Do you wish to say all these forms of "Consciousness" (experience, psych, mentality) are to the same form, degree and intensity? or just that they are all of the same metaphysical (ontological) kind?Yes, human experience requires a functioning human, just as canine experience requires a functioning dog, snail experience required a functioning snail, and rock experience requires a functioning rock. — bert1
But my goal is not to "disagree" with them but to "engage" in a discussion of ideas, an exchange of thoughts. One discussion rarely changes anyone's basic world view but hopefully it stimulates one to explore other ideas. I know the main value of engaging here is the reading I do elsewhere in an attempt to understand the discussions and clarify and defend my views.Yes, but there is little value in saying things that people can interpret to fit their own view if what you intend to do is disagree with them. But maybe you are a more agreeable person that I am, and maybe you will keep people interested long enough to have a conversation with them that I will miss out on — bert1
Well I freely admit language is a problem and language is imprecise. Defining terms like mind, mentality, experience, consciousness are a major problem in philosophy of mind. I don’t claim to have a definition that would satisfy a mathematician or materialist. This is part of the so called “hard problem of consciousness”. We experience directly (all of our thoughts, inquiries and answers start there in the mental)and yet we can’t measure or quantify it and we only infer its presence in other entities.Present your definition of mentality, please. The Stanford article on panpsychism refers frequently to mentality, but I couldn't find a clear definition of the word in that context. Being a math person I prefer an intelligible presentation of basic definitions. — jgill
That was in reference to sharply demarcating life from non life. A distinction I think is arbitrary. The “strange attractor” quality of such systems is worthy of philosophy thought and speculation. If you expect the precision of applied and theoretical math in philosophy you are likely to be disappointed. Metaphysics and ontology in particular are speculative.Is this what you mean: "self organizing and self sustaining systems in physics, chemistry and biology." ? — jgill
If you expect the precision of applied and theoretical math in philosophy you are likely to be disappointed. Metaphysics and ontology in particular are speculative. — prothero
This is where one's view about the most fundamental nature of reality comes into play.Thus in some way processes themselves might be self-informing. — schopenhauer1
That's interesting. Let's say that's true, that phenomenologically, there is a sharp distinction between dichromatic and trichromatic experience. And let's also assume that these phenomenologies are closely correlated with biological systems. I don't really know the biology of sight at all, but can we find a similarly sharp distinction in the biology with which to correlate the phenomenology? Or can we find borderline cases of the physical biology? — bert1
Yes, there is a sharp division in the biology, to do with how many kinds of cones and how many channels there are in the optic nerve. — Pfhorrest
What does the word 'aware' in this sentence mean? It can't mean 'conscious' because you're implying that awareness exists but saying that consciousness does not exist. — bert1
When you say “red isn’t a property of the real world” you engage in what Whitehead would call an “artificial bifurcation of nature”. We are part of nature, our perceptions are part of nature. The division of the world into primary and secondary qualities per Locke is an artificial one that leads us into many of our philosophical difficulties — prothero
So my objection to panpsychism is that I think people are mistaking the descriptive capacity of appropriate systems for actual physical entities. — Graeme M
Should qualia on that definition be regarded as consciousness? — Graeme M
When I'm talking about consciousness, I mean sense 1, and this is what I believe most panpsychists and people like Chalmers who go on about the hard problem mean. The focus of definition 1 is on the awareness, not what one is aware of. There is a list of categories of content, but only to indicate that is the kind of thing that one's awareness is often aware of.1) the state of being conscious; awareness of one's own existence, sensations, thoughts, surroundings, etc.
