How can the hypothesis be falsified? — HuggetZukker
Especially since Science won't let Scientists investigate Consciousness. Any and all thoughts are still on the table.How can the hypothesis be falsified? — HuggetZukker
Not all hypotheses can. This is upsetting for scientists, but philosophers can continue applying their considered thought in such a case. Only scientists must grind to a halt. And surely no-one would be rash enough to attempt to investigate consciousness using science? — Pattern-chaser
I think you knew in which way I meant the word, so let's move on. — HuggetZukker
If we can be aware of some intelligibility that does not require neural encoding to make itself present, then there is no reason why awareness cannot continue after the brain ceases to function. After reading W. T. Stace, Mysticism and Philosophy, I am convinced that we can be aware of such intelligibility. — Dfpolis
Can you clarify what you believe about such knowledge, which does not require "neural encoding?" — HuggetZukker
For introvertive experiences, points 1 and 2 become:1. The unifying vision, expressed abstractly by the formula “All is One.” The One is, in extrovertive mysticism, perceived through the physical senses, in or through the multiplicity of objects.
2. The more concrete apprehension of the One as being an inner subjectivity in all things, described variously as life, consciousness, or a living Presence. The discovery that nothing is “really” dead.
3. Sense of objectivity or reality.
4. Feeling of blessedness, joy, happiness, satisfaction, etc.
5. Feeling that what is apprehended is holy, or sacred, or divine. This is the quality which gives rise to the interpretation of the experience as being an experience of “God.” It is the specifically religious element in the experience. It is closely intertwined with, but not identical with, the previously listed characteristic of blessedness and joy.
6. Paradoxicality.
Another characteristic may be mentioned with reservations, namely,
7. Alleged by mystics to be ineffable, incapable of being described in words, etc. — Stace, Mysticism and Philosophy, p. 79
1. The Unitary Consciousness; the One, the Void; pure consciousness.
2. Nonspatial, nontemporal. — Stace, Mysticism and Philosophy, p. 131
Now it happens to be the case that this total suppression of the whole empirical content of consciousness is precisely what the introvertive mystic claims to achieve. And he claims that what happens is not that all consciousness disappears but that only the ordinary sensory-intellectual consciousness disappears and is replaced by an entirely new kind of consciousness, the mystical consciousness. — Stace, The Teachings of the Mysitcs, p. 18
Do you believe that it might require "encoding" in a way, which cannot be described as "neural"? — HuggetZukker
can you offer an example, even a hypothetical one, of a relation between such knowledge after the cessation of brain function, and something else? — HuggetZukker
I'm not asking anyone to give credence to the thought experiment. — HuggetZukker
But you have not convinced me that the physicalist approach is inadequate. You may say that awareness transforms information from being latent in the physical world into being active in logical order, but "logical order" needs not be founded in a non-physical realm. "Logical order" may well be abstract, but so is the internet, yet has no operational existence independantly of running servers. — HuggetZukker
"logical order" needs not be founded in a non-physical realm — HuggetZukker
I am not averse to some forms of panpsychism. Integrated Information Theory (IIT) shows how consciousness higher than protoconsciousness might emerge. IIT is a panpsychist (or maybe panprotopsychist?) theory, and I'm not averse to it. It could well have the answer, but I'm not decided on the matter. — HuggetZukker
Your thoughts? Let me hear about arguments to be had over the metaphysical significance. — HuggetZukker
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