description of the confusion this thread is in (or is just me overthinking things again...) — Dawnstorm
Patterner
SophistiCat
Do we need to analyze thoughts in terms of causation? — SophistiCat
To this, I'd say no, we don't. I'm quite open to other hypotheses about the "relations," "affinities," "influences," "associations," et al. among thoughts. The only line I'd draw in the sand would be: We mustn't talk as if we already understand this issue, or as if there is no issue. — J
L'éléphant
Because of the operation of the mind -- thoughts are modes of thinking. If a thought can cause you another thought, are you not removing the mind from the equation?It's not causation. It's memory retrieval. — L'éléphant
Could you expand on this? I have Thought A and then retrieve a memory so as to have Thought B? Why that particular memory? — J
Because causation is an observed phenomenon. That's why it is the case that it is physical.Causation is physical. — L'éléphant
We can stipulate that, certainly. Do you think there's an argument for why it must be the case, or does it represent a kind of bedrock commitment to how to understand the concept? — J
Patterner
It seems to me retrieving a memory is a big way one thought causes another. Any kind of association is a memory. The fact that bananas are yellow is stored in my memory. So seeing something yellow might make me think of bananas. There was a ridiculous, hilarious show with Space Ghost as a talkshow host. One time he just blurted out that bananas have potassium, when it was only a tangent to the conversation. So thinking of bananas might make me think of Space Ghost.It's not causation. It's memory retrieval. — L'éléphant
Maybe that is the mind. I've asked elsewhere - What is the mind when there is no thinking taking place?Because of the operation of the mind -- thoughts are modes of thinking. If a thought can cause you another thought, are you not removing the mind from the equation? — L'éléphant
Pierre-Normand
A famous example of correlation not being causation is watching a train station for a day, and noticing that every time a bunch of people gather at it, a train shows up. — Patterner
Harry Hindu
Maybe the issue is classifying causation as "physical" or "mental" rather than simply "procedural"?And, in reverse, all the muddle-making issues about physical cause show up when we try to understand mental causation! — J
This is the way it is for you now, but what about when you were in grade school learning arithmetic? Are you saying that we only think when we are learning something new and when it becomes reflexive it is no longer a thought?Take "7+5". In what ways is that even thught? If I read "7+5" and think "12" then I might just cover this with a stimulus-response model without ever invoking the concept of "a thought".
Another problem: 5+7=12 is usually just memorised, so what happens is that we're completing a culturual template. In a manner of speaking, we're completing a default thought: filling a gap we automically perceive. So "5+7" might be an incomplete thought where we automatically fill the gap in the proper way. — Dawnstorm
Patterner
You knew you were being prompted to retrieve 12, so chose not to, all without thinking of 12? aren't you thinking of 12 when you realized it's what was being prompted? Isn't the best you could do choosing to stop thinking about 12?So what was my thought process here? What's clear is that, even though I was prompted to "retrieve 12" and I knew I was prompted such, I didn't bother to retrieve twelve. — Dawnstorm
Yes, I was misunderstanding. However, I think I disagree. In what way can we not break apart what's going on and isolate a single thought? Driving into work this morning I see a lot of leaves on the ground. It's autumn. I think New Yorkers as a rule like autumn. Pumpkins and squash and apples are big this time of year. All the apple orchards have apple cider and cider donuts this time of year, and there's usually fudge also. One orchard has a cupcake festival every year, which is as wonderful thing as you can imagine. Autumn also reminds me of a particular Monty Python moment with the leaves falling off the tree, seen here:I think you misunderstand my position. "Thought" is what's going on in when we're thinking. The process; the stream of consciousness (or part of it, whatever we're willing to count as thinking). "A thought" is unit that occurs with that process. It's perfectly possible to be thinking, but there's no good way to break what's going on apart to isolate "a single unit that makes up a thought". — Dawnstorm
Sure, we should be able to come up with ideas for models along these lines. Any suggestions? I can't say I'm entirely clear on what you have in mind.I'm suggesting we need a model of what type of thoughts can reasonable compared to each other on a level that's relevant to causation. I'm sorry for being so convoluted, but that's just how I... think. — Dawnstorm
Difficult to answer, since, as I've said, we don't even know what charge, which is fairly important for physical causation, is. If mental causation is a significantly different thing, it's going to be even more mysterious, since we don't have centuries of systematic study of it.Finally, thought in the context of cause and effect needs certain traits amenable to cause. What are they? — Dawnstorm
Patterner
