However, as far as my argument is concerned, "thinking" means everything that occurs in the brain, whether our consciousness is aware of it or not. — TheMadFool
Then the mind "thinking" how to catch a ball is the same as the brain "performing" mathematical calculations? — Harry Hindu
I would not say I ordinarily estimate the trajectory and velocity. I look and catch, look and throw.When an object is thrown at me, and I hope I'm representative of the average human, I make an estimate of the trajectory of the object and its velocity and move my body and arm accordingly to catch that object. All this mental processing occurs without resorting to actual mathematical calculations of the relevant parameters that have a direct bearing on my success in catching thrown objects. — TheMadFool
Isn't it the job of the robot designers to design robots that perform certain actions, like drilling or catching? What does it matter whether the processes involved are the same as the processes in us? How could they be exactly the same sort of processes?The other possibility is that we don't need mathematics to catch a ball and roboticists are barking up the wrong tree. Roboticists need to rethink their approach to the subject in a fundamental way. This seems, prima facie, like telling a philosopher that logic is no good. Preposterous! However, to deny this possibility is to ignore a very basic fact - humans don't do mathematical calculations when we play throw and catch, at least not consciously. — TheMadFool
So, what you mean by performance is being carried out by the lower consciousness/the subconsciousness and this friendly exchange of ideas between us is the work of our higher consciousness. The difference in opinion we have is that for me both higher and lower consciousness is thinking but for you thinking seems to apply only to higher consciousness. — TheMadFool
When you are learning how to do these things for the first time, you are applying your "higher" consciousness. For instance, learning to ride your bike requires conscious effort. After you have enough practice, you can do it without focusing your consciousness on it.The higher consciousness doesn't decide which muscles to contract and which to relax and calculate the force and direction of my fingers in typing our text. Rather the lower consciousness/the subconscious carries out this activity. — TheMadFool
So, is the subconscious just an object of thought in the higher level, or is it really a "material" object in the world independent of it being objectified by the higher level? You seem to be saying that brains and the subconscious are objects before being objectified by the higher level. If they are already objects in the material world, then why does the higher level of the brain need to objectify those things? What would it mean for the "higher" level to objectify what is already an object?Nevertheless, the complexity of the brain necessitates a distinction - that between higher consciousness and lower consciousness/the subconscious. The former refers to that part of the mind that can make something an object of thought. What do I mean by that? Simply that higher consciousness can make something an object of analysis or rational study or even just entertain a simple thought on it. Our higher consciousness is active in this discussion between us, for example. — TheMadFool
No, I'm trying to clarify what you are really asking in your OP. I asked (I wasn't asserting anything) if the brain and mind were doing the same thing, but if we are using different terms to refer to the same thing - thinking and performing - and the terms have to do with different vantage points - from within your own brain (your mind thinking) or from outside of it (someone else looking at your mind and seeing a brain performing mathematical calculations). — Harry Hindu
When you are learning how to do these things for the first time, you are applying your "higher" consciousness. For instance, learning to ride your bike requires conscious effort. After you have enough practice, you can do it without focusing your consciousness on it. — Harry Hindu
So, is the subconscious just an object of thought in the higher level, or is it really a "material" object in the world independent of it being objectified by the higher level? You seem to be saying that brains and the subconscious are objects before being objectified by the higher level. If they are already objects in the material world, then why does the higher level of the brain need to objectify those things? What would it mean for the "higher" level to objectify what is already an object? — Harry Hindu
You're in the ballpark on this one. The only issue I have is I don't see the involvement of higher consciousness in learning to ride a bike in the sense that your consciousness is directly involved in deciding which muscles to contract and which to relax and how much force each muscle should exert. — TheMadFool
Why is it that when I look at you, I see a body with a brain, not your mind? If I wanted to find evidence of your mind, or your intent, where would I look? Would I see what you see? If I see a brain causing the body to perform actions, and you experience intent causing your body to perform actions, why the difference?No, I'm trying to clarify what you are really asking in your OP. I asked (I wasn't asserting anything) if the brain and mind were doing the same thing, but if we are using different terms to refer to the same thing - thinking and performing - and the terms have to do with different vantage points - from within your own brain (your mind thinking) or from outside of it (someone else looking at your mind and seeing a brain performing mathematical calculations).
