How do you become aware of these signals? — Luke
Your working memory rehearses the connection between these signals and various areas of the brain dealing with sematic content of one sort or another. When you think about a "What am I feeling right now" type of question in any of it's many guises, your hippocampus enables a return to the working memory of a filtered selection of these signals - ie they re-signal those centres. That, to you, feels like 'awarenss of...' — Isaac
Please point out the part where you said you become aware of the signals. — Luke
When you think about a "What am I feeling right now" type of question in any of it's many guises, your hippocampus enables a return to the working memory of a filtered selection of these signals - ie they re-signal those centres. That, to you, feels like 'awareness of...' — Isaac
We don’t think in terms the scientists use to tell us how we think. You’re asking a stonemason how he would plumb a bidet when all he knows how to use is a trowel and mud.
Thankfully, you know that as well as I do. — Mww
When you think about a "What am I feeling right now" type of question in any of it's many guises, your hippocampus enables a return to the working memory of a filtered selection of these signals - ie they re-signal those centres. That, to you, feels like 'awareness of...'
— Isaac
You'll have to be more clear about what you think is missing. — Isaac
Which part is you becoming aware of the signals? — Luke
Do I need to be thinking about a "What am I feeling right now" type of question in order to become aware of the signals? — Luke
the re-signalling of "those centres" feels to me like an awareness of [/]the signals[/i]? Is that it? — Luke
I've seen no support for the assertion that you know your own conscious experiences, nor have you even suggested a mechanism by which you could (without public linguistic conventions). — Isaac
Which of all that (and the several hundred more) is 'happiness'? — Isaac
When people say "I'm happy", what are they doing with the word? Pointing to a chunk of this stream of experience that has a label on it saying 'happiness'? — Isaac
Do I need to be thinking about a "What am I feeling right now" type of question in order to become aware of the signals? — Luke
Yes. What you think of as your awareness of physiological and sensory data is actually a post hoc narrative constructed in response to triggers from the hippocampus - in other words, you 'wondering what's happening'. — Isaac
the re-signalling of "those centres" feels to me like an awareness of [/]the signals[/i]? Is that it?
— Luke
No, it feels to you like an awareness of your arm. But it isn't. — Isaac
Which of all that (and the several hundred more) is 'happiness'? — Isaac
If you don't already know what it is to feel happy, why should I bother trying to tell you? — Marchesk
You do realize this is just a social construct right? — frank
A pubic carving up of the world. — Marchesk
So none of this is consciously thought/wondered. — Luke
If you become aware of the signals by having the feeling, then the signals are inferred from the feeling, rather than the other way around. — Luke
None of the process is consciously thought, no. You're only aware of the result. — Isaac
Not following you here. You don't become aware of the signal by having the feeling. — Isaac
your hippocampus enables a return to the working memory of a filtered selection of these signals - ie they re-signal those centres. — Isaac
You become aware of the signal because they're connected to the part of your brain for which activity therein is what we call 'conscious awareness'. — Isaac
If, perhaps, what you're getting at is that the feeling itself plays some part in inferring the signals, then yes, that's rather the point. — Isaac
It's a two-way process. — Isaac
None of the process is consciously thought, no. You're only aware of the result. — Isaac
Then why are you referring to "thinking" and "wondering"? Those are not things you do unconsciously. — Luke
You said, "No, it feels to you like an awareness of your arm." Now you're saying instead: — Luke
This might be why someone is consciously aware, ... What makes someone aware of them? — Luke
You said earlier that the feelings are inferred from the signals. This is the opposite. — Luke
There's no problem at all with it using binary to code a printout of the previous bit of binary. — Isaac
Yes. They're both things you do unconsciously. You may have a conscious feeling of having initiated them (you could even have your 'free-will' version of having actually initiated them), but the process itself is subconscious. — Isaac
Having initiated a recall, you don't then consciously follow the signals around the brain. — Isaac
The part I was objecting to was "... of your arm", not "become aware...". — Isaac
The process by which you become aware is as described, but it is absolutely evident that it is not 'your arm' that you become aware of. — Isaac
Humans are the meaning-makers and we're outside the computer. — frank
I typically think and wonder using language. — Luke
what I'm consciously aware of does not have the nature of, or is not in the form of, a brain signal — Luke
You become aware of the signal because they're connected to the part of your brain for which activity therein is what we call 'conscious awareness'." The latter doesn't at all explain how, or at what point, you become aware of the signal. — Luke
Then what is it that you are aware of? — Luke
In this case, doesn't it seem to you - that is, aren't you consciously aware - of your arm being in one location, when it is, in fact, in another location? — Luke
computers can use their internal calculation mechanisms to report the state of that same mechanism — Isaac
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