I think that anxiety, at least of the sort that someone might need treatment for, is a brain chemistry/brain function issue — Terrapin Station
How you feel is always a factor of how your brain is functioning.
No one is saying that the environment doesn't have an impact on that, but that doesn't change the fact that how you feel is always a factor of how your brain is functioning. — Terrapin Station
what's obvious about assuming that one part of what you can see with your eyes is the source of everything you feel? — leo
we have tons of data from neuroscience (both modern and historical, when it wasnt called neuroscience) of how third-person observations of brain states affect first-person reports of consciousness. — Terrapin Station
There is some correlation between observed electrical activity in the brain and what someone experiences, but that does not imply that all you feel stems from observable brain activity, — leo
Absence of evidence is not evidence of absence. — leo
Also, if the brain is made solely of particles as described in the current laws of physics, it is impossible for these particles to give rise to any conscious experience, — leo
Yes it is.
The way that you tell that there's no elephant in the room you're in at the moment, for example, is by looking for an elephant. If you don't see one--absence of evidence of an elephant, then that's evidence that there's no elephant in your room. — Terrapin Station
That's a sentence you could write. A completely arbitrary sentence. — Terrapin Station
No it's not, all it implies is you don't see an elephant. — leo
when we hadn't observed Neptune there was evidence it didn't exist. — leo
Look up the hard problem of consciousness — leo
Fundamentally I'm just saying that we are more than our physical body, more than our brain, we don't see the "more" with our eyes but it's there. And then even if we find correlations between the brain we see and what we feel, that doesn't imply that the brain is the cause of what we feel, nor that what we feel cannot exist without the brain. — leo
What I was getting at is that you'd need an argument that doesn't exist as far as I know to support "it is impossible for these particles to give rise to any conscious experience," — Terrapin Station
P2. Elementary particles only have the ability to move each other — leo
The argument would have to not be incredibly poor, as that premise is. — Terrapin Station
These properties have no ability — leo
Properties aren't the same thing as abilities. So listing abilities doesn't exhaust property-talk. — Terrapin Station
When particles are in relations with other particles, so that they form atoms, molecules, etc. all the way up to things like shoes, ships, sealing wax, cabbages, etc. they have a lot of other properties than just mass, charge, etc., don't they? — Terrapin Station
No, the particles keep moving as described, what changes is what we perceive and what we interact with. The emergent properties are to be found within our experience rather than in the particles themselves. — leo
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