not following 'you' — Isaac
No. The neuroscientist is not correlating with experiences he has. He's correlating with the spoken words the subject is reporting, on the assumption that these refer to something shared - the public concept of pain. — Isaac
Here's the thing i would guard against: — Banno
How am I aware of the signals being sent from my thalamus? If I were conscious of it, I think I would know. — Luke
Why do people in ordinary language occasionally say things like, "the pain must be in your head"? — Marchesk
... These are then modulated, filtered and suppressed in turn by models in the frontal cortex which is where cultural mediation, semantics, other somatosensory feedback and environmental cues come in to play. — Isaac
You're aware of your arm movements aren't you? Well, they're signals from your proprioception system through your cerebellum. — Isaac
I've not changed what you're aware of. — Isaac
Am I aware of my arm movements or am I aware of my brain function? — Luke
The last part of the system I described to Luke
... These are then modulated, filtered and suppressed in turn by models in the frontal cortex which is where cultural mediation, semantics, other somatosensory feedback and environmental cues come in to play.
— Isaac — Isaac
...on the assumption that these refer to something shared - the public concept... — Isaac
Let's say you had some lesion within your cerebellum, you think your arm is doing one thing, but it's actually doing another. What is it you're 'aware of' there? You can't say "my arm", you're obviously not aware of your arm. — Isaac
You're aware of the (faulty) signals from your cerebellum. You assume they're telling you about your arm. — Isaac
The last part of the system I described to Luke
... These are then modulated, filtered and suppressed in turn by models in the frontal cortex which is where cultural mediation, semantics, other somatosensory feedback and environmental cues come in to play.
— Isaac — Isaac
So the public referent to "pain in your head" comes from a bunch of technical jargon? — Marchesk
...on the assumption that these refer to something shared - the public concept... — Isaac
The public concept is of a first person experience. — Marchesk
What I'm conscious of is what I think my arm is doing, even if it's doing something else. What I am not conscious of are the brain signals that help to produce or inform my conscious thought about what my arm is doing. — Luke
I'd imagine that I wouldn't need to make assumptions about my arm if I was already aware of the signals from my cerebellum. — Luke
But why stop there? I don't see why I shouldn't also be aware of the lesion, if I were to actually have these superpowers of awareness about my unconscious bodily functions. — Luke
What I'm conscious of is what I think my arm is doing, even if it's doing something else. What I am not conscious of are the brain signals that help to produce or inform my conscious thought about what my arm is doing.
— Luke
The second part is just a technical definition of the first. — Isaac
What do you mean by a "technical definition"? — Luke
There's the bodily functions that produce your awareness, and then there's the stuff about which you are aware. — Luke
There's the bodily functions that produce your awareness, and then there's the stuff about which you are aware.
— Luke
Well then the stuff about which you are aware cannot have material form — Isaac
If we talk about being aware of 'the location of my arm' in the non-technical sense (the object of my mental awareness phenomenologically), then any conclusions drawn from that awareness are about that object - the phenomenological 'location of my arm'. At no point can any analysis done on the non-technical object of your awareness reveal anything at all about the technical 'location of my arm arm'. — Isaac
If you want to maintain a non-technical sense of the objects of your awareness then that's entirely your lookout. But all the conclusions you draw from it remain in that realm. It cannot be said to be the case that these objects are private, or unique, or any other such universal. It can only be said that the seem to you to be private, or unique, or any other such, because the objects we're talking about are the mental representations as they sem to you.
I don't see how it's of any public interest how things happen to seem to you. — Isaac
There's the bodily functions that produce your awareness, and then there's the stuff about which you are aware.
— Luke
Well then the stuff about which you are aware cannot have material form — Isaac
Why not? — Luke
I'm just trying to get you to acknowledge that we have first-person perspectives at all. Do you have pain sensations? — Luke
There are no subjects or subjectivity? That's one solution, I suppose. I guess the discussion on the topic can be closed now. — Luke
You've just defined, quite clearly, that my first person perspectives are not about anything we can between us refer to as 'pain sensations' The only object that we could both agree constituted a referent for 'pain sensations' is a public object. If you only want to talk about subjective experience as being about objects as they appear to you, never relating them to public object, then the one cannot ever reveal anything about the other, they're two different objects. — Isaac
If you maintain that what you're aware of is 'the location of my arm', then you've immediately rendered all conversation about it meaningless. — Isaac
I can't comment at all about 'the location of your arm' in that sense. I can't use the term, it has no referent I can identify. So what's it's purpose linguistically? — Isaac
Obviously you don't need to make any inferences to have pain sensations, but you changed the subject to talk about brain signals and the third-person perspective - a perspective from which pain sensations disappear - instead. — Luke
It was your example. Your example was about my awareness. As you said: "You're aware of your arm movements aren't you?" — Luke
You keep conflating my awareness of the location of my arm with the location of my arm. All I can say is it's your own example: "you think your arm is doing one thing, but it's actually doing another." — Luke
Only if you adopt a certain philosophical position that makes it impossible. — Marchesk
What is your alternative by which we could carve up the sensed world by private means and yet still tell each other what we'd done? — Isaac
I don't follow. You keep slipping in words like 'you' as if they referred to something other than the brain that I'm talking about. If 'you' is just, by definition, the bearer of conscious awareness, then obviously 'you' might infer pain sensations or 'you' might not. — Isaac
There's no fact of the matter for us to discuss because you've defined it as being the bearer of whatever your conscious awareness happens to be. One might feel one is inferring everything, or not. Or feel like one is the King of Arabia, or in contact with God.. — Isaac
No. This seems to be a running theme here. You cannot declare something to be an awareness of... as a subjective truth. The awareness bit is the subjective truth, you are having an experience of being aware. What you claim to be aware of is an object in the shared world. It's a mutual matter, amenable to empirical evidence, whether you are in fact aware of what you claim to be aware of. That you are aware is without question. The fact of the matter regarding what it is you are aware of is not without question. — Isaac
Infer them from what? — Luke
Similary, my awareness of my arm being at location A is without question, but the fact of my arm being at location A is not without question. — Luke
Intersubjectivity which includes attribution of mental content to others. I know my own conscious experiences and assume other people have similar ones. Mirror neurons play a role in this, allowing us to simulate what others probably feel. — Marchesk
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