Well if applied to antinatalism.. — schopenhauer1
you’ve said it’s not tenable because the majority will simply stampede over it with their preferences and thus can’t be a true ethical theory. — schopenhauer1
1. What is the main point between the physical laws and control constraints? When do the local constraints get in the ontological ecosystem? He mentions them as if they are already existent along with the physical laws (or at least how I interpreted it). How do the local constraints come into the picture if all were originally physical laws? — schopenhauer1
2. What is the emergent property of protein (what he calls enzyme) folding? I know he talks about strong and weak bonds, but that didn't seem to answer the question. — schopenhauer1
3. I guess what is the main point regarding biosemiotics in regards to experience? — schopenhauer1
So some constraints are global. And other constraints can then be local. Where's the problem?
The Cosmos has its universal constraints on action or uncertainty. Physical systems, like stars or rocks or waterfalls, then express more local or particular constraints. And then organisms can even construct their own local and particular constraints via the symbol~matter deal of biosemiosis. — apokrisis
Your question doesn't make sense. — apokrisis
He seems to make a stark dichotomy between "physical laws" and "local constraints". So were local constraints always in the picture in his view or were they created by the physical laws? — schopenhauer1
Presumably, emergent theories claim that new properties are created from the processes of a lower order and cannot be reduced. I don't really see that problem with proteins per se. — schopenhauer1
So what was the interpretive context the protein was already situated in? — schopenhauer1
So the earliest biological structure would have been merely a switch pointing a way in indexical fashion. The interpretive context would be of the most minimal possible kind.
But then what else would you expect right at the beginning? — apokrisis
How is this story analogous to the first internal state (i.e mental state)? — schopenhauer1
Ok, then replace state with experience or process. — schopenhauer1
Life and mind are levels of the same trick. One level involves the machinery of genes. The other, neurons and even words. — apokrisis
Saying, "Wouldn't processes feel like something" — schopenhauer1
And why wouldn’t the kind of world and self modelling that brains do, not feel like something rather than nothing?
You’ve never said despite being asked many times now. — apokrisis
What are you defining as self-modelling then — schopenhauer1
Again that wouldn't be an explanation, just a synonym, an infinite regress)? — schopenhauer1
An umwelt is a model of the world with a self in it. — apokrisis
So it is a way to understand why experience appears to be imbued with selfhood and thus avoid the usual dualistic and homuncular regress of a self that witnesses its own perceptions in some Cartesian theatre. Selfhood is built into the "picture" from the beginning. — apokrisis
Again, can you now answer my question instead of continuously deflecting. Why wouldn’t the kind of unwelt modelling that brains do, not feel like something rather than nothing? — apokrisis
What does that mean? "Self in it"? That makes no sense outside of already experiencing selfhood. — schopenhauer1
Because of precisely what I am inquiring above.. — schopenhauer1
I've explained these things 1000 times. Look up umwelt. Look up proprioception. Look up enactive perception. If you want to discuss these issues, you need to educate yourself on them. — apokrisis
You are just deflecting. If you were serious about wanting to know, you would have learnt enough about how the brain works not to be wasting my time with your Cartesianism. — apokrisis
Neurons and sensory tissues that react to stimuli are behaviors the "what it feels like" are the experiences. — schopenhauer1
sign relation just is the experience, the 'feeling-like-something' — Janus
Sure we can wade through literature on all sorts of neurobiological concepts.. doesn't get me closer to what experiential process is. — schopenhauer1
The problem is, you don't even know the problem. — schopenhauer1
Defeatist. — apokrisis
Sure I do. You keep running from the question of why all that umwelt-style modelling wouldn't feel like something. — apokrisis
Well an interpretation would be a response which is not merely mechanical, wouldn't it? — Janus
Isn't that the kind of definition which makes sense of the difference between human and computer responses? — Janus
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