• Punshhh
    3.4k
    Yes, it’s a crude metaphor, perhaps a society of cells is more appropriate.
  • 180 Proof
    16.4k
    When observing ourselves, we are observing a puppet moving as though it is alive. Its aliveness is sustained by a complex process of actualisation which is hidden from us, unconscious. So we are only viewing an apparently conscious puppet. But because the puppet is a highly real projection, we think it is real, alive and inexplicable, it seems to have a life of its own. We are not aware of what makes it alive, which is behind the scenes, a complex biological machine.Punshhh
    :up: :up:

    Do you know the power of a machine made of a trillion moving parts? ... We're not just robots. We're robots, made of robots, made of robots. ~Daniel Dennett180 Proof
    Organisms are self organizing in a way no machine can be.Wayfarer
    Really? :chin:

    Consider these articles:

    https://wyss.harvard.edu/news/a-self-organizing-thousand-robot-swarm/

    https://direct.mit.edu/books/monograph/4241/Evolutionary-RoboticsThe-Biology-Intelligence-and

    https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/scirobotics.adh4130

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-replicating_machine
  • Punshhh
    3.4k
    The biological machine (society of cells) behind the scenes, is alive and imbues the puppet with sentience.

    I noticed that there were no living cells in the AI/robots in the links. So no consciousness, or sentience.
    Where are the cyborgs and cybernetics?
  • Gnomon
    4.3k
    You're presuming that "real world" human reasoning is somehow beyond duplicating. I don't see any problems at all, because any specific issue you might bring up could be dealt in the design- either in software or hardware.Relativist
    Ha! I don't do a lot of "presuming" about such technical questions, because that is peripheral to my amateur philosophy hobby. But I'm currently reading a book by Federico Faggin*1, who is a credentialed expert in computer-related technology. And he details a variety of "problems" and "specific issues" that could limit software & hardware design from reaching the goal of duplicating human reasoning.

    Faggin seems to be an Idealist, who believes that Consciousness is fundamental, and the human Mind is irreducible to physical processes. Personally, I have a slightly different view of the foundations of human thought. But hey! What do I know? I'm just an untrained amateur philosopher, and he is an experienced computer guru. :smile:


    *1. Irreducible : Consciousness, Life, Computers, and Human Nature is a 2024 book by Federico Faggin, the inventor of the microprocessor, that argues consciousness is a fundamental quantum phenomenon, not an emergent property of complex computation, challenging the idea that humans are just biological machines.
    https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=irreducible+book
  • Esse Quam Videri
    32
    Not an impasse but a misunderstanding.Wayfarer

    Perhaps.

    The point is categorical, not psychological. There is a difference between reflexive awareness and object-awareness. By way of analogy: just as the eye is present in every act of seeing without ever appearing as a seen thing, subjective consciousness is present in every experience without itself appearing as an object of experience.Wayfarer

    Fair enough. I acknowledge that there is a difference between reflexive awareness and object awareness. You are right that the subject is not an object in the sense of being something standing “over-against” the subject.

    But I don’t think that this is enough to establish your conclusion that realism is incoherent. After all, you don’t deny that the subject can be experienced, understood or known. Your claim that there is a categorical distinction between the subject qua object and the subject qua subject doesn’t strictly follow from the fact that the subject is not an empirical object. All that follows is that the subject can epistemically appropriate itself in different ways - as experienced, as understood, as known.

    You could argue that understanding and judgement cannot fully appropriate the subject. There’s always “something more” that hasn’t yet been appropriated. This has already been granted in the transcendental distinction between the in-itself and the for-consciousness as outlined in previous posts. This only implies the unknown, not the unknowable.

    So the realist deals with the “noumenal ground” of subjectivity by understanding it as unknown, not unknowable; indeterminate, not indeterminable; intelligible in potentia, not unintelligible in actu. Inquiry is the process of excavating this intelligibility, not manufacturing it.

    I have argued that this attitude is a normative precondition of inquiry itself. Inquiry would be incoherent if consciousness presupposed that Being was unknowable, indeterminable and unintelligible. To deny this, I would argue, is not mystical profundity, but a retreat from the task and responsibilities of honest inquiry.

