Could one of you, or anybody, explain why zero was a "troublesome" concept to integrate into science? Was the issue forced by the success of math in making predictions? — frank
Does anyone want to comment on his criticism of computational theory of mind? — schopenhauer1
Zero: The Biography of a Dangerous Idea : — Gnomon
ṣĭfr in Arabic, means literally: the void. — Olivier5
is pointless to talk of 0 things and nonsense to talk of negative things. How could you have -3 tables? — khaled
You're saying numbers had to become abstract in order for zero to be accepted? — frank
Could one of you, or anybody, explain why zero was a "troublesome" concept to integrate into science? Was the issue forced by the success of math in making predictions? — frank
criticism of computational theory of mind — schopenhauer1
A TM is designed so as to be materially divorced from reality. A biosemiotic system is evolved to be intimately connected to the construction of its material reality.
The two ontologies are so wildly at odds that there is no point making "computational" arguments until you can show you get the difference. — apokrisis
The eliminativists want to keep point to one part of the equation and keep forgetting to address the part we are actually trying to figure out which is "what" (metaphysically) is experience as opposed to the matter which is causing or associated with the experience. — schopenhauer1
Of course, the overriding thing he hasn't gotten to is how absence of material processes create the form, yadayada which I am sure is the bulk of the book. — schopenhauer1
It just seems to me that at the end, we are going to get a lot of what the machinery behaves like, but then lose how behavior becomes something like the internal colors and textures of our internal subjective self. — schopenhauer1
It does provide interesting ideas for how biology can be considered information rather than mechanistic, but that's not answering the question I am interested in. — schopenhauer1
It seems to me that even behavior patterns of matter and their statistical tendencies for this or that, are still not quite getting at the question. It does provide interesting ideas for how biology can be considered information rather than mechanistic, but that's not answering the question I am interested in. — schopenhauer1
attentional spotlight is what emerges from the active suppression of every other possible state of interpretative response. We are conscious of "something" because the brain has just filtered out "everything else" that might have been the case — apokrisis
Does this mean that experience is not intentionally directed but emerges as an act of subconscious attentional focus? — magritte
Does this mean that experience is not intentionally directed but emerges as an act of subconscious attentional focus? — magritte
It is more complicated. But as a general principle, yes. — apokrisis
Are you now upholding that consciousness (as differentiated from the total mind within which it is embedded) cannot hold top-down effects upon the CNS via its consciously performed choices during times of conscious deliberation? — javra
that which is too novel or too demanding to be handled by automatic routine becomes escalated for a full brain attentional response — apokrisis
I wouldn’t agree that habit level processes are unconscious and thus that only attentional processing is conscious. — apokrisis
I'm not sure life and consciousness are exclusice about that, though. A positively charged object is understood in terms of what it's missing. Right? — frank
Yes. That seems to be the meaning of Deacon's term "Absence" ; the pull of the future, so to speak. Apparently, only humans can imagine a non-existent future state, and then work to make it real. So the purpose of Purpose is to convert Absence (lack, want) into Presence (possession, fulfillment). :smile:End-directed forms of causality, or purpose, is clearly an aspect of life and consciousness. The term "abstential" is supposed to pick out the object of purposeful behavior. — frank
End-directed forms of causality, or purpose, is clearly an aspect of life and consciousness — frank
"absential" is supposed to pick out the object of purposeful behavior — frank
This is chapter one. He talks about causality in relation to a child throwing a stone. He points out that none of the atomic information we may have access to would explain the rock's motion as well as knowing the mental information associated with the throw.
Then he points to the abstential associated with the child's purpose. — frank
I dont know if it diminishes his point, but absence is an aspect of a lot of things, such as a valley or a positive charge which results from atoms that are missing some of the electrons they would need to be neutral. True? — frank
I dont know if it diminishes his point, but absence is an aspect of a lot of things, such as a valley or a positive charge which results from atoms that are missing some of the electrons they would need to be neutral. — frank
Absence should incorporate enough of the unknown background environment to explain symbiosis and forward evolution. — magritte
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