It seems like a good starting point. — Malcolm Lett
the broad options are monism, dualism and triadicism
The point about the Buddhist approach is that it never refines ‘consciousness’ as some kind of mystical whatever
My own opinion is that it will ultimately be proven to be merely an artifact of those other qualities — Malcolm Lett
What would be a key text, or some key texts, for this approach please?the triadicism of a global systems viewpoint.
Artefact - an object made by a human being, typically one of cultural or historical interest.
"gold and silver artefacts"
2.
something observed in a scientific investigation or experiment that is not naturally present but occurs as a result of the preparative or investigative procedure. — Wayfarer
My own opinion is that it[ consciousness] will ultimately be proven to be merely an artifact of those other qualities — Malcolm Lett
if the
brain is making inferences about the causes of its sensations then it
must have a model of the causal relationships (connections) among
(hidden) states of the world that cause sensory input. It follows that
neuronal connections encode (model) causal connections that conspire
to produce sensory information.
There's so many different lines of thought taken to understand consciousness. In my own line of thought I've intentionally taken a spell to form my own theories, free of priming/framing from the theories of others. It's a hard job to then try to get one's head around the different views available.
I just came across an effort to categories the different theories.
https://canonizer.com/topic/88-Theories-of-Consciousness
It seems like a good starting point. — Malcolm Lett
No real project, just an interest in feasible alternatives to monisms and dualisms in the philosophy of mind. — jkg20
However, ‘vagueness’ is not ‘nothing’. It’s still something - just something not very definite. Maybe something like a range of possibilities, out of which something definite condenses. — Wayfarer
the initial indeterminateness of which you speak is to be thought of as the ball balanced at the apex of the dome, — jkg20
What, though, stops the ball from just going straight back to a balanced initial state, i.e. even if the symmetry of indeterminateness is broken, randomly or otherwise, what stops it from simply reestablishing itself? — jkg20
So, it looks like the future, whatever it is, at least must be something that is both real, yet does not arise from indeterminateness. That looks like it contradicts the kind of triadicism described, which requires that all reality arise from indeterminateness. — jkg20
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