Corvus
I'm glad you picked up on what I was trying to tell you about your comment. It's just nonsense. — L'éléphant
SolarWind
The OP is very vague, and nobody seems understand what it is trying to say. — Corvus
Corvus
Fair enough solar. I haven't read any of your posts before, but maybe you have written something on the topic? Not sure. But if you do follow the OP, good on you. When you read the others posts, they sound all cloud catching.I have been following the discussion for some time now and I have no problem whatsoever understanding the OP. — SolarWind
They talk about "hard problem" must exist. But it only exists, because they think consciousness as some sort of physical entity, or something that emerged from brain, which is not very meaningful.Why don't we just use the terms 'easy consciousness' and 'hard consciousness'? Easy consciousness could be explained by physicalism in the distant future without having to explain hard consciousness. — SolarWind
Corvus
Easy consciousness could be explained by physicalism in the distant future without having to explain hard consciousness. — SolarWind
Questioner
is that you can't get out what you don't put in. — Clarendon
by combining — Clarendon
as our brains are made out of atoms, then either atoms have consciousness (or are disposed to) or brains simply can't have consciousness. — Clarendon
SolarWind
To say that atoms must be conscious in accounting for human consciousness is like saying atoms must be able to move because muscles can. — Questioner
Patterner
The difference is that movement is a physically observable, measurable, and explainable thing. We can watch someone's muscle move. We can measure how far and fast it moved, and in which direction. We can discuss the events within the nerves, such as ions crossing membranes, that cause the muscles to contact.To say that atoms must be conscious in accounting for human consciousness is like saying atoms must be able to move because muscles can. — Questioner
Questioner
We cannot discuss anything physical in regards to consciousness. — Patterner
Patterner
Apologies. I'm beyond swamped at work and with my 89 year old father's many needs. I participate as time allows. I'll read your post again.I notice you both take issue with my other example, but offer nothing against my main point. — Questioner
Corvus
Questioner
Science tries to explain how information is processed in what path of the neurons conjunction to which part of brain, when they claim to be explaining consciousness. — Corvus
It does not touch anything about what consciousness is. — Corvus
Corvus
More or less the same thing, but more accurate word is "explaining".I don't think it is so much "explaining" as finding the structural source for it. — Questioner
It really doesn't say much. No one is denying brain is connected to consciousness. But consciousness is not brain or neurons. It is not atoms or particles.Since we all have it, we know what consciousness is. The role of science is to try to link consciousness - the function - with the structure - the brain. — Questioner
Questioner
But consciousness is not brain or neurons. It is not atoms or particles. — Corvus
It needs personal history, emotions, thoughts and reasoning and imagination as well as linguistic abilities which are backed by past memories of living individual. — Corvus
Corvus
Yes, I said no one is denying that. But they are not consciousness.No, atoms, molecules, neurons, brain - that is structure. But when engaged in its highly complex function - that produces consciousness. A brain has to be working to produce awareness. — Questioner
It does. But it needs good education and philosophical training for maximum performance. :grin:And doesn't that just make the brain all the more the marvel of human evolution? — Questioner
Questioner
But it needs good education and philosophical training — Corvus
Patterner
All true. But, if I read you right, you are saying that, if you add enough physical things and processes, you will get something non-physical. The point some of us are making is that that is not an obvious chain of logic, and there's no evidence to support it. How that happens needs to be explained.With respect to consciousness, to say “you can’t get out what you don’t put in” neglects the highly complex electrochemical functioning of the human brain. To reduce this function to “atoms combining” is to not take into account that the human brain is comprised of around 86 billion highly specialized neurons, one with up to thousands of connections to others, performing highly synchronized and regulated electrochemical processes, involving highly complex molecules. Brain waves arise from the overall co-ordination of this vast functioning in neuronal networks between specialized brain regions. — Questioner
Questioner
How that happens needs to be explained. — Patterner
AmadeusD
Science is working on it! But to come up with the answer that, "atoms must be conscious" is an absurd conclusion to make. — Questioner
Brain waves arise from the overall co-ordination of this vast functioning in neuronal networks between specialized brain regions. — Questioner
Questioner
400,000 non-mammals combining together wont make a mammal.
65 non-sugar crystals wont make a dissacharide carbohydrate
100 white people wont make a black person
3,545,654,646 thoughts don't make an object. — AmadeusD
AmadeusD
Questioner
what about, the human mind makes it so special that standard logic doesn't apply? — AmadeusD
AmadeusD
Questioner
mere electrocchemistry. — AmadeusD
AmadeusD
I wondering what it is about the human mind/consciouness (hint: not the brain) that leads you jettison that avenue(general logical principles) when assessing the question? — AmadeusD
Questioner
You seem to be saying that the human mind is so special that we can't apply general logical principles.
I wondering what it is about the human mind/consciouness (hint: not the brain) that leads you jettison that avenue when assessing the question? — AmadeusD
AmadeusD
It is involved in a highly complex chemistry - I would say the most complex chemistry that exists on this planet. — Questioner
Questioner
an emotional position. — AmadeusD
A complex is a combination. — AmadeusD
The human brain literally combines different atoms into microstructures, microstructures into brain areas and brain areas into hemispheres. — AmadeusD
It's all combination — AmadeusD
it's just perhaps counter to your preferred way of thinking about the mind. — AmadeusD
The complex neurochemistry of the brain is not different from complex neurochemistry everywhere else — AmadeusD
Is the suggestion that a certain level of complexity in a system magically generates a novel attribute? — AmadeusD
But your position seems to me magical thinking rather than some kind of mechanical explanation. — AmadeusD
Clarendon
Emergence is a slippery term, but no one would call this any kind of emergence:
Combining objects of different weights will result in a whole that weighs more than any of its parts. The weight is said to be weakly emergent.
— Clarendon — SophistiCat
Clarendon
Questioner
Complexity does not create new kinds of property. It only reorganises existing ones — Clarendon
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