To be candid, "Panpsychism" sounds whackdoodle to me. So I will observe to see if it's me who needs to learn something. — tim wood
if "mind" "emerges" from the physical, the emerging from one type of realm (the physical), into a completely different kind (the subjective, internal, "feels like", qualia, mental) state needs to then be explained in non-dualist terms. — schopenhauer1
If you want to be a panpsychist, the best way to do so is to attack emergentism as hard as you can. If you can say that emergentism isn't true, and that consciousness is real, then you can say that consciousness is fundamental. — Pneumenon
As I asked schopenhauer1, what would an 'explanation look like? What properties of an explanation are missing from "neurons firing seem to cause what we experience as thoughts"? — Isaac
these behaviours are not the definition (unless you are a behaviourist) of thoughts and experiences. — bert1
The definition of thoughts and experiences involves something other than a behaviour. — bert1
What properties of an explanation are missing from "neurons firing seem to cause what we experience as thoughts"? — Isaac
But, notwithstanding the above, the thing I really want to focus on here is how you would know that you have your sought after 'explanation'. What would it do that 'neurons firing' doesn't? — Isaac
And what would such an 'explanation' look like? How would you recognise that some proposition constituted an 'explanation'? I ask because such avoidance seems to dog these kinds of discussions. Some physical relationship is proposed by the (non-panpsychic) physicalist, and the 'hard problem' crowd will inevitably respond with "but that's just a description of how, not an explanation accounting for it". What I've yet to hear is a reasonable definition of what such an explanation should be like.
We can do how - neurons firing seem to cause what we experience as thoughts.
We can do why - having the experience of thoughts seems to help integrate information better than letting individual circuits act independently.
What's missing? — Isaac
Me: This does make sense. Emergence is its own inexplicable alchemy. The reason is the next level is assumed in the previous one. — schopenhauer1
Are properties something inhering in matter or is it presumed to have something that gives the measurements property? I mentioned the possibly arbitrary divide in Locke between primary and secondary qualities, for example. But what are properties really without experiential knowledge? Properties seem to be something that are observed, not necessarily an actual "real" thing out there. — schopenhauer1
Sentience — bert1
awareness — bert1
the capacity to feel — bert1
the capacity to experience — bert1
The problems I see is the physicalists (presumably elimitavists/functionalists) are often switching the causes of mental states with the explanations of metaphysical equivalence of how physical states are indeed mental states. — schopenhauer1
That doesn't help, I'm afraid. It's not more clearly identifiable than 'conciousness'. — Isaac
If I said "the activity of neurons is Sentience" you'd want to deny that, right? So on what grounds, that's what I'm trying to get at. — Isaac
As in 'appears to respond to stimuli'? Still sounds behavioural to me. — Isaac
Feel what? — Isaac
And 'experience' here means? Is it the same as awareness? Does a rock 'experience' being dropped from a cliff? I'd say it doesn't because it is not aware of the event, but you offered this in addition to awareness, so I'm guessing you mean something more? — Isaac
How is the issue of conciousness any different from any other investigation. Why the need for 'the hard problem' epiphet, dualism, panpsychism, all these ideas which require us to add totally new, otherwise unjustified, concepts to our world-views. — Isaac
'Consciousness' is impossible to define except by appeal to consciousness, unfortunately. — bert1
Attend to an object. Then attend to your awareness of the object. — bert1
The activity of neurons is the activity of neurons. Sentience is sentience. If you want to say that, despite definitions, these too things are, in actual fact, the same thing, you need a theory that connects them. — bert1
Panpsychism simply assumes that Mind is more fundamental to the real world than Matter. Since my own worldview is similar to ancient notions of Panpsychism, I could go into great detail to explain to you why it is a necessary assumption to make sense of the mental phenomena (e.g. Consciousness) of the world. But as an introduction, I'll just link to an article by philosopher Phillip Goff. :nerd:I will "attend" to see if anyone will say simply what the idea behind pansychism is. — tim wood
Question to you, Gnomon: Are you an endorser and apologist for the substance of this article by Goff? Do you stand for him? It's short enough to reproduce here, where we could dismember it - a tedious exercise. But unless you or someone will represent him, not a best use of time. Or do you have something better?I'll just link to an article by philosopher Phillip Goff. — Gnomon
What I'm struggling to understand is the distinction you're both drawing between A causes B and 'a description of of how A causes B'. What does 'a description of of how A causes B' contain that is not just more A causes B type explanations?
If I asked what causes a car to go, someone might say "give it some gas and release the clutch". If I asked how that caused the car to go, they'd say "the gas enters the chamber, explodes, causes the crankshaft to turn, which connects to the gears, which drive the axle which turns the wheels". It would still be a series of A causes B type propositions.
I could say "but how does the turning of the axle turn the wheels?". I might get something in terms of friction causing neighbouring molecules to transfer momentum.
"But how does friction cause neighbouring molecules to transfer momentum?". I might get something I probably wouldn't understand about the inter molecular forces, but nonetheless...
"But how does the-thing-I-don't-understand-about-molecular-forces cause neighbouring molecules to transfer momentum under friction?"
... And so on. — Isaac
At https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/panpsychism/Does panpsychism imply a piece of rock is self-aware? — jgill
There is a radical break between matter in various processes and arrangements and observers/internal states/feeling/awareness. — schopenhauer1
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