• _db
    3.6k
    So much of metaphysics is focused on the quite unusual isolation of mind. In my own words, I would say that the mind appears to be "a world inside of a world"; in a crude analogy, the world is a "container" and inside of the container are even more containers. Little "black boxes" so to speak, which cannot be accessed from the outside and which subjectivity arises.

    This view is basically Cartesian substance dualism. There's the unconscious world of extension and the conscious world of ideas. Somehow these substances interact, perhaps by way of divine intervention. But why? Why would the world be structured as such? Why only two substances? Why not an infinity of substances, a la Spinoza and Leibniz (monads)?

    Is it even the case that there actually is an ontological separation going on here? I for one cannot understand how some people, like materialists/physicalists, can believe that mind is literally reduced to non-mind. For some funny reason they want to tell us that the things we are more sensitive and knowledgeable about (our own experiences) are actually reducible/identical to a "something" else that we have very little knowledge of. If we have to choose sides, monism would seem to favor idealism.

    Idealism may be coherent, but that doesn't make it right per se. Whereas physicalism suffers from the problem of literally explaining away our own minds, idealism and also substance dualism suffers from an apparent difficulty mentioned above: it's hard to see why the universe would be structured like this. Given what we know about evolution in both the biological and cosmological arenas, it comes across as ad hoc to simply slap a static structure onto reality.

    So we have what I see to be the definitive and essential property of mind: subjective isolation, and we also have a tension between the rather strange nature of mind and the surrounding context which it (apparently) emerged. Where does mind come from? Is it really plausible to say that mind has "always been" or is "poofed" into existence by an act of the divine? But if substance monism/dualism is unpersuasive, how else do we account for the subjective isolation of the mind? What else could account for the impossibility of "going into" someone else's mind, except by an actual metaphysical barrier of sorts, the same barrier that makes such theories seem ad hoc?

    Because the fact is that we cannot access other people's minds in the way we do our own. They are our property. The universe has made various sorts of containers: fog obscures a landscape, a clam shell protects the organism, a door shuts off a room from the rest of the world. Yet at least conceptually we can open these containers and see their contents. We cannot do this with mind.
  • apokrisis
    7.3k
    So is there a difference between life and mind in your book? Is one "just physics" and the other "something else"? Or does life start the swerve away from the brutely material. Is it a good philosophical place to start looking for the answers you seek?
  • Janus
    16.3k
    Why not an infinity of substances, a la Spinoza and Leibniz (monads)?darthbarracuda

    Spinoza does not posit an "infinity of substances" but on the contrary argues that there can be only one.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    I for one cannot understand how some people, like materialists/physicalists, can believe that mind is literally reduced to non-mind.darthbarracuda

    As a materialist/physicalist, I don't believe that mind is reduced to non-mind. Minds and brains are identical. Brains are not "non-mind."

    Whereas physicalism suffers from the problem of literally explaining away our own minds,darthbarracuda

    For the umpteenth time, not all physicalists are eliminative materialists.
  • lambda
    76
    Why would the world be structured as such?darthbarracuda

    Darth, I contend that reality is structured in such a way as to privilege the existence of conscious beings (like yourself) precisely because God loves you and wants to have a personal relationship with you. Eternal fellowship with God demands consciousness because it is not possible for God to share his love with an unconscious thing. You can freely choose to pursue God’s love or you can freely choose to ignore his promptings and continue wallowing in a state of permanent isolation. He is not going to coerce anyone into loving him.