— Harry Hindu
Either your English is too good or my English is too bad :rofl: because I can't see the relevance of the above to my position. Either you need to dumb it down for me or I have to take English clases. I'm unsure which of the two is easier. — TheMadFool
Are you saying that your intent moves your brain into action? How is that done? Forgetting you said that is forgetting how your position is incoherent.Forget that I said that. I wanted to make a distinction between the part of the "mind" (brain function) that generates intentions with respect to our bodies and the part of the mind that carries out those intentions. — TheMadFool
How did you learn to ride a bike? What type of thoughts were involved? Didn't you have to focus on your balance, which in fine control over certain muscles that you might or might not have used before? What about ice-skating which uses muscles most people haven't used (in your ankles) that have never ice-skated before.
The reason you say that this "physical" act is done by some other part of the brain is because you've already passed the performance to another part of the brain. Using your theory, learning to ride a bike would be no different than knowing how to ride a bike. Learning requires the conscious effort of controlling the body to perform functions the body hasn't performed before. Once you've learned it, it seems to no longer require conscious effort to control the body. Practice creates habits. Habits are performed subconsciously.
I think part of your problem is this use of terms like "material" vs. "immaterial" and "physical" vs. "mind". You might have noticed that haven't use those terms except to try to understand your use of them, which is incoherent.
What is "intent" at the neurological level? Where is "intent" in the brain? — Harry Hindu
You're avoiding the questions and this post doesn't address any of the points I have made.The part of our mind that generates intent isn't necessary for carrying out physical activities. If the chicken can walk without a head then surely learning to ride a bike, which is nothing more than glorified walking, can be done without the intent-generating part of the brain, completely at the level of the subconscious. — TheMadFool
I wonder, if a child lost it's head before learning how to walk, if the child would be able to walk after losing it's head? Why or why not? — Harry Hindu
You wasted your time. None of this addresses the questions I asked TMF. — Harry Hindu
You're avoiding the questions and this post doesn't address any of the points I have made.
All you have done is provide an explanation as to why the part of our mind that generates intent isn't necessary. Then why does it exist? What is "intent" for? You're the one that proposed this "intent" in our minds and now you're saying it isn't necessary.
I wonder, if a child lost it's head before learning how to walk, if the child would be able to walk after losing it's head? Why or why not? — Harry Hindu
The reason you say that this "physical" act is done by some other part of the brain is because you've already passed the performance to another part of the brain. — Harry Hindu
If you didn't define "intent" or show how it has a causal influence on the brain, then no, you didn't come close to addressing my earlier points that both you and TMF have diverted the thread from by bringing up one chicken who could walk after a botched decapitation.If you take my answer to your sarcastic question seriously, then it also answers some questions about "intent", which I won't hazard to define. If you're not interested that's alright, but I'm sure many others are, so please forgive my use of your post as a springboard for my own. — VagabondSpectre
Read it again. I'm talking about what YOU said. YOU are the one using terms like "physical", "immaterial", "higher consciousness", "lower consciousness", etc. I'm simply trying to parse your use of these terms and ask you questions about what YOU are trying to ask or posit. I haven't put forth any kind of argument. I am only questioning YOU on what YOU have said.You said
The reason you say that this "physical" act is done by some other part of the brain is because you've already passed the performance to another part of the brain.
