Clarendon
Questioner
reorganisation cannot create a new kind. — Clarendon
Clarendon
Questioner
Unless a new kind of property is already in the base, no amount of complexity - or whatever - will conjure it. That is the point you haven't grasped. — Clarendon
Wayfarer
First, I take it that 'problems' of consciousness only arise if you assume that physical things are what ultimately exist, such that consciousness has to be found a home in that picture (a project that is then problematic).
This is already problematic - for if making a particular assumption generates problems that would not have arisen otherwise, then the sensible thing to do is to give up the assumption, not double-down on it!
But anyway, let's make that assumption and try and figure out exactly how this generates a 'problem of consciousness'.
It seems to me that a lot of what is represented to be problematic isn't at all. For example, that consciousness is strange and that we have unique access to our own conscious states. All kinds of state are strange. Shape is nothing like colour. But that in no way implies that such states cannot be states of one and the same thing. Physical things have shape and colour despite those qualities being nothing remotely like each other. Similarly, no matter how peculiar consciousness may be, and no matter how unlike other physical properties, this is no obstacle in itself to it being a state of a physical thing. — Clarendon
Clarendon
Questioner
the arrangement — Clarendon
Clarendon
Questioner
It's painfully simple. — Clarendon
Questioner
that you can't get something for free. — Clarendon
Clarendon
Clarendon
Questioner
Further demonstration that you haven't grasped the point. — Clarendon
Wayfarer
You're giving a historical diagnosis, not raising an objection or highlighting some flaw in the reasoning. — Clarendon
Clarendon
Questioner
Life is only getting shorter. You haven't grasped the point never mind addressed it. So really this isn't worth continuing. — Clarendon
Questioner
Clarendon
Clarendon
Questioner
No, I'm afraid you used up whatever store of good will I may have had for you. Sorry about that. — Clarendon
Wayfarer
I am not arguing that consciousness is puzzling because it is private, first-personal, or resistant to third-person description. I made it abundantly clear in the OP that I consider all of those pseudo problems. — Clarendon
AmadeusD
Are you for real? — Questioner
Review your grade 9 notes about the types of chemical equations. Now multiply that by a thousand and you'll have maybe a smidgeon of the chemistry that goes on in a human brain. — Questioner
You are talking structure, not function — Questioner
God, no. It's chemistry to electrical circuitry. it's on and off switches, and a whole lot of other things. — Questioner
Like where? — Questioner
No, the brain is not mechanical. — Questioner
then, explain to me why I cannot ask a rock how it is feeling? — Questioner
SophistiCat
That is a paradigm example of weak emergence. — Clarendon
Clarendon
Patterner
The property is in all particles, not just those in the human brain.To ascribe a special property to atoms in the human brain, but not in all atoms, flies in the face of rational thinking. — Questioner
Consciousness doesn't mean intelligence or the ability to communicate. Ask a mouse how it is feeling.then, explain to me why I cannot ask a rock how it is feeling? — Questioner
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