    Now that explains why reality is structured to privilege the existence of conscious beings, but what accounts for the isolation? I think it is a form of protection. Protection from what, you ask? In Eastern Orthodox theology, God’s loving presence is experienced as Hell to those who are unprepared to meet him. For those who turn their love inward and worship themselves, for those who reject the freedom Christ offers and embrace their slavery to sin will inevitably experience God's presence as eternal torment. Therefore, it is first necessary to undergo a radical moral transformation (what is called 'divinization' in Orthodoxy) before you can enjoy the unmediated presence of an absolutely just and holy being. I thus contend that God, in his mercy, has erected a ‘veil of perception’ between you and Him as a means for you to complete 'divinization'. I further hypothesis the beatific vision will not only be a vision of God but also somehow include the minds of other people – thus permanently ending the isolation.
  • _db
    3.6k
    Spinoza does not posit an "infinity of substances" but on the contrary argues that there can be only one.John

    Sorry, I meant an infinity of modes.
  • Janus
    16.3k


    Easy mistake, man. :)
  • _db
    3.6k
    So is there a difference between life and mind in your book? Is one "just physics" and the other "something else"? Or does life start the swerve away from the brutely material. Is it a good philosophical place to start looking for the answers you seek?apokrisis

    I don't know what you're saying here.
  • _db
    3.6k
    For the umpteenth time, not all physicalists are eliminative materialists.Terrapin Station

    Right. It's just that if they aren't eliminative materialists, then the definition of material or physical has to be stretched.
  • _db
    3.6k
    ou can freely choose to pursue God’s love or you can freely choose to ignore his promptings and continue wallowing in a state of permanent isolation. He is not going to coerce anyone into loving him.lambda

    I feel like that itself is a form of coercion. Either pick a nice relationship or lonely isolation. God, if he exists, has incentivized our actions.
  • apokrisis
    7.3k
    It's a question. Do you find mind problematic for physicalism but not life? If so, why exactly?

    The point of the question is that the origin of life must mark some kind of causal divergence in your
    notion of physicalism. So have you in fact understood the nature of that divergence in a way that says it doesn't also explain the divergence you claim as problematic - that of mind?

    If you can quickly say why life and mind are different in ways that make sense, we're good. Otherwise your presumed dualism already founders.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    if they aren't eliminative materialists, then the definition of material or physical has to be stretched.darthbarracuda
    No. Eliminative materialism isn't the default position. There's no standard definition of "material" or "physical" that have it so that necessarily, neither has mental properties.
  • _db
    3.6k
    If you can quickly say why life and mind are different in ways that make sense, we're good.apokrisis

    Mind is of life, but life is not mind. It is not a requirement for life to be mind.
  • apokrisis
    7.3k
    Mind is of life, but life is not mind.darthbarracuda

    OK. That's your claim. Now make sense of it causally. What is the mechanism that underpins your categorical distinction?
  • _db
    3.6k
    OK. That's your claim. Now make sense of it causally. What is the mechanism that underpins your categorical distinction?apokrisis

    The point of the OP was that the phenomenological experience of being a black box is in friction with a universe that is seemingly open to observation, and vice versa. I have no idea how this came to be. But the fact is that I cannot see your mind and you cannot see mine.
  • apokrisis
    7.3k
    The point of the OP was that the phenomenological experience of being a black box is in friction with a universe that is seemingly open to observation, and vice versa.darthbarracuda

    Fine. So now try to answer my question.

    I'm drawing attention to a presumption your OP embodies. The way to understand it is by considering why you might seem to think that "merely being alive" does not result in phenomenology.

    If you have a good causal grounds for making this kind of categorical distinction, then great, wheel it out.

    So far as I know, the only reason why you would look conscious to me is that you would look alive to me. If you could explain why and how the two are in fact ontically disconnected in the fashion you appear to presume, then I might think the OP had a better actual point.
  • jkop
    905
    at least conceptually we can open these containers and see their contents. We cannot do this with mind.darthbarracuda
    Evidently we can, for example, when we talk about the mind, and share insights into the minds of different speakers. Therefore, the mind is not isolated.
  • _db
    3.6k
    So far as I know, the only reason why you would look conscious to me is that you would look alive to me. If you could explain why and how the two are in fact ontically disconnected in the fashion you appear to presume, then I might think the OP had a better actual point.apokrisis

    You'll have to give me the essential characteristics of "life", then. As far as I can tell, anything lacking a nervous system cannot have a mind.

