But consciousness - on his view - is quite different. We're not talking about more of the same. And thus it cannot emerge. It must therefore be present all the way down. I don't see that you've said anything to block this. — Bartricks
You phrase it is as if I were saying bears and apples could not interact. I am saying that the material and immaterial; better, the physical and non physical, can not interact. This is a simple tautology: if the nonphysical interacted with the physical, then it would be a part of the physical description of the universe, and so be physical. — hypericin
The only point I want to stress is that experience (consciousness) all the way down can be misleading, because it would suggest that particles or tables are conscious somewhat analogous to the way people are conscious. He doesn't say this at all. — Manuel
I accept the force of this intuition. I do think that everything is conscious, and I do not think that the concept of consciousness admits of degree. Shape might be another good example of a property that does not admit of degree, I'm not sure. — bert1
That is a very poor argument. Doing things to A affects B does not imply that B 'is' A — Bartricks
Not "A affects B". Rather, changes to A result in changes to B. When this relationship is observed, it provides evidence that either:
* A is B
or
* B is causally connected to A — hypericin
every impression of being immaterial — Bartricks
You have now claimed that material objects cannot interact with immaterial ones. That is absolutely not - not - a tautology. — Bartricks
No. You can divide things into groups on any basis whatsovever. These divisions may be more or less relevant, more or less salient, but thats a far as it can go.An ontological distinction - would you agree? — Wayfarer
Because 'appears' requires a subject, i.e. an agent to whom something appears. Nothing appears to a rock. — Wayfarer
The issue I see with ‘vitalism’ is actually caused by the impossibility of taking the ‘elan vital’ to be an object or an objectively real existent — Wayfarer
Bulk matter can be alternatively in a solid, liquid, gaseous or plasma state; it cannot be alternatively, and in the same sense, in a "field" state. Fields are used as mathematical models of continuously distributed physical quantities, but that probably isn't what Lange has in mind (although it can still be asked whether any or all such fields are real things). — SophistiCat
(Indeed, at an even deeper level, ordinary matter - solids, liquids, etc. - is all quantum fields.) — SophistiCat
f I were making an argument that fields are real things, I would put it the other way around: fields are real things because they have real effects. — SophistiCat
I see, he is talking about relativistic length contraction. That's not an example of fields moving matter; for that you could just refer to e.g. an electric field interacting with charged particles. — SophistiCat
I'm not sure this makes sense. The word "life" cleaves reality so that some things fall on one side, some things on another. And there are things where the cleaving is ambiguous such as viruses. But you can't say, "well in reality things are neither dead or alive".
Rather they carve the world into sets. — hypericin
This misunderstands words, they do not and cannot point to the true nature of things. — hypericin
You seem to have said above that what applies to consciousness does not also apply to life. Can you explain why you think that, if indeed you do? — Janus
I forgot to add, this version of his panpsychism comes from his two most cited works I believe, Realistic Monism and Consciousness and Its Place in Nature. — Manuel
Between the non-living and the living there also seems to be an infinite gap. Panpsychism is a modern vitalism. — hypericin
Why should I favor "the physical world is mental, and only appears physical" over "the mental world is physical, and only appears mental"? — hypericin
This misunderstands words, they do not and cannot point to the true nature of things. Rather they carve the world into sets. — hypericin
Everything that can be explained about life can be explained without reference to "elan vital". The same will likely prove true of consciousness. — hypericin
Matter/information is the real dualism, — hypericin
"The wizard of Oz" is the same movie, whether it is stored on a film reel, a dvd, a magnetic tape, a hard drive, or an eidetic brain's memory: all completely different physical media. — hypericin
carve [those (or adjacent) bits of the] world into [the same] set[...]. — hypericin
Matter/information is the real dualism, and demonstrates how ontologically distinct entities nonetheless interact. — hypericin
Both of these books are Strawson's. Maybe Chalmers wrote in the latter book, as it contained many responses by philosophers. — Manuel
"where do distinct subjects come from? what ensures they share a common world of experience? i find these qs easier to answer on panpsychism than idealism." — spirit-salamander
Despite your bald assertion, it is in fact a tautology. If a ghost picks up a rock and throws it, by definition this is not the nonphysical interacting with the physical. Rather, by virtue of throwing a rock, the ghost enters the physical realm, and textbooks must now somehow account for the physics of ghosts, or be incomplete. — hypericin
Using my own words against me? — hypericin
the information content of the movie on dvd, and on hard disc, is identical, bit by bit, in spite of the total dissimilarity of the physical medium. — hypericin
In a sense, the information is not just the same, but it is the same informational "thing" residing in two places simultaneously. — hypericin
This is in contrast to physical objects, — hypericin
where this assertion of identity simply cannot happen. At best you can say that two things are very similar. — hypericin
In order to reconcile mind and brain, one must first reconcile information and matter. — hypericin
I was really only concerned with the basic idea. And my thesis was how one could save materialism. Since materialism represents a monism, i.e. assumes that there is only one kind of stuff, namely matter, which makes up the whole world, I must necessarily, in order to prevent dualism, regard physical fields, provided they are ontologically real, as a form of matter. — spirit-salamander
Okay, so matter would be quantum fields in your view. — spirit-salamander
Why the woo? Why not, here are two different things both classified as "apple"; here are two things both classified as "Wizard of Oz file"? — bongo fury
Two spatially distinct objects cannot be numerically identical, only qualitatively similar (even qualitative identity cannot be established). Two spatially distinct informational "objects" may be numerically the same object.How — bongo fury
But you just pointed out that digital identity of symbols isn't affected by their physical diversity, so... — bongo fury
Incidentally, let's distinguish between The Wizard of Oz the set of its plays or screenings (sound-and-light-events) from The Wizard of Oz the set of its recordings on reel or disk etc. — bongo fury
No more "woo" [than] to say that two numbers, i.e. "13, 13", are the same number. Two different things, classified as "13"? Sounds woo to me. — hypericin
And consider that, in binary form, the movie is a single (beyond-cosmically large) number. — hypericin
Two spatially distinct objects cannot be numerically identical, — hypericin
only qualitatively similar (even qualitative identity cannot be established). — hypericin
words [...] do not and cannot point to the true nature of things. Rather they carve the world into sets. — hypericin
Two spatially distinct informational "objects" may be numerically the same object. — hypericin
my woo claim — hypericin
Such events of the first sort [plays or screenings] are where information interacts with, and drives, the physical, material world. — hypericin
But consider that the light and sound is the same information as that in the reel or disc, just in another physical medium, and spread across time. — hypericin
An authentic copy of "the wizard of oz" is the very same "wizard of oz". — hypericin
Yeah, but I feel that saying "there is only one kind of stuff, namely matter" doesn't really say much. All we have to do to "save materialism" in this sense is to extend the definition of "matter" as far as we need. — SophistiCat
Just consider the numbers "13, 13" as they appear on your screen. Are they two different numbers, both classifed as "13"? Or the same number?I don't quite understand the choice of example. — bongo fury
You are probably aware that digital data is stored as 1s and 0s. These are interpreted as base-2 numbers, which are just like the familiar base-10, except at every digit only 2 values are possible, instead of 10 So, every file on your computer can be interpreted as an enormous number. In the case of a movie, if it is well compressed and HD the file size might be ~4GB. This is 2^32 base-I'm lost here. Please help. — bongo fury
So qualitative identity of distinct physical objects is as I see it perfectly easily established, as in the example of distinct tokens of a digital signal, or of a notational text — bongo fury
mystical about information — bongo fury
Information is patterns. Facts. — bongo fury
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