    Forms are real in Aristotle’s sense, but their reality is not the reality of an object of perception. Their mode of being is inseparable from intelligibility itself. And if that is the case, how could they 'exist in the world in a mind-independent way'?Wayfarer

    For Aristotle forms exist in substances. Their existence is, in some sense, constitutive of substance. This is what I meant when I said he considered form to be immanent to material substances. For him form is literally inseparable from matter. When form enters the mind it is still bound to the matter of the organism, but in a different mode of existence. In that case the form exists in a way that determines “what” the organism is thinking about or perceiving, rather than in a way that determines “what” the organism is.
  • Mww
    5.4k
    a proper understanding of the empirical depends on a proper understanding of the transcendentalEsse Quam Videri

    …proper understanding of the origin and use of the transcendental. Transcendental is a condition representing the possible determination of the particular iff the general is given.

    That space is a general intuition, is a transcendental proposition; that things have their own spaces, is an empirical one.
  • Gnomon
    4.3k
    How else do we know "what is true"? — Gnomon
    Notice that in the context of science, this is usually limited to a specific question or subject matter, but can also then be expanded to include general theories and hypotheses. Philosophical questions are much more open-ended and often not nearly so specific. That is the subject of another thread, The Predicament of Modernity.
    Wayfarer
    Apparently, disagrees with your definition of Philosophical questioning. He seems to picture himself as a Socratic gadfly, arguing against the Sophists, whose fallacious logic and situational rhetoric was goal-oriented instead of truth-seeking. In my early reading about Philosophy, Socrates was portrayed (by Catholic theologians?) as the good-guy, separating True from False, and the Sophists*1 were bad-guys, preaching relativity & subjectivity. Yet, unlike 180's sneering & disparaging & humiliating trolling-technique, Socrates' philosophical method*3 was dialectical & didactic & persuasive.

    Now, I'm beginning to see that the Sophists' "practical wisdom" may have been anticipating the subjective relativity*2 of Einstein. Today, the notion of absolute Truth is relegated to revealed religions, while pragmatic Science makes-do with Bayesian truths. My own "open-ended" BothAnd philosophy is holistic & complementary & inclusive, instead of a dogmatic Either/Or belief system, which is reductive, binary, & exclusive.

    I guess the Predicament of Modernity is highlighted by the Classical (deterministic) vs Quantum (probabilistic) revolution in worldviews. Transcendent truths are inherently subjective conjectures, not objective observations. So, how does 180 know what is objective capital-T-truth*4, while I have to get by with my little subjective perspective? :cool:


    *1. The Sophists were ancient Greek thinkers who emphasized relativism, believing truth, knowledge, and morality are subjective and depend on human perspective, famously stated by Protagoras' maxim, "Man is the measure of all things". They taught rhetoric as a vital skill for success in politics, focusing on practical wisdom and the power of persuasive speech (logos) to shape reality, often contrasting with Socrates' search for universal, objective truths. Key beliefs included skepticism, conventionalism (laws are human-made), and humanism, seeing humans and their needs at the center of philosophy, not divine mandates.
    https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=sophists

    *2. Einstein's Relativity fundamentally changed philosophy by showing space and time aren't absolute but relative to an observer (Special Relativity) and that gravity is the curvature of spacetime (General Relativity), challenging concepts of universal "now" and introducing a geometric view of the cosmos, influencing epistemology, metaphysics (reality of space/time), and even religion through his idea of a "cosmic religion" based on nature's order.
    https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=einstein+relativity+philosophy

    *3. The Socratic Method is a teaching and discussion technique named after Socrates, using persistent, probing questions to guide individuals toward deeper understanding, uncovering assumptions, identifying contradictions, and fostering critical thinking rather than simply giving answers. It's a dialectical process of dialogue, discovery, and self-examination, moving from what a person knows to complex truths by systematically challenging ideas through carefully planned questions, aiming for clearer, more consistent thought
    https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=socratic+method

    *4. "Capital T Truth" (or Big T Truth) refers to universal, absolute, objective reality or fundamental principles beyond personal belief, contrasting with "little t truths," which are subjective, contextual, or individual perspectives/facts (e.g., "my truth"). Think of it as the ultimate, overarching reality versus specific, smaller truths or experiences, often used in philosophy and religion to discuss transcendent concepts like Beauty, Good, or Truth itself, as opposed to mere factual statements
    https://www.google.com/search?client=firefox-b-1-d&q=capital+t+truth
  • Mww
    5.4k
    I see consciousness as inherently reflexive.Esse Quam Videri

    That’s you talking, not the system in which consciousness is a consequence.

    It can (and manifestly does) use experience, understanding and reason to appropriate itself as experiencer, understander and reasoner.Esse Quam Videri

    If I am the experiencer, understander and reasoner, what am “I” doing while consciousness is, for all intents and purposes, making of itself a copy of me?

