We can use our models and shared language to report the state of our models and shared language. Saying "Ah, but your conclusion is just a model too" isn't sufficient on its own to undermine anything. — Isaac
Can computers describe their own calculations in detail, bit by bit? Or do they only report the results of theses calculations, at points specified in the program? It makes a difference. — Olivier5
I'm not a computer scientists, so if there's some technical issue I'm unaware of then maybe this would be difficult, but I can't see the intrinsic barrier. Ctrl+esc gives me a rundown of the cpu's occupation, this, despite the fact that the cpu must be in use running the program which works out how 'in use' the cpu is. — Isaac
I don't see what that's got do do with the metaphor. All I'm saying is that computers can use their internal calculation mechanisms to report the state of that same mechanism.
We can use our models and shared language to report the state of our models and shared language. Saying "Ah, but your conclusion is just a model too" isn't sufficient on its own to undermine anything. — Isaac
Ctrl+esc gives me a rundown of the cpu's occupation, — Isaac
I can ask a computer to print out the actual binary of its last calculation. — Isaac
Sure, but it's not telling you what the CPU hardware is actually doing. And binary is an abstraction of electricity being moved around through logic gates with high and low voltages. — Marchesk
It doesn't give you a run down of the detail of its calculations though. To do that, the CPU would need to know what it is calculating while it is calculating. IOW it would need to be self aware. — Olivier5
So we never exit the realm of models, right? We just deal in models of models, and models of modeled models.
This language implies the thing that's being modeled (the thing in itself), but that's forever beyond our reach. Is that a fair assessment of your view? — frank
BTW, you frequently seem to be putting a homunculus in "the brain" which interprets signals. Maybe that's just a result of the nontechnical language you're using. — frank
To a degree. The only thing I'd say is that I don't consider the 'thing in itself' to be beyond our reach. I think a model is us reaching it. There's no more 'it-ness' than the impact on our models. Not like there's a 'really real' tree out there and all we have is approximations to it. Out approximations are the tree, the 'really real' one, the hidden states that cause us to model a 'tree' are revealed to us by our sense organs as they 'really' are. We might not be able to sense all there is to be potentially sensed, but that doesn't make what we do sense less real. — Isaac
Yes, flitting between 'you' (meaning the entity producing self-reports) and 'your brain' (meaning that which neuroscientists can see) i — Isaac
I'm not understanding why you wouldn't extend the same attitude toward the psyche. — frank
Entity just means thing. The thing that produces self reports is what? The whole organism? — frank
I typically think and wonder using language.
— Luke
No you don't. You think and wonder using neurons. You talk using language. — Isaac
what I'm consciously aware of does not have the nature of, or is not in the form of, a brain signal
— Luke
It obviously does. — Isaac
But you seem to be missing the point I raised a few posts back (Shakespeare/Milton example). Common use of 'about', or 'of' when it comes to awareness assumes one can be wrong in identifying the object. — Isaac
Yet here you want to say that whatever you think is the object of your awareness just is, purely by virtue of the fact that you think it is. That seems contrary to the way we use the expression in all other areas. — Isaac
But I said "...because they're connected to the part of your brain for which activity therein is what we call 'conscious awareness'". That's how. — 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
Then what is it that you are aware of?
— Luke
We could say neural signals, or we could perhaps also talk about models, or features of perception to get away from neuroscience terms. — Isaac
Well, it seems to me like I think and wonder in language, if that's any different. I'm never aware of myself thinking and wondering using neurons. — Luke
I think there are two different meanings of "awareness" at work here, and both are "common use". — Luke
All you have done here is to identify brain activity with conscious awareness; it doesn't explain how you are conscious of your brain activity. — Luke
The point is it is using the CPU to report data about the CPU. That's all. It's presented only in opposition to the claim that we cannot use a model to report on our modelling process. We obviously can. — Isaac
one cannot access the actual electric currents inside the CPU that produce these data sets, as they happen. — Olivier5
our consciousness cannot access the physical, neuronal processes underlying it; it can only access periodic reports from such neuronal processes. Eg visual, audio or pain reports. — Olivier5
our consciousness cannot access the physical, neuronal processes underlying it; it can only access periodic reports from such neuronal processes. Eg visual, audio or pain reports.
— Olivier5
Exactly what I've been arguing with Luke. — Isaac
It always baffles me that this this is seen as some coup de grace. "But the study of social constructs is itself just a social construct", "You're using rationality to work out the origin of rationality", "All metaphysics is nonsense is itself metaphysics"...
It's just not the logical flaw people seem to assume it is. I can ask a computer to print out the actual binary of its last calculation. There's no problem at all ... Psychology's models of how the brain works (including that we model the world) is itself just a model of the world (in this case the brain bit of it). So what? What's the killer blow we must now succumb to because of that insight? — Isaac
This is like saying humans can't fly. Sure, they can't without any mechanical help, but they can with mechanical help. Our consciousness can access the underlying physical processes with a little mechanical/electronical help, by observing (a conscious activity) MRI images of our brain.our consciousness cannot access the physical, neuronal processes underlying it; it can only access periodic reports from such neuronal processes. Eg visual, audio or pain reports. — Olivier5
Either there is a causal relationship of your mind with the world or there isn't. If there is then the relationship between cause and effect is information and effects (the state of your mind) carry information about their causes (the state of the world just prior to some mental state like the state of some internet philosophy forum post as you begin to read it). — Harry Hindu
And therefore... — Olivier5
IF the study of social constructs concludes that social constructs are possible, reasonable, useful and improvable (the Collingwood project if I understand well), then there is no problem, but IF one concludes from the study of social constructs that they are on the whole unreasonable fancies, then one has a problem of self-contradiction. — Olivier5
Likewise, "all metaphysics is nonsense" is reflexive, and thus it is a self-contradictory statement. — Olivier5
1.) The mental model of the brain.....
that determines brain workings.....
which determines mental models to be illusory....
....must therefore be illusory. — Mww
Why must those be the only two options? By far the majority of work is in deciding which models are useful, coherent and which aren't. — Isaac
With respect to epiphenomenalism, science may eventually falsify the premise, empirically, but it is currently viable as an explanatory thesis, metaphysically, merely because we don’t possess knowledge sufficient to negate it, and while it violates the principle of cause and effect physically, it stands as non-contradictory from a purely logical domain. — Mww
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