— Harry Hindu
which implies that you think learning involves a top-down process where the skill is passed down from the higher consciousness to the subconscious. The headless chicken disproves that claim. — TheMadFool
And I asked you how does intent make the body move? How does deciding to learn to ride a bike make the body learn how to ride a bike? Where is "intent" relative to the body it moves? Why is your experience of your intent different than my experience of your intent? How would you and I show evidence that you have this thing that you call, "intent"?As for intent in re the brain, think of it as the decision making body - it decides what, as herein relevant, the body will do or learn e.g. I decide to learn to ride a bike. The actual learning to ride a bike is done by another part of the brain, the subconscious. — TheMadFool
If you didn't define "intent" or show how it has a causal influence on the brain, — Harry Hindu
you didn't come close to addressing my earlier points that both you and TMF have diverted the thread from by bringing up one chicken who could walk after a botched decapitation. — Harry Hindu
In fact color is an excellent example of our brain doing math because we can discern colors and color is completely determined by a mathematical quantity viz. frequency of EM waves. — TheMadFool
This is wrong, the eyes are what we use to determine colour, not mathematics. And colour is not determined by frequency of EM waves. That's a false myth. — Metaphysician Undercover
Color is a frequency-property of light/EM waves. — TheMadFool
Change the frequency of light and color changes i.e. without changes in frequency there are no changes in color. — TheMadFool
How do you know what is in a chick's mind? What does it mean for the chick to not know what it is doing at first? It seem to me that the chick is showing intent to feed, or else it wouldn't peck the ground. How do you know that what it does instinctively, is what it intends to do in it's mind? For an instinctive behavior - one in which it is not routed through the filtering of consciousness - what it does is always what it wants to do. It is in consciousness that we re-think our behavior. I'm famished. Should I grab John's sandwich and eat it? For the chick, it doesn't think about whether it ought, or should do something. It just does it and there is no voice in their mind telling what is right or wrong (their conscious). What is "right" is instinctive behavior. Consciousness evolved in highly intelligent and highly social organisms as a means of fine-tuning (instinctive) behavioral responses in social environments.The 'pecking' motion that some birds (but especially baby chickens) do is actually an automatic hard-wired reflex that gets triggered by certain stimulus. However the chick doesn't know what its doing at first, or why; it just thrusts its beak randomly toward the ground. — VagabondSpectre
What was the stimuli? If the stimuli was a visual or smell of the bug or grain that started the instinctive behavior of pecking, then what purpose if the reward? If it already knows there is a bug or grain via it's senses, and that causes the instinctive behavior, then what is the reward for if they already knew there was a bug or grain on the ground?Once it manages to snatch something tasty (like a bug or grain), it can start to optimize the pecking motion to get more "reward" (a hard wired pleasure signal that plays an essential role in the emergence of intelligence and intention). — VagabondSpectre
Frequency is a property of light. Color is a property of minds. I don't need frequencies of light to strike my retina for me to experience colors. I can think of colors without using my eyes.Myth? Color is a frequency-property of light/EM waves. Change the frequency of light and color changes i.e. without changes in frequency there are no changes in color.
Although frequency may not be the sole determinant of color for there maybe other explanations for the origins of color, existing color theory bases colors on frequency of light. — TheMadFool
It means that it has no prior experience of the thing it is doing, and also that the proximal cause of the thing is not its high level thoughts. After it gets experience of the thing it is doing, and figures out how to do it on demand, and how to refine the action to actually get food, then we might say "it knows what it is doing".What does it mean for the chick to not know what it is doing at first? — Harry Hindu
It seem to me that the chick is showing intent to feed, or else it wouldn't peck the ground. How do you know that what it does instinctively, is what it intends to do in it's mind? — Harry Hindu
For an instinctive behavior - one in which it is not routed through the filtering of consciousness - what it does is always what it wants to do. It is in consciousness that we re-think our behavior. I'm famished. Should I grab John's sandwich and eat it? For the chick, it doesn't think about whether it ought, or should do something. It just does it and there is no voice in their mind telling what is right or wrong (their conscious). What is "right" is instinctive behavior. Consciousness evolved in highly intelligent and highly social organisms as a means of fine-tuning (instinctive) behavioral responses in social environments. — Harry Hindu
Based on your theory, there is no reason to have a reward system, or intent. What would intent be, and what would it be useful for? — Harry Hindu
What was the stimuli? If the stimuli was a visual or smell of the bug or grain that started the instinctive behavior of pecking, then what purpose if the reward? If it already knows there is a bug or grain via it's senses, and that causes the instinctive behavior, then what is the reward for if they already knew there was a bug or grain on the ground? — Harry Hindu
Frequency is a property of light. Color is a property of minds. I don't need frequencies of light to strike my retina for me to experience colors. I can think of colors without using my eyes.