2) the thoughts and feelings, collectively, of an individual or of an aggregate of people: — dictionary.com
I understand the notion. Apples are not “red” when not being perceived by a “subject” with an “appropriate” sensory system.I don't think I am positing some kind of division, I am saying that red doesn't exist. It is not a property of the world. At least, not in the everyday sense we think of red, which is to say that we think of it as a property of objects that we perceive. — Graeme M
Bert1 (I think) would make a distinction between qualia (content) and consciousness (awareness of content) but I don’t make that distinction (he can elaborate). For me consciousness depends on experience not vice versa (deprived of input consciousness deteriorates). Consciousness (self-aware, self-reflective) is a high level of integrated unified form of experience which is in my view relatively rare in nature. You seem to wish to make the brain state and the experience (identical) thereby eliminating the need for any further discussion or explanation (eliminative materialism or physicalism). I do not claim that human experience can be had without a human brain (there is a one to one correspondence). I just claim that the scientific, material, physical, quantitative descriptions of brain states do not complete, adequately or satisfactorily describe the entire “process” of experience. Much like describing your travels (no matter how complete) to someone else is no substitute for them taking the trip. The experiential component of nature is more that can be described in purely mechanistic deterministic or materialist quantitative terms. The content of human experience and thought is more that can be described with language.but it seems to me that consciousness (for brevity, let's call consciousness qualia so we aren't being confused about physical states of awareness etc.) describes physical brain state — Graeme M
Most mental processing, indeed a lot of creative output and problem solving, memory retrieval does not occur in our conscious awareness. (Examples are those solutions that appear in the morning, those answers that pop into our head after we stopped asking the question). “Consciousness” is just the tip of the iceberg of mental activity (purposeful, intelligent) that takes place in the human brain. Training is what we do to teach ourselves to accomplish tasks without conscious effort or reflection (sports, musicians, military).Behaviorally, patients can in many cases respond to sensory input without a conscious experience of that perception. That suggests, to me at least, that qualia describe computational outcomes within the processing system — Graeme M
Qualia are the result of perceptual process but all properties of nature are the result of process and relationship. So the distinction between qualia and properties is artificial (bifurcation of nature).My take on this is that qualia, as we call them, aren't real things, they are descriptions of the internal brain states. — Graeme M
I am not an advocate of “rocks are conscious”. Rocks are simple aggregates. Rocks lack the complex integrated structure that would give any kind of unified integrated experience. You will have to address Bert1 on that subject.without the agent and its computations, a description does not occur. Descriptions are information, information is ubiquitous, describing agents are not. Rocks do not undertake those kinds of computations, at least not so far as I know. — Graeme M
Other materials have different interactions, relationships and processes related to that wavelength.If red were a genuine physical property of the universe, then it seems possible other material objects could also experience red — Graeme M
No, not rocks as composites or aggregates.Do rocks compute information about internal states and reliably respond to those computations? — Graeme M
Only certain forms and only when you have a certain definition of consciousness. There are many forms of panpsychism (I have one and Bert1 has another, but there are many other versions). The basic notion is that some form of mind, experience, mentality, psyche or “conscious quality” is ubiquitous in nature (to the core) and that physical monisms, and dualisms are mistaken ontologies that give rise to the “hard problem of consciousness”.After all, isn't it the phenomenal character of consciousness with which we are concerned in panpsychism? Or have I misunderstood the claim? — Graeme M
I don't think so, no. Consciousness is an essential prerequisite for an experience. If I'm conscious, it means I'm capable of experience. — bert1
I think that experience, perception and feeling (prehension) precede (are a requirement for) life and the higher form of mentality that we call “consciousness”. Most of nature is “non or unconscious experience” but I concede you are not alone (or even a minority) in your view.For me, an experience happens when a conscious system undergoes a change. — bert1
Consciousness is an essential prerequisite for an experience. If I'm conscious, it means I'm capable of experience. Exactly what I experience is not yet determined merely by the fact of my being conscious. What I experience are the qualia, and these change. We can't identify consciousness and qualia because qualia change and consciousness doesn't. — bert1
The basic notion is that some form of mind, experience, mentality, psyche or “conscious quality” is ubiquitous in nature (to the core) and that physical monisms, and dualisms are mistaken ontologies that give rise to the “hard problem of consciousness”. — prothero
I don't know very much about IIT, though what little I do know of it didn't lead me to think it promoted panpsychism. As you say, I believe the theory claims to model information integration mathematically in order to predict what systems might be conscious (I guess on the basis that consciousness is enabled by complex bi-directional and integrated information flows). But that still depends on some kind of computational system (the idea being that complex feed-forward/feedback circuits enables complex computations) so I am not sure how panpsychism could be implied by IIT? I guess I am still not clear on just what panpsychism really says. I had a quick skim of a couple of definitions but they seem to be sketchy, talking only of mentality and thought and "minds", whatever those things are. — Graeme M
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