True enough. But the idea is that the gathering of people at that time and place is not the cause of the train's arrival. If nobody showed up when they needed to to catch the train, the train still would have shown up. It wasn't even the purchase of those particular tickets that caused the train to show up. Tickets for that particular day of the week and time would have to stop for some time before they stopped having three train stop there. At which point, no number of people gathering there would cause the train to stop.They're most definitely causing the trains to show up. The proof of that if that if those people would stop showing up, the trains would eventually also stop showing up :wink: — Pierre-Normand
Pierre-Normand
At which point, no number of people gathering there would cause the train to stop. — Patterner
J
I don't know anything at all about Popper. I only heard his name for the first time recently, in another thread, and haven't been able to make head or tail out of what you two are saying about his Worlds. — Patterner
He proposes a novel form of pluralistic realism, a “Three Worlds” ontology, which, while accommodating both the world of physical states and processes (world 1) and the mental world of psychological processes (world 2), represents knowledge in its objective sense as belonging to world 3, a third, objectively real ontological category. That world is the world
'of the products of the human mind, such as languages; tales and stories and religious myths; scientific conjectures or theories, and mathematical constructions; songs and symphonies; paintings and sculptures.]' (1980: 144)
In short, world 3 is the world of human cultural artifacts, which are products of world 2 mental processes, usually instantiated in the physical world 1 environment. — SEP article on Popper
Harry Hindu
True enough. But the idea is that the gathering of people at that time and place is not the cause of the train's arrival. If nobody showed up when they needed to to catch the train, the train still would have shown up. It wasn't even the purchase of those particular tickets that caused the train to show up. Tickets for that particular day of the week and time would have to stop for some time before they stopped having three train stop there. At which point, no number of people gathering there would cause the train to stop. — Patterner
It could also simply be that we are wrong about the causes. Train stations are built where there are towns, or close to interesting locations that humans might want to visit. It's not necessarily about where humans are, but where they might want to go. A locomotive company might make a bad investment building tracks to somewhere people are not interested in going, or are no longer interested in going.Got that, I was joking, but also kind of highlighting the contrastive character of causal explanation. Claims that event A caused event B always are ambiguous if one doesn't specify (or relies on shared assumptions) regarding what counts relevantly as event A happening: is it its happening in general, its happening once, its happening in some particular way, etc. — Pierre-Normand
Dawnstorm
Are you saying that we only think when we are learning something new and when it becomes reflexive it is no longer a thought? — Harry Hindu
It seems to me that consciousness has out-sourced it's thinking to other (sub/un-conscious parts of the brain) once something has been learned sufficiently enough where conscious thought is no longer needed. Does this mean that thinking is no longer involved, or that thinking was simply relegated to another part of the brain that does not require updated information from the senses? — Harry Hindu
You knew you were being prompted to retrieve 12, so chose not to, all without thinking of 12? aren't you thinking of 12 when you realized it's what was being prompted? Isn't the best you could do choosing to stop thinking about 12? — Patterner
I can't say I'm entirely clear on what you have in mind. — Patterner
ProtagoranSocratist
Google’s ever-helpful chat-program – presumably reflecting some kind of cyberworld consensus – would like to straighten this out for us:
“Causation involves a physical connection between events, while entailment is a relationship between propositions.” — J
J
Patterner
One thought can cause another. It happens all the time.So my initial question is now: “Can one J-thought cause another — J
I won't be able to help you with this. I just don't get the idea well enough. Or maybe the point of it. We'll see if I catch on as you guys discuss.and if so, is this by virtue of a World 2 relationship, a World 3 relationship, or some combination?” — J
I think causation is a good model, and I think it's because of associations.If causation isn’t a very good model of what happens when we think J-thoughts, then can we come up with a better description, something more contentful than merely “association” or “affinity”? — J
Harry Hindu
I don't see how one isolates a thought from the process of thinking. It would be like trying to isolate the stomach from digestion, and I don't see how that would get us any closer to how thoughts are caused.As I replied to Patterner, I'm not concerned with "thought"; I'm concerned with how to isolate "a thought" from the process of thinking such one can say that "thing" is caused. And I need to be concerned with this because I'm denying that thought corresponds either with words or propositions. The problem is that have no clear alternative.
