In order to have complete knowledge of your own consciousness you have to be able to observe yourself being conscious. How can you observe/perceive yourself?
Last time I checked, Magritte wasn't in the business of making memes. That's a painting called "The Treachery of Images", not something whipped up by some schoolkid. Foucault wrote a book about it btw.The this is not a pipe meme shows that images/models/reflections/pixels are not the actual thing:
We need to understand the brain better, but the mind which the brain contains... leave it alone. — Bitter Crank
In order to have complete knowledge of your own consciousness you have to be able to observe yourself being conscious. — Purple Pond
So let's say that science has advanced so far that they can show detailed brain scans of a you when you are conscious. All they are showing you are images/models/brain-scans of you being conscious not the actual consciousness. The conscious you is beyond the capabilities of science by the very limits of observation. — Purple Pond
In order to have complete knowledge of your own consciousness you have to be able to observe yourself being conscious. How can you observe/perceive yourself? Perception is outward, from the subject to object. That is to say form subject to another object. .....The conscious you is beyond the capabilities of science by the very limits of observation. — Purple Pond
Consciousness isn't a unity. — TheMadFool
If I relay that idea to your eyes, can I trust them to pass it on to your brain? — Wayfarer
It does seem that consciousness, at least the stuff that's happening in it, is like jigsaw pieces fitting together - a unity of experience if I may say so. We understand each other, for the most part, and that again indicates a unity in shared experience. The mind fits, or at least tries to, the pieces of the puzzle together and unifies experience. — TheMadFool
Gould goes on to discuss the idea of the mental modularity - how our minds are made up of numerous capabilities and properties that are tied up into an integral whole. — T Clark
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