As I said, the pain signal (in effect) reaches a transducer which produces the mental state of localized pain. Does this much sound plausible? If so, what is your specific issue? — Relativist
If the mind is immaterial, as you assume — Relativist
the issue seems to he: how do physical, electro-chemical signals produce the related mental states — Relativist
Aside from the fact that this claim is wholly unsupported by data, there is no reason to suppose simulating physical (simulation) operations can generate intentional operations.
I suggest that we can deduce this is the case.I do not assume that "electro-chemical signals produce the related mental states." — Dfpolis
But surely you must agree that sensory perception originates in physical processes, and ultimately mental states arise. This implies there is a causal chain from the physical to the mental. This suggests that somewhere in the chain, there is a final physical event followed by an initial (non-physical) mental event. There can be parallelism, but at the fundamental level, physical-mental causation has to be taking place. Mental causation entails the converse. I refered to this interface as a "transducer". It seems unavoidable if the mind is non-physical.I do not assume that "electro-chemical signals produce the related mental states." Following Aristotle, I see this as the work of the agent intellect, which acts in the intentional, not the physical, theater of operations. — Dfpolis
I have not deduced it, so I'm considering it a premise, for sake of discussion. Challenging it would entail a different discussion.I do not assume the mind is immaterial. I deduce — Dfpolis
I do not assume that "electro-chemical signals produce the related mental states." — Dfpolis
I suggest that we can deduce this is the case. — Relativist
surely you must agree that sensory perception originates in physical processes, and ultimately mental states arise. — Relativist
This implies there is a causal chain from the physical to the mental. — Relativist
at the fundamental level, physical-mental causation has to be taking place. — Relativist
It seems unavoidable if the mind is non-physical. — Relativist
I do not assume the mind is immaterial. I deduce — Dfpolis
... Challenging it would entail a different discussion. — Relativist
No, programs implement the intentions of their programmers. They themselves are signs requiring human interpreters to actually signify.
Who is interpreting the signs in your DNA? — Zelebg
And what do you call a process constrained by a set of instructions, such as processes in your body, your cells and organs, if not a program? — Zelebg
OK, this suggests mental states contingently arise. Nevertheless, the relevant mental states do not arise without the physical input.I agree that neural processes are physical. Whether or not mental states arise from them depends on whether or not we attend to them. The act of attending to them is an act of awareness (aka the agent intellect). — Dfpolis
Sensory perception ceases when there's a physical defect. This is strong evidence that the physical processes are in the causal chain even if there are immaterial dependencies as well (like attentiveness).at the fundamental level, physical-mental causation has to be taking place.
— Relativist
Why? — Dfpolis
Laws of nature describe physical-physical causation. Mental-physical and physical-mental is unique.Immaterial does not mean physically impotent. The laws of nature are not made of matter; nonetheless, they effect physical transformations. — Dfpolis
How does the physically encoded data get into an immaterial mind? How do you explain the dependency on physical processes? If you deny the dependency, why does input cease when the equipment is defective? It seems to me the only plausible explanation is that the physical processes cause immaterial mental states. The attentiveness issue doesn't refute this, it just adds a switch.This implies there is a causal chain from the physical to the mental.
— Relativist
No, it shows that the agent intellect can transform physically encoded data to concepts (mental intentions). — Dfpolis
The same signals indicating I am seeing an apple also indicate that my retinal state has change. — Dfpolis
DNA does not work by being a sign, but mechanically. Hence, it needs no interpretation or interpreter.
We use words analogously to cover new needs. As a result various uses need not mean the same thing, and what they name need not work in the same way. Normal instructions and rules are signs which must be interpreted by a mind before they can be implemented. There is no such set of instructions in human physiology. Rather, there are laws of nature that act on initial physical states to produce later physical states without need of interpretation. So we must be careful not to be fooled when the same words are used with differ meanings in different cases.
I am, however, glad that you see that the laws of nature are works of Mind.
OK, this suggests mental states contingently arise. Nevertheless, the mental states do not arise without the physical input. — Relativist
Sensory perception ceases when there's a physical defect. This is strong evidence that the physical processes are in the causal chain even if there are immaterial dependencies as well (like attentiveness). — Relativist
Laws of nature apply to physical-physical causation. Mental-physical and physical-mental is unique. — Relativist
How does the physically encoded data get into an immaterial mind? — Relativist
It seems to me the only plausible explanation is that the physical processes cause immaterial mental states. — Relativist
Two different signals are involved in the process of sensation.
Light (one type of signal) changes retinal states. Photoreceptors (rods and cones) in the retina transform light signals into neural signals. — Galuchat
Neural signals and visual perception are related by correlation, not causation. — Galuchat
So, do neural codes signify conscious content? — Galuchat
So, in your view, no dynamics links neural signals and visual perception?? — Dfpolis
The immaterial aspect of the mind (the power to choose and attend, aka aware) has no specific "place;" however, experience tells us it generally attends to data processed by and encoded in the brain -- and we have a reasonable idea of how data gets there. — Dfpolis
Even if your mind is not spatially located, your brain is - and there's clearly a strong connection between your mind and your brain. Your mind doesn't obtain sensory input from your next door neighbor's brain. This suggests some sort of ontic connection between something located in space and something that is not. (There is an ontic connection between positively charged and negatively charged particles).It seems to me the only plausible explanation is that the physical processes cause immaterial mental states. — Relativist
They inform the mental states, but to inform is not to be an efficient cause. Plans may inform a process, but they do not cause the process. — Dfpolis
No, and that is my point. We do not first become aware (or ever become aware) of our neural state and then interpret what that state means. For an (instrumental) sign to work we need to be aware of what the sign is, and then decide what it means. There is no such process here. So calling neural pulses "signs" only increases confusion. — Dfpolis
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