    Unless you're going for some sort of panpsychism or idealism.

    So my thoughts on this are that, since mind appears to be so wholly different than ordinary material objects and processes, it is unlikely that it just suddenly "appeared" as if it were an alien to an otherwise material universe. Instead, mind, or at least a derivation of it, would have always been, either in the monism of idealism or the transcendental idealism of Kant and co.

    Then there's also the question as to what purpose consciousness actually serves to an organism. Presumably everything necessary to survive could have been done without the use of subjectivity. Why pain, when you could have algae? Why city-scapes, when you could have moss? Why philosophy, when you could have shrubbery? The purposeless-ness of the universe must be taken into account here, then. A decisive, yet accidental, mutation in genetic information created an organism that accidentally happened to live alongside more simple organisms. Complexity was not necessary, yet there was nothing preventing it from happening either. The rise of complex, sentient creatures was entirely unnecessary and accidental, not inevitable, but happened anyway thanks to goldylocks luck.

    Evidently we can, for example, when we talk about the mind, and share insights into the minds of different speakers. Therefore, the mind is not isolated.jkop

    This is merely communication and inference. There's a reason behaviorism was so popular back in the day: mind is literally cut off from observation and thus it was seen as unfit for scientific inquiry.
  • apokrisis
    7.3k
    As far as I can tell, anything lacking a nervous system cannot have a mind.darthbarracuda

    Well. And why is that? What is causally significant about a nervous system?

    There must be something or else why else have you just singled it out?

    So my thoughts on this are that, since mind appears to be so wholly different than ordinary material objects and processes...,darthbarracuda

    But now you are immediately back in the weeds because as soon as you mention nervous systems, you just as quickly abandon them to repeat the claim that the mind "appears wholly different" from "ordinary processes".

    The nervous system is an "ordinary biological process", no? And yet you agree that nervous systems - on any reasonable view - are at least a necessary condition of phenomenal states.

    So how is the nervous system different from other ordinary biological processes in your view? Surely the answer to that should go a long way to solving the dilemma you express?

    Then there's also the question as to what purpose consciousness actually serves to an organism. Presumably everything necessary to survive could have been done without the use of subjectivity.darthbarracuda

    Why on earth would consciousness serve no purpose? Is that your own experience? You function just as well in a coma or deep sleep? Does paying attention rather than acting on automatic pilot not help you learn and remember?

    A decisive, yet accidental, mutation in genetic information created an organism that accidentally happened to live alongside more simple organisms.darthbarracuda

    Again, where is there any scientific or commonsense evidence for these wild assertions? Doesn't everything already point to degrees of consciousness associated with complexity of nervous systems? Can't we tell that just from the way animals of different sized brains behave - their apparent liveliness?

    Again, as I said at the outset, the only way we have judge the probability of consciousness in others is the degree to which they seem living. Is their behaviour complex and interesting?

    The rise of complex, sentient creatures was entirely unnecessary and accidental, not inevitable, but happened anyway thanks to goldylocks luck.darthbarracuda

    More rambling unfounded assertion I am afraid.
  • jkop
    905
    This is merely communication and inference.darthbarracuda

    "Merely"? What do you expect? Ability to be someone else?
  • _db
    3.6k
    So how is the nervous system different from other ordinary biological processes in your view? Surely the answer to that should go a long way to solving the dilemma you express?apokrisis

    Apo I don't know all the answers, so stop playing with me and actually start giving me your own answers. I don't go on this board to satisfy some urge to confirm my own superiority, I don't know the answer to this question so do me the service and enlighten me with one instead of treating me like a child.

    Why on earth would consciousness serve no purpose? Is that your own experience? You function just as well in a coma or deep sleep? Does paying attention rather than acting on automatic pilot not help you learn and remember?apokrisis

    I say conceivably everything we do could be done by an unconscious mechanism. Consciousness, even though it works, is not necessary for the sorts of output we have.

