Why would you believe that? What led to that belief for you, in other words?
Also, do you believe that that's the standard view in physics, for example, since you were appealing to that earlier? — Terrapin Station
The standard view in physics is that for instance quarks move each other in a way that with rough instruments make us detect them as single particles such as protons and neutrons, that protons, neutrons and electrons move each other in such a way that with even rougher instruments we detect them as atoms, then with even rougher instruments as molecules, and so on. The standard view in physics surely doesn't say that an atom is anything more than the elementary particles it is made of, that a ship is anything more than the elementary particles it is made of, that a brain is anything more than the elementary particles it is made of. — leo
If only, in my opinion, that answered either question I asked you. — Terrapin Station
That answers both with some effort. The standard view in physics is based on the two premises I stated earlier. These premises cannot possibly account for conscious experience. Yet somehow physicists believe that in principle they could explain consciousness as arising from these particles, but based on these two premises that is impossible.
So "The emergent properties are to be found within our experience rather than in the particles themselves" is my view, based on the fact that particles as described by the two premises are incompatible with conscious experience. — leo
Okay, so let's take a rock. A rock is going to have a particular shape, size/extension, tendency to crumble or not (cohesion, brittleness, etc.), density, patterns where it might have lines/striations or "dots" of different minerals--all sort of properties, those are just a few as an example.
You don't believe that those properties are "of" the rock itself. You believe that those properties are only in our minds.
So, I'm asking you:
(1) how you came to believe that those properties are not of the rock itself, and
(2) whether you believe that the idea that those properties are not of the rock itself is the standard view of physics (and geology, etc.) — Terrapin Station
Regarding (2), as I described in the 3rd and 4th paragraph in my last message, I believe that fundamental physics holds the view that the behavior of a rock is completely described by the motions of the elementary particles that compose it and its environment, and as such that in principle all the properties of the rock could be derived from taking into account the motions of all these particles. — leo
That's fine.. But what I'm asking you is if you think the standard view there is that those properties obtain via interaction of mind and the object.
Whatever physics thinks those properties amount to, exactly, it posits that there are such properties. Either it thinks that those properties are the result of minds and objects interacting or it does not. — Terrapin Station
That follows directly from my last message, — leo
The standard view doesn't talk about the mind, yet the mind is involved in the act of observation. The color and shape and behavior of the rock are seen as properties of the rock, yet it is the act of observing the rock that leads us to these properties, someone who is blind would have no notion of the color of the rock, someone who has no sense of sight or hearing or sound would have no notion of the shape or patterns of the rock.
If we were all blind, we wouldn't come up with a notion of color. If you assume that color is a property of the rock, then why wouldn't we ascribe it this property if we were blind? Because we are not able to see it? But then that depends on us and our mind, not on the rock.
That's one example of observation that leads me to see that we are the ones who ascribe properties to things, based on what we are able to experience, what our mind is able to experience. That the properties we ascribe to things depends on our minds. — leo
without presupposing the existence of the mind we cannot possibly derive consciousness from a world devoid of consciousness, — leo
All properties are given through consciousness — leo
We're so used to using physics to explain what we see, that we forget that we also need to explain why we see in the first place, if we want to claim to explain everything. — leo
In fact, these elementary particles that make up everything according to the standard view, they exist in our imagination, in our mind. — leo
Jesus I'm getting sick of that nonsense here. Why is this place infested with idealists? — Terrapin Station
Why the hate? Do you see elementary particles with your eyes? — leo
When we feel anxiety we are on a path of fear that can lead to much greater evils. We may feel anxiety at first. Then we may try to control the fear by doing things and acting in ways that cause frustration when events don’t happen the way we thought we wanted. Then we might get angry or depressed. Anger at others or the world can lead to hate. Depression can lead to hating oneself. Hate leads to all kinds of evil acts. — Son of a Bitch
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