It takes about half a second to form one mental image and then start replacing it with the next. This is no surprise as neurons conduct their signals at earthbound rates of under 100mph and even way less where the axons are small and uninsulated.
So the materiality of the mind-brain shows up in the speed at which thoughts and images can be formed, or other things like that the brain uses as much energy as muscle. — apokrisis
What I'm looking at here is the immaterial side to the mind. — TheMadFool
You mean the symbolic aspect? The mind is an organism’s model of the world. To the degree it can symbolically model space and time situations, it is outside of those situations as a point of view. It can switch freely among different memory-based reconstructions.
There is a physical time and energy cost involved. The imagination has a standard refresh rate. But that cost is the same for any act of reality modelling. So there is no further physical limitation on the switching of views. The leaps from one point of view to another can be as small or large as one likes. The time and energy cost is there, but for the modelling, it is a built-in constant, not proportional to any actual real world physical effort. — apokrisis
One could say that a memory of a place is not the same as physically being at that place... — TheMadFool
....but the question is what's the difference between being physically at a place and a memory of that place? Do the two not fade into each other - there's a continuity there, right? — TheMadFool
Don't think this works, ↪TheMadFool.
Imagining standing on the Moon ≠ standing on the Moon.
The memory ≠ the remembered (as you also noted). — jorndoe
Case closed then surely? — apokrisis
Space exploration symbolized for Mitchell what it did for his nation—a technological triumph of historic proportions, an unprecedented demonstration of scientific achievement, and extraordinary potential for new discoveries. What Mitchell did not anticipate was a return trip that triggered something even more powerful. As he gazed at Earth floating in the vastness of space and contemplated the history and hopes of humankind on that lonely blue sphere, he was engulfed by a profound sense of universal connectedness.
“I realized that the story of ourselves as told by science—our cosmology, our religion— was incomplete and likely flawed. I recognized that the Newtonian idea of separate, independent, discreet things in the universe wasn’t a fully accurate description. What was needed was a new story of who we are and what we are capable of becoming.”...
After returning to Earth, he left NASA, grew a beard and divorced his wife. He founded the Institute of Noetic Sciences, which advocated exploring the universe by means of inquiry that lay outside of science and religion. He sought out South American shamans and Haitian Vodou priests, promoted the benefits of Tibetan Buddhist lucid dreaming, visited the homes of people who claimed their children could bend spoons with their minds. He went on Jack Paar’s talk show with the self-proclaimed psychic Uri Geller. Two more marriages came and went. He got deep, very deep, into theories about extraterrestrials. He had a posthumous cameo in the cache of John Podesta’s hacked emails that WikiLeaks published this year, which included messages Mitchell sent to Podesta (a U.F.O. buff) asking him to discuss the possibility of disclosing the federal government’s records of alien contact. He signed the emails “6th man to walk on the Moon.”
Well, for one, while on his sofa at home remembering back, he wouldn't need an oxygen tank. :) — jorndoe
Start by telling me what isn't different. I'm not sure how you think anything is the same.
Besides, the moon landing was faked. It was all shot on a Hollywood backlot and they burnt the set straight after. It's now a golf driving range. — apokrisis
Consider then the matter of reality simulation. — TheMadFool
Recall my previous reply which says it is correct to think that the brain's experience of reality is "just an information processing model". So sure. Matrix away — apokrisis
Are you agreeing with me? — apokrisis
SO your argument is that because these two images are next to each other, it follows that this page is not material. Physicalism is false. — Banno
If you agree with me then, I agree with you I guess. — TheMadFool
Can Neil Armstrong tell the difference between a mind simulation of the moon and actually being there on the moon? He can't, can he? Doesn't that imply the sameness of the two? — TheMadFool
The more interesting question seems to be this: did Neil Armstrong actually go to the moon? — TheMadFool
So, you're sure that this world you're experiencing is NOT a simulation? Descartes?I thought I said it didn’t imply that. Are you now claiming the physical consequences are identical? — apokrisis
For all practical purposes. — apokrisis
even if knowledge was reducible to "information", or qualia was, then that does not entail all is reducible to "information" — jorndoe
That’s pragmatism for you. If your thought experiment specifies that there is no possible evidence that could make a difference then that is what you have specified.
But now you have to do your bit and prove that such a simulation is a realistic exercise. Build the kit that you claim could do this job. Seems like an idle fantasy of someone with minimal scientific understanding to me. A lame plot for a lamer movie. — apokrisis
For all practical purposes is a pragmatic approach towards the problem of incompleteness of every scientific theory and the usage of asymptotical approximations - Wiki
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.