Gnomon         
         This sounds similar to my own worldview, except for some of the outdated terminology. "Experience" and "Consciousness" and "Panpsychism" are terms that are normally defined from the human perspective. So I have substituted the less anthro-morphic term "Information" as a reference to the fundamental element of the universe --- by contrast to "occasions of experience". Hence, "Information" is universal in Nature, but "Consciousness" is a limited and late-emerging phenomenon of evolution.Just to clarify, I think consciousness is form of integrated unified experience. I think experience is universal. Mind (a less unified and integrated form of experience) is widespread in nature and “consciousness” is a fairly rare form of mind and experience. I thus fall into the category of panexperientialism or a form of Whiteheadian process philosophy which some classify as a variety of panpsychism. — prothero
Mww         
         if I experience something that you don't, how then do I know it exists (...) Said another way, how does one know if that experience exists if one doesn't experience it himself? — 3017amen
Zelebg         
         There’s no profit in thinking experience is something that exists.
Wayfarer         
         Ontology (from the Greek word "ontos", meaning "being") is the study of being, as in existence, or reality. — Pfhorrest
Mww         
         Mww
There’s no profit in thinking experience is something that exists.
Can you summarize what argument you are having...... — Zelebg
........and what is the point you're making? — Zelebg
Wayfarer         
         The first sentence of Wikipedia on Ontology and the source for that both mention existence as a part of the subject matter. — Pfhorrest
Gnomon         
         Unfortunately, defining "experience" and "existence" has been a subject of debate in philosophy for millennia. Scientists typically try to limit experience to Empirical or A Posteriori Knowledge gained from sensory impressions. But Philosophers and Theologians often include Theoretical or A Priori (tautological) knowledge in their discussions of Consciousness. So, whether there is profit in talking about the ontological "existence" of Experience may depend on your worldview : Materialism or Idealism. Is unproven, but reasonable, Theoretical knowledge a form of non-sensory Experience? Some call Reason the sixth sense.There’s no profit in thinking experience is something that exists. Existence is a condition only of sensible objects, and experience is very far from a sensible object. — Mww
Pfhorrest         
         Look at what it says under 'etymology', footnote 2 — Wayfarer
Zelebg         
         And the point is: Nope, no way...not on even a good day in hell...can a category be used to underwrite a cognition not originated in sensibility.
I’m assuming the comment I was responding to implied that experience has some kind of existence.
We can think whatever we want about “experience”; we just don’t gain anything by saying it exists.
bert1         
         
Zelebg         
         
Zelebg         
         You: Existence of experience is what defines the difference between conscious and unconscious human
Me: Experience is what defines the difference between conscious and unconscious human
Mww         
         Scientists typically try to limit experience to Empirical or A Posteriori Knowledge gained from sensory impressions. But Philosophers and Theologians often include Theoretical or A Priori (tautological) knowledge in their discussions of Consciousness — Gnomon
The confounding problem here is that human beings are capable of acting as-if concepts that exist only in the mind (e.g. fictional characters) are real. — Gnomon
Mww         
         you need to explain what do you assume the word “existence” means by specifying your definition — Zelebg
3017amen         
         
Mww         
         
Zelebg         
         Oh fercrissakes, no I do not. I don’t give a crap how existence should be defined, in order to show the concept “existence” as it is already defined, or at least understood, adds nothing to the conception “experience”, in a synthetic a priori logical judgement.
This represents a long-standing principle of basic epistemological metaphysics, at least since Aristotle.
3017amen         
         Be really cool, though, to get to a similar eco-system, evolved from a similar set of conditions.....and see no evidence of life at all. In which case, I guess we would indeed be special — Mww
Mww         
         
Pantagruel         
         
Zelebg         
         ...how did self-awareness evolve from the universe?
Pantagruel         
         If matter makes the clay that makes the bricks, what consiousness made the matter? — 3017amen
3017amen         
         
Pantagruel         
         Thanks ...but I must have missed something, it doesn't explain how consciousness came from matter ? — 3017amen
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