neutral monist — thewonder
That'd take a radical reconceptualization of the concept of information. — thewonder
I disagree. I see neutral monism as a rejection of the distinction between the physical and the mental. — thewonder
It's possible you're not understanding it.Kinda like going "hibbidy-jibbidy woo" and waving a wand then saying, "There--that solves all of the problems of philosophy of mind, doesn't it?" — Terrapin Station
Neutral monism is a monistic metaphysics. It holds that ultimate reality is all of one kind. To this extent neutral monism is in agreement with the more familiar versions of monism: idealism and materialism. What distinguishes neutral monism from its monistic rivals is the claim that the intrinsic nature of ultimate reality is neither mental nor physical. This negative claim also captures the idea of neutrality: being intrinsically neither mental nor physical in nature ultimate reality is said to be neutral between the two. — SEP
William James’s (1842–1910) uses the term “radical empiricism” for the view he sets forth in James 1912—the view that has become the paradigm of neutral monism. His critique of the relational account of experience—according to which the self directs an act onto an object—was the model upon which Russell later shaped his analysis of experience. James presents this argument as an attack on a particular conception of consciousness. He finds it in the Neo-Kantian tradition and in the early analytic tradition. And today we can find it in philosophies as diverse as existentialism and philosophical naturalism. Roughly, it is the notion of consciousness as a diaphanous, transparent, elusive medium or container of some sort in which the objects of consciousness appear. The objects that are, in this sense, “in” consciousness simply present themselves to us. But the consciousness that makes this kind of object presentation possible eludes our grasp. This thin notion of consciousness is the one James wants to eliminate:
I believe that ‘consciousness,’ when once it has evaporated to this estate of pure diaphaneity, is on the point of disappearing altogether. It is the name of a nonentity, and has no right to a place among first principles. Those who still cling to it are clinging to a mere echo, the faint rumor left behind by the disappearing ‘soul’ upon the air of philosophy. (James 1904b: 2)
His radical proposal is to simply discard this shadowy something and to make do with what remains, with what used to be the object of the conscious act. He introduces the term “pure experience” to stand for this datum. Prior to any further categorization, pure experience is, according to James, neutral—neither mental nor physical:
The instant field of the present is at all times what I call the ‘pure’ experience. It is only virtually or potentially either object or subject as yet. For the time being, it is plain, unqualified actuality, or existence, a simple that. (James 1904b: 23)
Mind and matter, knower and known, thought and thing, representation and represented are then interpreted as resulting from different functional groupings of pure experience (see James 1905: 64). — SEP
That's kind of what I figured, though I wouldn't say that energy is equivalent to mass. Matter, perhaps. — thewonder
It's possible you're not understanding it. — Wayfarer
nothing there about mind, however. — Wayfarer
Mass is like the whatever being manifest into a measurable something. Energy, I feel like differs too much from what we understand as mass to be considered to be equivalent to it. Einstein's theory is relevant to Physics, but not necessarily my speculative Metaphysics. — thewonder
'Energy' is currently an unfathomable force. We don't yet know enough about particles to adequately understand energy. All that I can describe energy as is a force of some kind. I have realized by doing this that I don't at all know what energy is. — thewonder
reject that anything other than the present exists. It all collapses upon the wave function in every given moment. There is only the moment, though. — thewonder
s "neutral" even the correct term? I don't know how you would say either/neither/or/nor. — thewonder
Personally I've never been able to make much sense out of what it's supposed to be positing, exactly. It's always rather struck me as one not wanting to be a dualist, while also not wanting to assert either physicalism or idealism, so one just posits some hand-waving "something or other" that's somehow neither mental or physical, but somehow constitutes both. Kinda like going "hibbidy-jibbidy woo" and waving a wand then saying, "There--that solves all of the problems of philosophy of mind, doesn't it?"
Basically it seems like extremely vague fence-sitting/trying to please/not offend anyone. — Terrapin Station
How is asserting that everything is either "physical" or "mental" not just hand-waving themselves? What does it mean to say that something is "physical" or "mental"? What are the differences between "physical" and "mental" things, and then how do they interact? — Harry Hindu
I rather like the idea of surrounding consciousness to show that it comes from the brain (stopped by faints, blows to the head, anesthesia) and thus is a brain process, which tells us that the brain makes it, the brain having evolved consciousness as a way of perceiving its own results to best symbolically via qualia to both remember it for far off future reference and also for an immediate reference/broadcast for more areas of the brain to get notified and continue on with it, this startling (to us) unique internal language being what works for higher and higher brain modules more and more utilizing symbols. I suppose this is materialism. — PoeticUniverse
Saying that everything is physical is saying that everything has properties like location and extension, that things are comprised of particles which are in dynamic relations with each other, etc. etc. — Terrapin Station
What would be the particles of the mind? — Harry Hindu
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