Animism is wonderful. The trouble is, this is unprovable. I'm talking about the "souls" of people, animals and different "things".I am sorry if I appear to be referring to specific ideas of particular writers and this is just because they seem to have thought so much about the subconscious or systems. I see your point about a database and how we could be like databases. However, while the model of information may have some usefulness for considering our processing, but it is a picture based on our particular perspective, whereas people who lived in different historical eras may have thought in an animistic way, or in connection with the planets and stars as a basic construct for viewing and explaining the content of thoughts. — Jack Cummins
"Thoughts" is the name we give to our inner experience when we have to put it into words to communicate with another person. — T Clark
I can see the relevance of the idea of a mirror as a way of seeing the whole process of thinking. It is also easy to see the danger of thinking in a narcissistic way, or of just in ways which enable us to buffer up our own egos. I would imagine that the one way we have of preventing this from happening is that we share our thoughts through conversing with others, and this exchange of thoughts probably stops us from living in our own little thought bubbles. — Jack Cummins
I feel that my thoughts seem like they are from some underlying source, such as that of a soul. — Jack Cummins
but as for the process of thought itself, this is open to question because in some ways it is hard to know when thoughts stop — Jack Cummins
I have began reading thinkers such as Plotinus and Huxley's perennial philosophy, but it does still seem that it is hard to place some degree of emphasis on mind or matter as being more real. — Jack Cummins
What is interesting is how some of the Eastern thinkers really did see the physical world as illusion, or maya. I remember when I did study the module of Hinduism, I was at the time attending Christian Union and felt that the Hindu idea of Atman, man, merging with Brahman, God, made more sense to me than the idea of eternal paradise after the resurrection. — Jack Cummins
Apparently, you're still fairly unacquainted with the history of cognitive science and the "schools" of contemporary nonreductive (supervenient, emergent) physicalism in both the philosophy of mind and neuroscience, Jack. Besides, it's much easier to derive experimentally reliable results using a reductionist approach than not – but that only gets us so far in explaining any complex phenomenon – which accounts for much of the bias rather than "fear of ostricism". Scientists tend to ostricize only other scientists who peddle "fringe", demonstrably pseudo-scientific, woo-woo (e.g. Capra, Wilbur, Leary, Jung, Chopra, Peterson, Bebe, Tipler et al). :roll:I do wonder if the reason why most scientists are not wishing to challenge the attempt to go beyond reductionist materialism is related tofear of ostracism fromthe scientific community. — Jack Cummins
:up: Okay, I'll drink from that bottle ... Btw, welcome to TPF.Or maybe thoughts are just the result of one subroutine being read by another subroutine? We call these procedures "consciousness" and "subconsciousness". — SimpleUser
Perhaps only that "personal identity" consists in the continuity of affective memory-bodily states rather than inheres in a discrete, or concrete, "substance" independent of transient body-states (re: Buddha's anatta, Epicurus' atoms & void, Hume's bundle theory, ... Metzinger's phenomenal self modeling).I am asking what does thought tell us about the nature of personal identity and about the underlying source of consciousness? — Jack Cummins
I don't think so, or not much if it all. "Thoughts" "help to explain the nature of consciousness" no more than the sight of migratory flocks of birds high overhead "help to explain" the nature of the sky.Do thoughts help to explain the nature of consciousness?
It's a 'strange loop', or self-referential tangled hierarchical system (vide Douglas Hofstadter ... or Thomas Metzinger); the extent of self-reflection, I suspect, corresponds to the limits of the semiotic or symbolic systems available to cognition.I wonder to what extent the "I' is able to reflect upon it itself? — Jack Cummins
Basically, thinking is autonomic processing of environmental and bodily sensory inputs reflexively looped through memory correlations. "Thoughts", thereby, are referential (intentional?) narrative-like abstractions from – interpretive confabulations of – thinking; in other words, they are reflexive sub-vocalizations of which we are more often than not completely unaware (like e.g. breaths or stools) that tend to facilitate adaptively coordinating behaviors with perceptions.What are thoughts comprised of, or composed from, and can they be reduced to matter'?
Good question!So what it is about your thoughts that makes it seem like they are from some underlying source? — Daemon
an acid trip — Jack Cummins
However, the question is how accurate our mirror — Jack Cummins
TPF is "Transaction Processing Facility" or "Terrestrial Planet Finder"? :)Okay, I'll drink from that bottle ... Btw, welcome to TPF. — 180 Proof
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.