    Even if it be allowed to consciousness that it uses, say, understanding, it cannot do so in the approximation of itself as an understander, for it is the understander which stands in consciousness of its thinking, from which follows consciousness, in approximating itself as a thinker, is conscious of itself being conscious of its thoughts, which is absurd.

    If perchance then the same scenario holds for experiencing and reasoning, the whole proposal falls apart.

    Consciousness is a consequence of faculties, having no pretensions of being one.

    Or so it seems……
  • Wayfarer
    25.9k
    I think you’re rather over-dramatising my view. My argument isn’t against realism as such, nor against inquiry into it. It’s against the presumption that reality is exhausted by the objective domain. Scientific realism, insofar as it ‘brackets’ the subject as a methodological step, turns that bracketing into an ontological claim, that all that can be known, can be made subject to scientific analysis. That is precisely where methodological morphs into metaphysical naturalism. My point is that objectivity itself presupposes reflexive awareness, which itself cannot be captured within the scope of objective analysis (‘facing up to the problem of consciousness’). That marks a principled limit, not a failure of inquiry. And I do think an acute sense of the unknowable is not just mysticism, it’s also realism in a different register. Humans are not all-knowing as a matter of principle, not just because of the limitless subject matter of scientific enquiry. Discursive knowledge doesn’t just have limits, it also has limitations.

    I will add, I’m in no way ‘anti-science’ in the sense that a lot of those on both the far left and far right are. I’m fully cognizant of the benefits of science, I’m not an anti-vaxxer or climate change denialist (and I know people who are.) What I’m protesting is viewing philosophical questions through scientific perspectives. An example we’ve been debating is D M Armstrong (‘Materialist Theory of Mind’) who believes that philosophy should be fully integrated with or even subordinated to scientific standards of enquiry. Again this is where Kant is invaluable as he was confronting just these kinds of questions.

    When form enters the mind it is still bound to the matter of the organism, but in a different mode of existenceEsse Quam Videri

    I’m not highly educated in Aristotle and Thomist philosophy, but the way hylomorphic dualism is understood in that philosophy impresses me. That ‘different mode of existence’ is insight into the intelligible domain:

    …if the proper knowledge of the senses is of accidents, through forms that are individualized, the proper knowledge of intellect is of essences, through forms that are universalized. Intellectual knowledge is analogous to sense knowledge inasmuch as it demands the reception of the form of the thing which is known. But it differs from sense knowledge so far forth as it consists in the apprehension of things, not in their individuality, but in their universality. — Thomistic Psychology, A Philosophical Analysis of the Nature of Man, by Robert E. Brennan, O.P., Macmillan Co., 1941.

    The point I want to make is that this was a ‘participatory ontology’. Man was not yet outside nature, the ‘accidental byproduct of the collocation of atoms’ in Russell’s phrase. But I’m not proposing a reactionary critique of modernism. It’s a matter of understanding the tectonic shifts in the meaning of Being that have occurred over this period of history.
  • Esse Quam Videri
    32
    I think you’re rather over-dramatising my view. My argument isn’t against realism as such, nor against inquiry into it. It’s against the presumption that reality is exhausted by the objective domain.Wayfarer

    I apologize if I've read too much into your critique. Hopefully the discussion has proved interesting nonetheless.
  • Wayfarer
    25.9k
    I apologize if I've read too much into your critique. Hopefully the discussion has proved interesting nonetheless.Esse Quam Videri

    Very much so. You're plainly an expert interlocutor, and I value your contributions.
  • Wayfarer
    25.9k
    Really?180 Proof

    Yes, really, 180. All machines, all systems, computers, and devices are allopoeitic, their organising principles are imposed from the outside by those who manufacture and program them. Organisms are autopoeitic, self-organizing. Chalk and cheese. Systems can be made to self-organise in a way analogous to organisms, but, you know, these are not naturally occuring.
  • 180 Proof
    16.4k
    So you didn't read (or understand) the articles on self-organizing machines I provided in my previous post ...
  • Wayfarer
    25.9k
    I scanned them. But they're artifacts, they're built by human designers, to emulate aspects of biology. Surely even you can spot the difference between that, and naturally-occuring organisms? Or does it suit you to try and obfuscate it? Maybe something you don't want to know?

    "This self-organizing swarm was created in the lab of Radhika Nagpal...."

    If you want to press a point, helps first to understand what point that is.
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