Interesting thought, colors seem to be a fundamental building block of the mind. I know I exist only because I can think, and thinking, perceiving, knowing, imagining, etc. are composed of colors, shapes, sounds, feelings, smells, etc. - sensory data - and nothing seems more fundamental than that. — Harry Hindu
Once it manages to snatch something tasty (like a bug or grain), it can start to optimize the pecking motion to get more "reward" (a hard wired pleasure signal that plays an essential role in the emergence of intelligence and intention). — VagabondSpectre
Like with pecking, it's likely to be the case that features that distinguish good to peck targets (like seeds' shapes and sizes or bugs' motion and leg movements) from bad to peck targets become heavily impactful in the learning process, as once an agent has cottoned onto a task relevant feature, they can respond quicker, with less effort, and just as accurately, as features efficiently summarise task relevant environmental differences.
Edit: in some, extremely abstract, respect, feature learning and central pattern generators address the same problem; Imagine succeeding at a task as a long journey, central pattern generators direct an agent's behavioural development down fruitful paths from the very beginning, they give an initial direction of travel, feature learning lets an agent decide how to best get closer to their destination along the way; to walk the road rather than climb the mountain — fdrake
The chick has never eaten before. It has no underlying concepts about things. In the same way that a baby doesn't know what a nipple is when it begins the nursing action pattern. We know because there is no such thing as being born with existing experience and knowledge; if we put chicks in environments without grains or bugs to eat, they start pecking things anyway (and hurt themselves). — VagabondSpectre
Interesting. This part looks like something I have said a number of times before on this forum:That's where the crudest form of central decision making comes into play. Evolution cannot hard code a reliable strategy once things start to get too complicated (once the task requires real-time adaptation), so brains step in and do the work. Even in the most primitive animals, there's more going on than hard-wired instinct. There is real time strategy exploration; cognition. the strategies are ultimately boot-strapped by low level rewards, like pain, pleasure, hunger,and other intrinsic signals that give our learning a direction to go in. — VagabondSpectre
I am a naturalist because I believe that human beings are the outcomes of natural processes and not separate or special creations. Human beings are as much a part of this world as everything else, and anything that has a causal relationship (like a god creating it) with this world is natural as well. Evolutionary psychology is a relatively new scientific discipline that theorizes that our minds are shaped by natural selection, not just our bodies. This seems like a valid argument to make as learning is essentially natural selection working on shaping minds on very short time scales. You learn by making observations and integrating those observations into a consistent world-view. You change your world-view with new observations. — Harry Hindu
The brain is a biological organ, like every other organ in our bodies, whose structure and function would be shaped by natural selection. The brain is where the mind is, so to speak, and any change to the brain produces a change in the mind, and any monist would have to agree that if natural selection shapes our bodies, it would therefore shape how our brains/minds interpret sensory information and produce better-informed behavioral responses that would improve survival and finding mates. — Harry Hindu
That depends on what knowledge is. We possess knowledge that we don't know we have. Have you ever forgotten something, only later to be reminded?
