Where is the contradiction in noticing something that has no effect? — khaled
If some stuff has not effect on anything, it cannot be sensed — Olivier5
you didn't have three effects. — Isaac
But our own thoughts are clearly apparent to us from the outset — khaled
To be able to consider a thought, i need to be able to perceive it — Olivier5
to hold it in some sort of short-term memory accessible to my consciousness. — Olivier5
And therefore they must have some effect on something — Olivier5
Give me an example of a thought you don't perceive. — khaled
You can perceive a thought by definition. — khaled
Not necessarily. The causal explanation could include the causality of the mental over the neuronal. The relationship between the mind and the body is a two way street, as always. If we discover how the brain creates this 'virtual mental space' that the mind seems to be, we might also discover that the deliberations and decisions made within that mental space are needed, indispensable for the organism, not optional. Not frivolous, not an epiphenomenon, but something useful: the capacity for an animal to consider multiple variables at once, what they mean for the animal's survival chances, and on this basis decide whether to fight or to flee, whether to mate or not with that other animal, where to go to drink, where to go to feed. A piloting system. — Olivier5
It would make no sense for the brain to generate such a virtual mental space, if that space was not the locus for some vitally important mechanisms. — Olivier5
The next question would be, how does this dualism manifest. Does it cause irregular patterns, such as distribution biases in QM. — simeonz
you appear to suggest that our freedom stems from the conventional possible fluctuations in the chemical processes in our brain due to QM uncertainty. — simeonz
I meant that the deity is considered free (even if trivially), without it itself having uncertainty. If the deity can be free and certain, why shouldn't people be credited with freedom in the same way. In fact, if someone is a theist, they should consider the freedom of the deity granted to them as part of being. If the deity is free, then the creation is on the whole a choice, then everything in it is the manifestation of a choice, and carries this choice in their embodiment. In any case, you propose that determinism is a matter of perspective, which appears to me to equate non-determinism and lack of knowledge. — simeonz
There may be unconscious thoughts, if you believe Freud. But the interesting point is that for a thought to be perceivable, you need some mechanism. It doesn't happen by magic I think. Therefore our conscious thoughts must have an effect on something, a percievable echo, a way to get 'heard' by our conscious self. Therefore they cannot be epiphenomena. Otherwise you would have no way of knowing what you think. — Olivier5
I don't have any argument with any of that, in fact I find it intuitively congenial; but I just don't see how it could ever be definitively empirically demonstrated is all. — Janus
The other possibility is that there is more going on than we can possibly imagine, that our ways of conceiving and imagining evolution, the mind, consciousness and so on are clunky, inadequate and that our inevitable fate is to "see through a glass, darkly", and most particularly when we seek to practice analysis. — Janus
The idea that something we are aware of, such as being conscious, could be an epiphenomenon is a contradiction in terms. Our being aware of it means that it cannot be an epiphenonemon, which is defined as a phenomenon having no effect, because it has the effect of making us aware of it. — Janus
The plain proof of Free Will is the feeling of choices made, ... — Ash Abadear
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