    More rambling unfounded assertion I am afraid.apokrisis

    Or just the anthropic principle.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    the phenomenological experience of being a black box is in friction with a universe that is seemingly open to observationdarthbarracuda

    The universe is wide open to observation, but only from one reference point at a time. The big error that's leading to the conceptual mess that you're appealing to is the belief that the one reference point that can be had at a time somehow tells us _everything_ there is to know about the stuff we're observing, as if it's not always just from one reference point at a time.
  • _db
    3.6k
    The point was that the reference point that we inhabit ourselves - mind - is inaccessible to anyone else but ourselves. It is our personal, private sphere.
  • apokrisis
    7.3k
    The point was that the reference point that we inhabit ourselves - mind - is inaccessible to anyone else but ourselves. It is our personal, private sphere.darthbarracuda

    It in fact seems an important point that consciousness has this character of being a highly particular point of view.

    So you are presuming that makes it "inaccessible". But think it through.

    Even for ourselves, to be in some particular brain state at this very moment is not to be in a near infinity of states we might also have been in. With a few trillion synapses, there's a lot of potential neural patterns. And yet one brain state is picked from that universe of possible states (or more accurately perhaps, all the other states are suppressed or inhibited by competitive feedback mechanisms).

    So being highly located as a particular point of view, a particular mapping of a sensory and intentional state, is what makes even all the alternative states of mind we might have had now inaccessible to us (to go along with the homuncular language that is unfortunately conventional in these kinds of consciousness discussions).

    Now following that same logic, I could conceivably be in exactly the same brain state as you right now. I could be accessing your private point of view by exactly mirroring your neural activity. Of course there are all sorts of practical difficulties to do with the fact that I would have to be hallucinating your surroundings and falsely remembering a past that is identical to yours. But given that you are easy going on conceivability, we can say that I could indeed physically access your subjective point of view in these exceptionally unlikely circumstances I've just outlined.

    So again, a little biological realism can go a long way to changing the tenor of the questions. If we take a deflationary view of mind - treating it less like an ectoplasmic substance and more like a complex state of world mapping - while also giving rather more credit to the actual biological complexity of a brain with its capacity for picking out highly particular points of view, then the explanatory gap to be bridged should shrink rather a lot. Earlier concerns will start to look redundant as more meaningful questions are revealed.
  • _db
    3.6k
    Now following that same logic, I could conceivably be in exactly the same brain state as you right now. I could be accessing your private point of view by exactly mirroring your neural activity.apokrisis

    I disagree. You would be accessing a duplicate copy of my brain state, not my brain state. Both of us can stub our toe and feel pain - perhaps we would be in the same exact state (probably not though). But these are two separate, independent states.

    You can have the Mona Lisa, or you can have a duplicate copy of the Mona Lisa. The two may be indistinguishable. And in fact multiple people can simultaneously look upon both Mona Lisa's. But Mona Lisa is a material object and thus it is unsurprising that this can happen. Material objects are public, mental "objects" are private. My mind does not seep into the world, or at least I don't think it does (re: externalism). It doesn't come out of my ears. Mind is the one thing that I am certain about having, yet I cannot locate it in the world I assume surrounds me.

    So a better analogy would be that I have my own container filled with stuff only I have seen. You can take an x-ray and get a general idea of what is inside. But you cannot actually see the contents. Only I can see the contents, only I am allowed to. Nobody else is allowed inside. Mind is subjective. Like a Liebnizian monad.

    If we look at the brain, we can presumably see the structure of fatty tissue and analyze the various synapses and whatnot going on. We can dig through the whole brain, but we'll never find mind. There's hair, skin, scalp, skull, brain tissue, then skull and scalp and skin and hair again. So where is the elusive mind? Where is it located?

