But even if Qualia only depended on the physical configuration, you have absolutely no way of finding the significant variables. Maybe people born after 3 pm on Wednesdays actually enjoy torture (though they’ll act like the rest of us and scream). — khaled
I assume that the "Qualia law" (matter->Qualia) is a law of nature similar to the other laws of nature, thus steady and time-independent. — SolarWind
Matter is anything that has mass and volume.
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The wheel neither gains mass nor increases in volume. Ergo, the spinning wheel isn't matter! — avalon
the spin of the wheel has no mass, the wheel does (forgive the earlier typo) but otherwise my point stands — avalon
I agree. I’m claiming this analogy mirrors the OP. — avalon
Let's get right down to business.
Physicalism claims everything is matter and/or energy.
Matter is anything that has mass and volume.
Energy is the capacity to do work.
Here's me, observing a wheel spinning.
The wheel neither gains mass nor increases in volume. Ergo, the spinning wheel isn't matter!
Conclusion: The phenomena of a wheel spinning is neither matter nor energy.
In other words, the spin of a wheel is nonphysical.
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1. The brain is made up of matter.
2. The mind is the name we give the core function of the brain.
3. A thought is an atomized unit of "mind". — avalon
Here's me, I'm thinking about Aphrodite (goddess of beauty).
My brain neither gains mass nor increases in volume. Ergo, my thought about Aphrodite isn't matter! — TheMadFool
Question: Is mind also nonphysical? — TheMadFool
The wheel is physical yes, but the “spin” of the wheel is a process that the physical object undergoes. The process itself is not physical. Similarly, the brain is physical, yet a thought it not. — avalon
Question: does a length of copper cable increase in weight when you pass electrical
current through it? Or does a piece of steel increase in weight when you heat it up? — Janus
You can't do any work with thoughts, at least I haven't heard of such an event having occurred. — TheMadFool
Considering thoughts aren't physical, how are you ever going to detect that this event has occurred? What do you expect to see when a thought does something? — khaled
That's one of the vexing problems in ontology. — TheMadFool
Vexing problems in dualist ontology* — khaled
I often wonder if what you mean is the invisible — Jack Cummins
I am talking more about the way in which at the present time, neuroscience can detect the underlying basis of brain processes but cannot see the specific images and ideas within our consciousness, because they are invisible to other minds. — Jack Cummins
You seem to be simply assuming that thoughts are not in any way examples of physical work. But if they are correlated with neural activity then they are examples of energy exchange, of physical work.
Anyway your argument seemed to be that if thoughts are physical activity when I think a thought I should weigh more. I presented the examples of electricity flow and heating of objects to show that I think this reasoning is fallacious. — Janus
But no, the schema is not problematic. To define physical by being detectable seems like a decent definition even in vacuum. If you want to propose a “mind substance” like a thought, being more than just a physical structure, then that’s a testable hypothesis. — khaled
The argument from physics is closely related to the argument from causal interaction. Many physicists and consciousness researchers have argued that any action of a nonphysical mind on the brain would entail the violation of physical laws, such as the conservation of energy. — Wikipedia
If the trio are ultimately proved right, it would not mean physicists having to throw their long-established conservation principles completely out of the window — From The Article Above
In other words, according to physicalists who make the argument from physics, playing by their rules, their hypothesis about the nonphysical as compatible with both violation and nonviolation of physical laws (10 above) is utterly unscientific as it can't be falsified. — TheMadFool
It's a logical statement, not a prediction of outcomes. — Kenosha Kid
One possible out is that X supervenes upon Y but Y does not supervene on X. This would be apparent as uncaused changes in Y and breaches of conservation laws (energy, momentum, etc.). However, if one saw such a thing, such as the strange angular momentum of galaxies or the accelerating expansion of the universe), one would probably and rightly predict an undetected physical cause over an invisible non-physical one. Such a prediction is scientific insofar as, should we detect the cause, we would predict effects of it being supervened upon also. — Kenosha Kid
It's better to posit a physical cause rather than a nonphysical cause if something inexplicable is observed. — TheMadFool
Then they define the nonphysical as that which violates physical laws. — TheMadFool
First, scientists and physicalists always maintain something physical is going on whether physical laws are being violated or not. — TheMadFool
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