As usual with this topic (mind-matter) we throw about these terms without really understanding what we are saying, or missing in our explanation. — Harry Hindu
Evolutionary endowed predispositions have these complex effects because they bleed into and up through the complex system we inhabit as organisms (e.g: environment affects hormones, hormones affect genes, genes create different hormone, different hormone acts as neurotransmitter, non-linear effects emerge in the products of affected neural networks), but they are also constrained by instability. When you change low level functionality in tiered complex systems you run the risk of having catastrophic feedback domino effects that destabilize the entire system.Larger brains with higher order thinking evolved to fine-tune it's behavior "on the fly" rather than waiting for natural selection to come up with a solution. You're talking evolutionary psychology here. In essence, natural selection not only filters our genes, but it filters our interpretations of our sensory data (and is this really saying that it is still filtering our genes - epigenetics?). More accurate interpretations of sensory data lead to better survival and more offspring. In essence, natural selection doesn't seem to care about "physical" or "mental" boundaries. It applies to both. — Harry Hindu
Because we have to distinguish between the underlying structure and the emergent product. Appealing to certain concepts without giving a sound basis for their mechanical function is where the random speculation comes in to play. I minimize my own speculation by focusing on the low level structures and learning methodology that approximates more primitive intelligent systems. Ancient arthropods that learned to solve problems like swimming or catching fish (*catching a ball*) did so through very primitive and generic central pattern generator circuits and a low level central decision makers to orchestrate them. In term of what we can know through evidence and modeling, this is an accepted fact of neurobiology. I try to refrain from making hard statements about how high level stuff actually works, because as yet there are too many options and open questions in both the worlds of machine learning and neuroscience.So then, why are we making this dualistic distinction, and using those terms? Why is it when I look at you, I see a brain, not your experiences. — Harry Hindu
What about direct vs. indirect realism? Is how I see the world how it really is - You are a brain and not a mind with experiences (but then how do I explain the existence of my mind?), or is it the case that the brain I see is merely a mentally objectified model of your experiences, and your experiences are real and brains are merely mental models of what is "out there", kind of like how bent sticks in water are really mental representations of bent light, not bent straws. — Harry Hindu
First, you talk about learning, then the next sentence talks about "fixed action responses". I don't see what one has to do with the other unless you are saying that they are the same thing or related. Does one learn "fixed actions", or does one learn novel actions? One might say that instincts, or "fixed action responses" are learned by a species per natural selection, rather than an organism. Any particular "fixed action response" seems like something that can't be changed, yet humans (at least) can cancel those "fixed" actions when they are routed through the "high level stuff". We can prevent our selves from acting on our instincts, so for humans, they aren't so "fixed". They are malleable. Explaining how "fixed action responses" evolved in a species is no different than explaining how an organism evolved (learned) within it's own lifetime. We're simply talking about different lengths, layers or levels in space-time this evolution occurs.Granted the high level stuff is still up for interpretation as to how it works, but what I have laid out is the fundamental ground work upon which basic learning occurs. The specific neural circuitry that causes fixed action responses are known to reside in the spine, and we even seem them driving "fictive actions" in utero (before they are even born) that conform to standard gaits.
Forgetting and remembering is a function of memory, and how memory operates and meshes with the rest of our learning and intelligent systems + body is complicated and poorly understood. But unless you believe that infants are born with per-existing ideas and knowledge that they can forget and remember, we can very safely say that people are not born with preexisting ideas and beliefs (we may not be full blown tabula rasi, but we aren't fully formed rembrants either); only the lowest level functions can be loosely hard-coded (like the default gait, or the coupling of eye muscles, or the good/bad taste of nutritious/poisonous substances). — VagabondSpectre
And then along came computers: fairy-free, fully exorcised hunks of metal that could not be explained without the full lexicon of mentalistic taboo words. "Why isn't my computer printing?" "Because the program doesn't know you replaced your dot-matrix printer with a laser printer. It still thinks it is talking to the dot-matrix and is trying to print the document by asking the printer to acknowledge its message. But the printer doesn't understand the message; it's ignoring it because it expects its input to begin with '%!' The program refuses to give up control while it polls the printer, so you have to get the attention of the monitor so that it can wrest control back from the program. Once the program learns what printer is connected to it, they can communicate." The more complex the system and the more expert the users, the more their technical conversation sounds like the plot of a soap opera.