    If we take a deflationary view of mind - treating it less like an ectoplasmic substance and more like a complex state of world mapping - while also giving rather more credit to the actual biological complexity of a brain with its capacity for picking out highly particular points of view, then the explanatory gap to be bridged should shrink rather a lot.apokrisis

    I don't think the explanatory gap shrinks more than it is just flat-out ignored. It's also telling that you assume alternative views must consist of some sort of ectoplasmic magic goo. That's just silly.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    Okay, but MY point is that we need to have an accurate understanding of "a universe open to observation." When we have that, mind is no longer such a mystery.
  • apokrisis
    7.3k
    You would be accessing a duplicate copy of my brain state, not my brain state.darthbarracuda

    So what makes it yours?

    Do you want to point to something material ... like nervous systems and physical locations? Or did you have in mind a soul?

    Let's get to the bottom of what you actually think you are claiming. What does "access" even mean in your book?

    If I were to suddenly flash into your exact state of mind for a moment - due to some extraordinary brain blurt, say - then how is that not accessing your state of mind?

    What else would access look like according to you?

    My mind does not seep into the world, or at least I don't think it does (re: externalism). It doesn't come out of my ears. Mind is the one thing that I am certain about having, yet I cannot locate it in the world I assume surrounds me.darthbarracuda

    So doesn't that make it more phenomenally accurate to say that the world seeps into your mind? And the same world seeps into my mind? So we both share access to the same world. Thus again, the critical issue is not that I can't access your mind. If our current accessing of the world happens to be indistinguishable at some instant, then we are of one mind.

    So a better analogy would be that I have my own container filled with stuff only I have seen. You can take an x-ray and get a general idea of what is inside. But you cannot actually see the contents. Only I can see the contents, only I am allowed to. Nobody else is allowed inside. Mind is subjective. Like a Liebnizian monad.darthbarracuda

    It is this resort to physicalist conceptions of substance to explain states of mind that seems so muddled. You can't both describe the mind in substantial terms while simultaneously rejecting that same substantialist ontology.

    Well, you can. It's called Cartesian dualism. :)

    So it is an analogy. But a completely question-begging one.

    If we look at the brain, we can presumably see the structure of fatty tissue and analyze the various synapses and whatnot going on. We can dig through the whole brain, but we'll never find mind. There's hair, skin, scalp, skull, brain tissue, then skull and scalp and skin and hair again. So where is the elusive mind? Where is it located?darthbarracuda

    Again you are thinking like a physicalist and trying to capture the essence of the mental.

    You have to start thinking like biologist and see structures as processes. Mind is not located in stuff but in action and organisation.

    I mean, you are familiar with Ryle's ghost in the machine category error argument? It's pretty slam dunk.

    I don't think the explanatory gap shrinks more than it is just flat-out ignored.darthbarracuda

    Do I seem to ignore it? I'm showing you why its importance is greatly exaggerated because people like to bypass the question of whether there is any real metaphysical difference between life and mind.

    Dualism depends on the presumption that animals can be dumb automata and humans are inhabited by a witnessing soul.

    Great. Everyone loves an interesting hypothesis. Now support it by showing that life is not already mindful from the get-go in any useful definition of mindfulness. Where does this claimed metaphysical duality first arise in nature?

    And the question can't even be addressed until you have meaningful definitions of both phenomena so that they may be compared and constrasted in counterfactual fashion. (That's the actual explanatory gap here.)
  • _db
    3.6k
    If I were to suddenly flash into your exact state of mind for a moment - due to some extraordinary brain blurt, say - then how is that not accessing your state of mind?

    What else would access look like according to you?
    apokrisis

    I am not thinking about a soul, although I suppose there are actually some decent arguments for the existence of a "soul-like" entity of sorts, in the Aristotelian schema for example.

    Rather I am saying that there is a distinct difference between the firing a C-fibres firing (an outdated theory nowadays but one that continues to be used out of tradition) and the experience of pain. Whatever is going on in the brain when I experience something is different than the experience itself.

