Corvus
here's a pretty straightforward description of what happens - — Questioner
Corvus
Where are memories stored in the brain? — Questioner
Where Imagination Lives in Your Brain — Questioner
Patterner
I am diabolical. :grin:even though you tricked me into getting back into the discussion — T Clark
I don't see the many characteristics of life as illusions or epiphenomena. They are real things, and so are you and I. I just don't see a property that we would call life.life may be just an illusion or epiphenomenon,"
This is one way of looking at things, but if we do see it that way, then all of reality is just illusions and epiphenomena. — T Clark
Corvus
The ability to conjure up possible futures or alternative realities is the flip side of memory. Both faculties cohabit in the brain region called the hippocampus — Questioner
Questioner
None of them tells what consciousness is. — Corvus
Do they mean that if you had your friend's brain, you will have his/her memories and imagination? — Corvus
Can you extract the conjured up possible future from the hippocampus, and view it? If it is physical, then it should be possible for you to do so. — Corvus
Corvus
I just asked if that is the case. I didn't claim they are identical. You are not reading the posts accurately.You keep moving the goal posts. At first, you claimed that all brains are identical, and I answered that they are not. Then you claimed that consciousness is something separate from its contents, and I answered that it is not. Now, you claim, we don't know what consciousness is. Upthread, I already mentioned - we all know what it is, since we all have it. — Questioner
You got it back to front. Because you already said the answer is yes, I asked the question. If answer is yes, then logically it implies you will have your friends imagination, memories and self identity and all the mental content of his/hers. I was asking if you would say yes to the inferred case from your resolute answer "yes". It followed from your answer "yes", hence it was not an absurd hypothesis. If you still insist it is absurd hypothesis, then your answer "yes" must have been false and absurd.This is somewhat of an absurd hypothetical. If you are asking whether memories and imagination are specific to one particular brain, then the answer is yes. — Questioner
Many folks here so far agreed to that - consciousness is not physical. Then what is it? That is what we are still trying to figure out.Consciousness is not physical. It is the function of the physical. It is a function of the structure operating in highly complex electrochemistry. — Questioner
Depends on how you define knowledge.Can you hold knowledge in your hand? Same idea — Questioner
AmadeusD
Now, you claim, we don't know what consciousness is. Upthread, I already mentioned - we all know what it is, since we all have it — Questioner
Questioner
Tell us then. — AmadeusD
Corvus
A coordinated set of mental capacities that include awareness, emotions, rationalization, analysis, synthesis and responsiveness — Questioner
Questioner
They are not consciousness. They are just mental states and activities. You can do all those without knowing you are doing them. Consciousness means you are aware of what you are ware of. So it is the perception higher than normal perception. So, it appears that you did not know what consciousness is, but thought you did. — Corvus
Questioner
That's close. — Corvus
Corvus
I gave the feeling that some want to separate consciousness from the person who is experiencing it, and for me that is an impossibility, a non-starter — Questioner
Questioner
Read on Apperception in Kant's terminology, and you might change your views. — Corvus
Corvus
Where I disagree with Kant is in this - — Questioner
Questioner
And it is called the hard problem of consciousness. Hence reading all the neurology books wouldn't tell us what consciousness is. — Corvus
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