I think one's metaphysical view of the nature of "reality" (worldview) is important. It profoundly affects the way that individual makes decisions and approaches problems.Not that that really means much, since it’s such a trivial thing.
E.g. if free will is just the absence of determination then every electron has free will. That makes it clear that that is a pretty useless sense of “free will”, — Pfhorrest
I'm not sure I understand why we even use expressions like "consciousness" or "experience" when speaking of non-living entities. Do the planets have the "experiences" of revolving about the sun? Does a virtual particle - which may only be a mathematical device - have "consciousness" or "experience"? Do quarks have free will? Why is it important for some people to apply these and similar words removed from a context of living beings? — jgill
Actually drawing a bright line between the living and the non living and the experiential and the non experiential is not such an easy task as you imply. It is precisely in attempting to draw such a line that one begins to consider, becoming over being, and process and relationship over being and properties. The task is also what leads some to consider panpsychism over mechanistic and deterministic approaches to nature and reality — prothero
Well language is always a problem being imprecise and subject to interpretation, but I think the difference is more than that.I think the trouble with consciousness is probably language - by creating terms to describe our internal experience we have given concrete existence to something that isn't really there. We report that we "see" things, that "we" feel emotions, that the subjective perspective of our corporeal selves is somehow a separate entity. — Graeme M
Perhaps fundamental to the way I present my view of "panpsychism" are terms like "mind in nature" or "panexperientialism", "non conscious experience" , "mentality", "psychialism". — prothero
Can we state that awareness is not self-awareness if we do not yet understand what awareness is? — Jonathan Hardy
But all of those still follow a nothing to something jump. A good example of the confusion might be the following. Dichromatic vision to Trichromatic vision is not a step up in the gradient of chromatics. It is dichromatic or not dichromatic, or trichromatic and not trichromatic. — Jonathan Hardy
Basically if what we ‘experience’ - our ‘experiencing’ - is what we call consciousness, — I like sushi
I think language is important and I try to avoid using terms like “consciousness” in ways that violate the common uses and understandings of the term. Language is imprecise and it is important to try to agree on definitions lest discussions become more disputes about usage of words than about ideas. — prothero
Rocks as simple aggregates would not be expected to have any unified experience. I think calling a rock "conscious" is part of what makes "panpsychism" seem silly to a lot of people. Asserting the individual constiuents of rocks "quantum events" have some form of non-conscious proto-experience is an entirely different matter. — prothero
I think saying things like "electrons are conscious" loses a great number of any audience that might be listening. — prothero
That is why panpsychism seems so untenable - it's explaining some claimed quality of the world that doesn't seem to be there. I can't for the life of me see why anyone would want to say that a rock has some kind of awareness, at least not in the sense we typically mean. — Graeme M
What I am suggesting is that we are mistaken when we claim that consciousness exists because we are aware of it. — Graeme M
I am perfectly happy to describe the “mental” as a process. The corollary to that concession is that IMHO the entire universe is a process “Process and Reality A.N. Whitehead”. I have a process-relationship view of nature versus an object –properties view. The most fundamental units of nature are “spacetime events, occasions”. These spacetime events for the type of panpsychist that I represent are not purely physical in nature but also possess a “experiential or mental pole, Whitehead used the term “prehension”. This for me is a type of “neutral monism”. I like the parsimony of monism versus any form of dualism or other plurality ontology or metaphysics. The physical and experiential are inseparable components of all processes and eventsSo I am not implying that the "mental" as it were is not real - there must be some actual thing happening - but that the qualities of the mental are not genuine physical qualities. Instead, they are descriptions of process. Red for example isn't a real property of the world. It's a description of how a physical quality of the world affects my body — Graeme M
Again this takes us into the philosophy of perception and will sidetrack the notion of “panpsychism”. Just for reference I like Whitehead on this subject as well, with his theory of perception “causal efficacy, presentational immediacy and symbolic reference”. A good introduction by Steven Shaviro http://www.shaviro.com/Blog/?p=1274 who I find in general to be a good interpreter of modern philosophy (some writers speak to me, others do not ).I suggest that if we move from thinking that our experience is a representation of the world and view it as the state of internal information manipulation, we no longer need to explain "consciousness — Graeme M
I think our perceptions represent the world to us well enough for us to function. Granted our perceptions are limited and may mislead us regarding the nature of reality and science has shown many of our perceptions or common sense notions to be incorrect. For me this includes the notions of the larger world being inert, mechanical and deterministic and devoid of any form of “will, psychical, mental or experiential qualities”.In the end, the world we inhabit (as opposed to the world without) is an abstracted model, perhaps something like Graziano's attension schema. — Graeme M
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.