    The point being, however, is that a numerically-distinct experience can only be experienced by one subject at a time. A teleporter kills me because the copy of me at time t+1 is not identical to me at time t.

    Only one mind can exist in a single perspective at a time, just as how only one object can exist in a single space-time location. Access to the mind would be akin to access of the exact same perspective as another person at the exact same time - impossible. My head cannot co-exist with your head at the same time. The perspective I have is unique. Of course, you can make perfect copies of my mental experience, just as you could make perfect copies of the perspective I inhabit at a certain time. But they would not be identical - it would not be true access, but rather access by "cheating".

    So doesn't that make it more phenomenally accurate to say that the world seeps into your mind? And the same world seeps into my mind? So we both share access to the same world.apokrisis

    But not at the same time nor place, i.e. perspective.

    You have to start thinking like biologist and see structures as processes. Mind is not located in stuff but in action and organisation.apokrisis

    So mind just "arises" out of structure/process? This doesn't explain anything really. Just seems all hand-wavy and actually kind of poetic.

    Dualism depends on the presumption that animals can be dumb automata and humans are inhabited by a witnessing soul.apokrisis

    No, this is false.
  • Gooseone
    107
    he point was that the reference point that we inhabit ourselves - mind - is inaccessible to anyone else but ourselves. It is our personal, private spheredarthbarracuda

    Yes you use this point to negate any pragmatism / physicality while, the other way around, you will only incorporate you yourself actually being an ape or some other "lower" life form and then relaying such an experience as your everyday darthbarracuda as proof 'for' such pragmatism.

    Someone smarter then me should be able to clearly state this is a form of an argumentum ad ignorantiam
  • jkop
    905
    a form of an argumentum ad ignorantiamGooseone

    Spot on!
  • apokrisis
    7.3k
    Rather I am saying that there is a distinct difference between the firing a C-fibres firing (an outdated theory nowadays but one that continues to be used out of tradition) and the experience of pain. Whatever is going on in the brain when I experience something is different than the experience itself.

    The point being, however, is that a numerically-distinct experience can only be experienced by one subject at a time. A teleporter kills me because the copy of me at time t+1 is not identical to me at time t.

    Only one mind can exist in a single perspective at a time, just as how only one object can exist in a single space-time location. Access to the mind would be akin to access of the exact same perspective as another person at the exact same time - impossible. My head cannot co-exist with your head at the same time. The perspective I have is unique. Of course, you can make perfect copies of my mental experience, just as you could make perfect copies of the perspective I inhabit at a certain time. But they would not be identical - it would not be true access, but rather access by "cheating".
    darthbarracuda

    Everything here you are arguing to be true per definition. You don't seem to realise that. So that is why I have tried to focus your attention on the issue of definitions. How could we more fruitfully frame the dichotomy so as to not talk past the differences that might actually make a difference?

    I of course have repeatedly said that the way to make sense of mind~matter duality is to re-frame your inquiry as one based on the semiotic symbol~matter distinction instead. That then allows you to see how - causally - mind is just life. A more complex version of the same modelling relation. And even material existence can be accounted for pan-semiotically.

    So I certainly have my own deflationary answer.

    But not at the same time nor place, i.e. perspective.darthbarracuda

    That just ignores the thought experiment I described. I specified that the "perspectives" would indeed be exactly alike. I offered a "plausible" mechanism - you might be having the "real" experience, I might be hallucinating all its features. But that doesn't really matter as you already admit in the OP that your own perspective of the world could be an idealist illusion. So you can't both allow for such disembodiment in your own arguments, yet insist on the facticity of embodiment when it comes to mine.

    Well, it is this kind of inconsistency that is indeed rife right from the OP.

    So mind just "arises" out of structure/process? This doesn't explain anything really. Just seems all hand-wavy and actually kind of poetic.darthbarracuda

    That is not what I said, was it? I said rather than talking about the structure - the materials from which brains are composed - let's talk about the processes taking place, the dynamics of the organisation.
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