You make this statement while saying there is no Problem. Here's the Problem .. Given:The hard problem introduce a new additional problem that in my view does not exist. When Red-Neurons are firing in X, the conscious experience of Red happen in X (X experiences a qualia). — Belter
How does 2 happen when 1 happens? — SteveKlinko
I guess we will have to disagree on the Hard Problem. I have given it my best shot and have obviously failed to convince you.It is in my view, the question is bad formulated. It is a scientific question the "how" the knife cuts the onion: it simply "cuts" it, separating it in different parts. If you want continue asking when you assume that 2 happens by 1 you only will obtain biological details: "How people think with the brain?" is responded "By circuits, cores, modules, for the different competences, faculties etc.". But even when we have not still an advanced theory of mind (neuroscience is very young) it does not mean that it is another problem that a psychological one. — Belter
So, if you attach a camera to your PC, the PC has qualia? Do you really think so? — tom
I have given it my best shot and have obviously failed to convince you. — SteveKlinko
But you never see the actual Physical Red object even when you are looking right at it. You are always only Seeing the Mental, or Conscious, Surrogate of the Physical Red object. The Redness of the Red exists only in the Conscious World, or as I like to say it exists only in Conscious Space.We can not know a priori if X is a physical red object or a mental red one. — Belter
Fish, lizards and robots all use some kind of "brain", in the sense of a material system for thinking. Mind happens without some form of brain is for my not conceivable. — Belter
This is a strange question - does it really make sense to suppose that we think with our brains?"How people think with the brain?"
Or perhaps I could think with someone else's brain, and not my own? — MetaphysicsNow
The terms "instrumentalism", "functionalism", "pragmatism" mean different things in different contexts and in some contexts are not even compatible with each other. — MetaphysicsNow
1) Mental states and occurences are defined by their functional roles.
2) The functional roles so defined are filled by states of and occurences in the brain (well, let's be honest, you'll need more than just a brain to fill some of these functional roles, the rest of the body will probably have to get a look-in).
3)Therefore, mental states and occurences are brain (bodily) states and occurences. — MetaphysicsNow
I think that mental states are not defined by their functional roles, but brain states.
I'm sorry, but I'm having difficulties with the way you are expressing yourself.Since I do not endorse that mental states have not a function
I'm not sure what you mean by "fit" here - do you mean "are", do you mean "are caused by" or something else entirely?I want to say that mental states fit brain functions
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