I think the point is that when it comes to the question " what is the feeling-like-something ontologically speaking" that the sign relation is where it "bottoms out". What more could we hope to say without positing some additional mental substance; which would be to return to substance dualism? — Janus
Mechanical response is conceived as being exhaustively causally determined. In an interpretative response there must be some agential freedom; you could respond in any of some variety of ways. — Janus
No, it just doesn't make sense how behavior can have an internalness. — schopenhauer1
If an entity could respond in different ways to the same stimulus, what other than some self-regulative "internalness" could give rise to that possibility? — Janus
It is not the behaviour that has "internalness" here. It is the modelling. So again, stop deflecting and focus on the question as it was asked of you. Discover for yourself that you really don't have any concrete reason to deny an "internalness" to a modelling relation between the brain and the world. You might in fact realise that the semiotic story is all about the organismic construction of an "internal and meaningful point-of-view". — apokrisis
I don't know but, that is definitely a sort of panpsychism that apokrisis would deny. I think I've seen that posited by some philosophers though. — schopenhauer1
We know there is internalness, but it is not obvious from the substrates themselves.. and modelling is a process.. — schopenhauer1
but where is this process space occurring? — schopenhauer1
I don't see your way out of the bind. — schopenhauer1
Experience can be understood as en embodied physical process if you don't have an eliminative or mechanically reductive notion of the physical, thus obviating the need to posit a separate mental substance. — Janus
What has physical space got to do with it? The model is about an organism in a world. So it is an abstraction as far as that physical space is concerned.
Then I should hardly need to point out that your talk about "physical space" is itself a modelling interpretation. So you are simply doubling down on the epistemological missteps. — apokrisis
This is why Whitehead's philosophy is spoken of as a 'pan-experientialism', rather than as a 'pan-psychism'. Experience can be understood as en embodied physical process if you don't have an eliminative or mechanically reductive notion of the physical, thus obviating the need to posit a separate mental substance. — Janus
No, I don't mean "physical space" in this case. What I meant is more abstract.. If all this physical stuff is happening.. "where" is this modelling happening? — schopenhauer1
The "experience" of electrons or photons becomes a hollow term which explains nothing and instead diverts attention from the actual holism and contextuality which is the metaphysical issue for fundamental physics. — apokrisis
Unless there is some already-there interpreter (first person point of view) this concrescence of behavior has to cohere and “do” its internal thing. — schopenhauer1
But despite that kind of ultimate barrier, we can then model the world pretty effectively. — apokrisis
And then that can take us down all the way to where quantum physics is again throwing up the same essential question about how physical reality itself could have intelligible form. — apokrisis
So the Peircean approach makes a concrete proposal that starts in an uncontroversial way with how language and logic work to structure human awareness of reality. — apokrisis
I think you are too dismissive of Whitehead and mischaracterize him as a 'panpsychist' as I've already explained. — Janus
...would you say that interpretance is operating at the quantum scale? If you would say that then would there not also be in your own terms an 'internalness", which could be characterized as a kind of proto-experience compared with our idea of human experience, just as the interpretance would be classed as a proto-interpretance compared to our notions of human interpretance? — Janus
So what is a first person point of view in your metaphysical scheme? Give us a useful definition that excludes interpretance as something models do. Let's see you shake that dualism one more time, tell us how the mind is some kind of unphysical thing rather than some kind of natural process. — apokrisis
So what is a first person point of view in your metaphysical scheme? — apokrisis
I don't see how he gets beyond being a panpsychist. If experiencing is a process, then what is its structure exactly? Where is the precise theoretical description of that? If you understand Whitehead, help by explaining how it works in some causal sense. — apokrisis
You might be disappointed if you expect a "precise theoretical description" from Whitehead. — Janus
The basis of experience is emotional. Stated more generally, the basic fact is the rise of an affective tone originating from things whose relevance is given. — Whitehead
That is why I don’t take him seriously. A theory of anything must have crisp counterfactual structure. It must impose a measurable definiteness on the world. — apokrisis
Just because a theory puts itself beyond been proved wrong does not mean it is then true. It means it is not even actually a theory. It is a claim that is not even wrong - the most damning of possibilities. — apokrisis
While I agree that this must be true of empirical theories; I don't think it is necessarily true of metaphysical theories. That would be like saying that poetry must have a crisp counterfactual structure — Janus
When we ask, did the universe come from nothing?, I have to wonder if we aren't confusing words. Precisely, nothing cannot be positively defined, for otherwise it would be something. The "nothing" is the primal Being, the darkness surrounding the light. — darthbarracuda
I prefer to think of metaphysical speculations not as theories at all, but as invitations to look at things in new and different ways. — Janus
The clinching evidence is that feelings are cognitive. Their organisation is dichotomous and hence counterfactually structured. — apokrisis
So rather than going on about the solitary splendours of poetry, just tell me how Whitehead counts as a proper metaphysical theory. — apokrisis
You don’t want to say Whitehead is just poetry do you? — apokrisis
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