If I engage with other people on this topic, I can't just assume we mean the same concepts just because we use the same words. I'll go into examples when replying to Patterner. — Dawnstorm
This doesn't make any sense. How did you know that there is a relationship between the scribbles "5+7" and the scribble "12", or even what that relationship is? WHY does 5+7=12? These are just scribbles on the screen in which the relationship is not obvious with a simply observation. You have to already have learned what the relationship is. Your recognition that 5+7 and 12 mean the same thing is an effect of your prior experiences. If you had never seen those scribbles before your thoughts about them would be different.To be precise, at no point did I retrieve the word "12". That is a fact, if my memory is reliable, which it might not be. The choice would have been subconcsious, if it's a choice at all, and not just me being busy with other things. One of my interpretations, is that - on account of me having made a strong connection between "5+7" and "12" - thinking of "5+7" already is thinking of "12". Me recognising your intention is me foregrounding your intention and thus actualising the connection between "5+7" and "12" was not neccessary. This is not a fact. This is me guessing what went on my in mind. — Dawnstorm
Patterner
I don't know about being able to isolate a thought from the process of thinking, but we can clearly talk about different thoughts in isolation. I can think of my door that needs work too keep thme cold out. I don't know what to do, so I need to find a carpenter. I really like the music of The Carpenters, and Karen had an amazing voice. Karen does because, even though she was recovering from anorexia, it had already causes damage to her heart.I don't see how one isolates a thought from the process of thinking. It would be like trying to isolate the stomach from digestion, and I don't see how that would get us any closer to how thoughts are caused. — Harry Hindu
I would agree that conclusions are caused by reasons. I think reasoning is one way a thought can cause another.Would you agree that conclusions are caused by reasons? Have you ever reached a conclusion without a reason? Would that still qualify as reasoning (thinking)? — Harry Hindu
My definition might be something like:It seems more important to lay out what we mean by "cause" so even understand how it happens in the physical realm to understand how it might apply to the mental. — Harry Hindu
Harry Hindu
But did they really occur in isolation? What do you mean by isolated? It seems to me that the isolation is a mental projection onto the thinking process just as we project our categorical boundaries onto other natural processes. And each thought shares a property with the thought before it.I don't know about being able to isolate a thought from the process of thinking, but we can clearly talk about different thoughts in isolation. I can think of my door that needs work too keep thme cold out. I don't know what to do, so I need to find a carpenter. I really like the music of The Carpenters, and Karen had an amazing voice. Karen does because, even though she was recovering from anorexia, it had already causes damage to her heart.
We can talk about many separate thoughts in all that.
-My door letting in the cold
-carpenters
-The Carpenters
-Karen's death
-anorexia — Patterner
We can agree that thinking and recalling are both mental processes and causally related (why would you recall something if not to think about it).But I don't think all thoughts caused by another are the result of reasoning. Sometimes it's just an association, which means memory. — Patterner
Yes. And thoughts can be the cause of things that are not thoughts.And not all thoughts are caused by other thoughts. For example, sensory input often causes thoughts. — Patterner
My definition might be something like:
Thought B was caused by Thought A if B would not have come into existence at the time it did had A not existed first.
As for how it works, I'm thinking of this:
B came into existence because of an association work A (meaning A triggered a memory); because it was the conclusion of a line of reasoning that lead from A to B; (other "mental mechanisms"?). — Patterner
Yes, the effect always seems to retain some property of the cause.B came into existence because of an association work A (meaning A triggered a memory); because it was the conclusion of a line of reasoning that lead from A to B; (other "mental mechanisms"?). — Patterner
Patterner
I don't really know what you had in mind with the word "isolation". But, unless we say we have only one thought per day, spanning the entirety of the time we're awake and thinking, then, whatever it means, we isolate thoughts all the time. I just ate a salad. You don't need, and surely don't want, to hear all the thoughts surrounding it. My wife gave it to me. She got it last night at a late meeting for her job. Her boss had these meeting every month. He always gets food. but my wife only eats one meal a day, and it is keto, so she never eats at these meetings. For some reason, that bothers her boss. He always wants her to eat, and actually you could say he pressures her to eat. don't know why he feels so strongly about it. Anyway, it's usually pizza or something, and she's not gonna eat it under any circumstances. But last night he got her this nice chef salad, and asked her how that was. She said she would eat it today. She gave it to me instead. My father absolutely loves chef salads. He always says, "That was good! It had everything!" it cracks all of us up. we can go to any restaurant, with the most amazing food in it, and he's darned likely to ask if they have a chef salad.:rofl:But did they really occur in isolation? What do you mean by isolated? It seems to me that the isolation is a mental projection onto the thinking process just as we project our categorical boundaries onto other natural processes. And each thought shares a property with the thought before it. — Harry Hindu
Dawnstorm
I don't see how one isolates a thought from the process of thinking. It would be like trying to isolate the stomach from digestion, and I don't see how that would get us any closer to how thoughts are caused. — Harry Hindu
Would you agree that conclusions are caused by reasons? Have you ever reached a conclusion without a reason? Would that still qualify as reasoning (thinking)? — Harry Hindu
In what way is a baseball causing a window to break different than 2+ 2 causing 4? 2+2 isn't necessarily equal to 4. — Harry Hindu
It seems more important to lay out what we mean by "cause" so even understand how it happens in the physical realm to understand how it might apply to the mental. — Harry Hindu
This doesn't make any sense. — Harry Hindu
You have to already have learned what the relationship is. Your recognition that 5+7 and 12 mean the same thing is an effect of your prior experiences. If you had never seen those scribbles before your thoughts about them would be different. — Harry Hindu
Patterner
Ted Chiang wrote a short story called Understand, in which a man becomes super intelligent. Not really intelligent. Super intelligent. He says this:Since I came into this thread saying that "sentences" aren't clear expressions of thoughts — Dawnstorm
I’m designing a new language. I’ve reached the limits of conventional languages, and now they frustrate my attempts to progress further. They lack the power to express concepts that I need, and even in their own domain, they’re imprecise and unwieldy. They’re hardly fit for speech, let alone thought. — Ted Chiang
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