What I'm saying is that those terms are meaningless, it's 'neuro-babble' which appears to connote something scientific but in reality says nothing. — Wayfarer
Love, hope, etc. are physical things on my view--they're terms for particular brain states and particular behaviors/behavioral dispositions that accompany those brain states. — Terrapin Station
The Churchlands maintains that a future, fully matured neuroscience is likely to have no need for beliefs. In other words, they hold that beliefs are not ontologically real. Such concepts will not merely be reduced to more finely grained explanation and retained as useful proximate levels of description, but will be strictly eliminated as wholly lacking in correspondence to precise objective phenomena, such as activation patterns across neural networks.
When you say 'objective' what do you mean? Are geometry, physics, and the other sciences all strictly objective, or are they also subjective. Or when you say objective do you mean 'real' as existing in the world outside of us, separate from us as things? — Cavacava
Didn't Kant connect the subjective with the objective, uniting or mediating them with reason which is objective universally necessary, reason which is the paradigm example of objectivity, yet is also a subjective ability, — Cavacava
It's worth figuring out why you'd say something so ridiculous as claiming that you don't know what "brain state" or "brain activity" could possibly refer to. — Terrapin Station
At any rate, yes, I'm a physicalist/"materialist." — Terrapin Station
Mind-independent. The objective world doesn't depend on us perceiving, knowing, or talking about it. It's objective precisely because it doesn't vary based on individual perception, cognition, etc. It's also objective in that it doesn't depend on us being human. Man is not the measure, if anything is truly objective.
That's not quite as unfathomable for you to say, as you obviously disagree with the view that they're identical. I can at least "intellectually" understand that the idea of them being identical might seem incoherent to you.I'm saying that equating conscious experience with brain states doesn't mean anything. — Wayfarer
At least the eliminative materialists are consistent. — Wayfarer
which materialist/physicalist philosopher do you think does represent your views? — Wayfarer
What I am arguing is that the basic rules of logic cannot be reduced to, or explained in terms of, physical laws. Ergo they're not physical. — Wayfarer
Why can't you simply listen to what I say and cognize it, realizing that there's no better representative of my views than myself? — Terrapin Station
What's unfathomable, though, would be you saying that you have no idea what "brain state" would refer to period. That would be as unfathomable as you not being able to figure out, say "foot state." — Terrapin Station
In my view, logic is simply a way that we think about relations of particulars, abstracting and extrapolating from particulars, all tempered by contingent facts re how our brains must work where that was influenced by evolutionary "requirements" for survival given the sort of creatures we developed into phylogenetically. — Terrapin Station
Meaning is not objective, it's subjective, correct. — Terrapin Station
Knowing other philosophers who say similar things, would help to understand what you mean. So far, I'm finding that very challenging. — Wayfarer
And I'm accused of non sequiturs? — Wayfarer
ideas, for which I say there is not an adequate physicalist account. — Wayfarer
You simply assume that these matters have been understood through the lense of evolutionary naturalism. — Wayfarer
I ask you for another representative of your views, and you don't have one. You're not advancing a coherent argument at all. — Wayfarer
So, when you say 'correct', you have no idea whether the person you're talking to understands what you mean - correct? — Wayfarer
I just explained that you should have trouble with "foot state" if you have trouble with "brain state." After all, it's just a different body part, followed by the word "state." — Terrapin Station
The objective as you have described it has no meaning, it may exist and have existed but that existence is meaningless without us. It was all meaningless until we came along and gave it meaning. It more a question of how we play into the schema of things, since there is no schema without us. — Cavacava
But there is still widespread acknowledgement that the central mystery of how neural matter gives rise to conscious experience — Wayfarer
To say "it was all meaningless until we came along and gave it meaning" is to admit that something (the "all" being referred to) existed before human consciousness. And the advent of human consciousness simply tagged this existence with "meaning". Fine, but that still seems to imply a mind-independent existence. (By the way, what "meaning" does existence have? Or, what are you implying when you use the term "meaning"? Is it simply that we give labels to things, like Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden naming all the birds and beasts? Or that somehow our minds imbue existence with purpose?)
The difference between observing neural activity and experiencing that neural activity as thoughts is one of perspective. I am not fond of analogies, but it is somewhat akin to watching other cars drive down the street and sitting behind the steering wheel of your own car when you go on a journey. Its all point of view. — Real Gone Cat
SourceNeuroscientist Alvaro Pascual-Leone instructed the members of one group to play [piano] as fluidly as they could, trying to keep to the metronome's 60 beats per minute. Every day for five days, the volunteers practiced for two hours. Then they took a test.
At the end of each day's practice session, they sat beneath a coil of wire that sent a brief magnetic pulse into the motor cortex of their brain, located in a strip running from the crown of the head toward each ear. The so-called transcranial-magnetic-stimulation (TMS) test allows scientists to infer the function of neurons just beneath the coil. In the piano players, the TMS mapped how much of the motor cortex controlled the finger movements needed for the piano exercise. What the scientists found was that after a week of practice, the stretch of motor cortex devoted to these finger movements took over surrounding areas like dandelions on a suburban lawn.
The finding was in line with a growing number of discoveries at the time showing that greater use of a particular muscle causes the brain to devote more cortical real estate to it. But Pascual-Leone did not stop there. He extended the experiment by having another group of volunteers merely think about practicing the piano exercise. They played the simple piece of music in their head, holding their hands still while imagining how they would move their fingers. Then they too sat beneath the TMS coil.
When the scientists compared the TMS data on the two groups--those who actually tickled the ivories and those who only imagined doing so--they glimpsed a revolutionary idea about the brain: the ability of mere thought to alter the physical structure and function of our gray matter. For what the TMS revealed was that the region of motor cortex that controls the piano-playing fingers also expanded in the brains of volunteers who imagined playing the music--just as it had in those who actually played it.
The objective as you have described it has no meaning, it may exist and have existed but that existence is meaningless without us. It was all meaningless until we came along and gave it meaning. It more a question of how we play into the schema of things, since there is no schema without us. — Cavacava
I think that epistemology leads to and structures ontology, not the other way around. What we believe we know, determines what is, not what is determines what we think we know. — Cavacava
However, it is not possible to observe neural activity as though from a third-person perspective. You can't reach that perspective on it. You might think it is possible, because intuitively, it seems like you're simply looking at something like an array of neural events from two perspectives. But the problem is that thought itself has an irreducibly first-person aspect; it can't be viewed from the outside. — Wayfarer
because there's no activity involved in thinking. — Wayfarer
and also the 'neural binding problem'. — Wayfarer
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