bahman         
         
Michael         
         Materialism is a system of belief which emphasizes that physical process can explain all phenomena in the world. Consciousness therefore is an epiphenomenon within materialism since it is not a physical process but outcome of a physical process. We however know that consciousness is necessary for learning (please read the following article). This means that consciousness is causally efficacious. Therefore materialism is not correct. — bahman
bahman         
         If consciousness is causally efficacious then epiphenomenalism isn't correct. Materialism doesn't depend on epiphenomenalism. In fact, materialism probably excludes epiphenomenalism. — Michael
Rich         
         Materialism doesn't lead to epiphenomalism. — Michael
Michael         
         The only way around this problem for materialists is by declaring consciousness some sort of illusion — Rich
Rich         
         Why? Can't they say that consciousness is real, just physical in nature? — Michael
Michael         
         Most people think of physical as something that can be causal in some manner. I would be delighted if biologists (specifically) admitted that consciousness causes things - such as evolution. That would be wonderful. — Rich
MindForged         
         
celebritydiscodave         
         
Rich         
         A "state" in this case can be understood as the way the world is, — MindForged
Rich         
         material mind. — celebritydiscodave
MindForged         
         
Rich         
         A state isn't an object, it cannot be physical. If one equates brain states with consciousness, one is not saying a "state" is a physical thing nor does it entail your favorite quantum woo. — MindForged
mcdoodle         
         We however know that consciousness is necessary for learning (please read the following article). This means that consciousness is causally efficacious. Therefore materialism is not correct. — bahman
Rich         
         There's a bunch of physical matter in a particular state, i.e. arranged in a particular way and behaving a certain way. That's perfectly consistent with materialism. — Michael
bahman         
         Personally I'm not a 'materialist'. But the article you quote can be easily accommodated within a materialist/physicalist account. Either 'conscious awareness' is itself physiologically based, or it supervenes on the physical here. — mcdoodle
Michael         
         Gosh, this is like a slippery eel.
WHAT IS MIND?
Please take a deep breath and instead of taking all sides to all things, figure out what you are trying to say and then say it. — Rich
Rich         
         I know what I'm trying to say. The materialist may argue that consciousness is identical to a particular arrangement and behaviour of matter (e.g. the brain and its activity). You seem to have some issue with the term "state" and are saying something about states not being physical. This doesn't make any sense to me, and I'm asking you to clarify it. — Michael
Michael         
         What I am arguing is that consciousness has a causal effect on state of affair therefore materialism, given the definition in OP, is not correct. — bahman
Under materialism, consciousness cannot have any causal effect on the state of affair since the state of affair is defined in term of physical process.
Michael         
         We have a bit of a problem if trying to explain the theory of how consciousness materializes out of a "state" that is continuously changing persistent". Magic? It just happens? The "Thermodynamic Imperative". Or is it just dogma? — Rich
Rich         
         The materialist will say that consciousness is those brain waves. — Michael
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