Behaviorist philosophers would insist that this is all just loose talk. The machines aren't really understanding or trying anything, they would say; the observers are just being careless in their choice of words and are in danger of being seduced into grave conceptual errors. Now, what is wrong with this picture? The philosophers are accusing the computer scientists of fuzzy thinking? A computer is the most legalistic, persnickety, hard-nosed, unforgiving demander of precision and explicitness in the universe. From the accusation you'd think it was the befuddled computer scientists who call a philosopher when their computer stops working rather than the other way around. A better explanation is that computation has finally demystified mentalistic terms. Beliefs are inscriptions in memory, desires are goal inscriptions, thinking is computation, perceptions are inscriptions triggered by sensors, trying is executing operations triggered by a goal. — Steven Pinker
What do you mean by "emergent product", or more specifically, "emergent"? How does the mind - something that is often described as "immaterial", or "non-physical" - "emerge" from something that isn't often described as "immaterial", or "non-physical", but is often described as the opposite - "material", or "physical"? Are you talking about causation or representation? Or are you simply talking about different views of the same thing? Bodies "emerge" from interacting organs. Galaxies "emerge" from interacting stars and hydrogen gas, but here we are talking about different perspective of the same "physical" things. The "emergence" is a product of our different perspectives of the same thing. Do galaxies still "emerge" from stellar interactions even when there are no observers from a particular vantage point? There seems to be a stark difference between explaining "emergence" as a causal process or as different views of the same thing. The former requires one to explain how different things "physical" can cause "non-physical" things. The latter requires one to explain how different perspectives can lead one to see the same thing differently, which as to do with the relationship between an observer and what is being observed (inside the The Milky Way galaxy as opposed to being outside of it, or inside your mind as opposed to outside of it). So which is it, or is it something else?Because we have to distinguish between the underlying structure and the emergent product. Appealing to certain concepts without giving a sound basis for their mechanical function is where the random speculation comes in to play. I minimize my own speculation by focusing on the low level structures and learning methodology that approximates more primitive intelligent systems. Ancient arthropods that learned to solve problems like swimming or catching fish (*catching a ball*) did so through very primitive and generic central pattern generator circuits and a low level central decision makers to orchestrate them. In term of what we can know through evidence and modeling, this is an accepted fact of neurobiology. I try to refrain from making hard statements about how high level stuff actually works, because as yet there are too many options and open questions in both the worlds of machine learning and neuroscience. — VagabondSpectre
Well, I was talking about if I cut open your skull, I can see your brain, not your experiences. Even if I cut open your brain, I still would't see something akin to your experiences. I've seen brain surgeons manipulate a patient's speech when touching certain areas of the brain. What is the experience like? Is it that you know what say, but your mouth isn't working (knowing what to say seems to be different than actually saying it, or knowing how to say it (think of Steven Hawking), or is that your entire mind is befuddled and you don't know what to say when the brain surgeon touches that area of your brain with an electric probe? How does a electric probe touching a certain area of the brain ("physical" interaction) allow the emergence of confusion ("non-physical") in the mind?Also, you don't see my brain; you don't even see my experiences; you experience my actions as they express, which emerge from my experiences, as orchestrated by my brain, within the dynamics and constraints of the external world, and then re-filtered back up through your own sensory apparatus. — VagabondSpectre
Solutions to hard problems often come in looking at the same thing differently. The hard problem is a product of dualism. Maybe if we abandoned dualism in favor of a some flavor of monism, then the hard problem goes away. But then what is to say that the mind is of the same stuff as the brain, so the why do they appear so differently? Is it because we are simply taking on different perspectives of the same thing, like I said before? Is it the case that:We cannot address the hard problem of consciousness, so why try? We're at worst self-deluded into thinking we have free will, and we bumble about a physically consistent (enough) world, perceiving it through secondary apparatus which turn measurements into signals, from which models and features are derived, and used to anticipate future measurements in ways that are beneficial to the objectives that drive the learning. Objectives that drive learning are where things start to become hokey, but we can at least make crude assertions like: "pain sensing neurons" (measuring devices that check for physical stress and temperature) are a part of our low level reward system that gives our learning neural networks direction (e.g: learn to walk without hurting yourself). — VagabondSpectre
Then the mind "thinking" how to catch a ball is the same as the brain "performing" mathematical calculations? — Harry Hindu
Well, that's a first that a philosophical question has actually been answered. Maybe you should get a nobel prize and this thread should be a sticky. The fact that you used a scientific explanation to answer a philosophical question certainly makes me give you the benefit of the doubt, though. :wink:There are a few obvious implications that come from understanding the 'low level" workings of biological intelligence (and how it expresses through various systems). I would say that i have addressed and answered the main subject of the thread, and beyond. A homunculus can learn to catch a ball if it is wired correctly with a sufficiently complex neural network, sufficient and quick enough senses, and the correct reward signal (and of course the body must be capable of doing so). — VagabondSpectre
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