I don't think you need to overthink this. I don't think blind people have lesser minds than sighted. — RogueAI
I can somewhat understand how all these features of this proposed mind-stuff were cooked up. IMV, a casual and basically useful way of talking is transformed by philosophers into something rigid. Is a toothache immaterial? I guess one might say so, but is this science of some kind? 'Immaterial' is a negation. And yeah, intentions aren't like apples. Dreams aren't like shovels. — Zugzwang
Do we all imagine 'pure' space in the same way? Who knows? If we are locked in private minds, I don't see how we could ever check. Why should imaginary pure space correspond to practical material reality? Maybe some things can't be sliced. Or maybe there is a way to slice dreams that we haven't discovered. Or maybe this is more about usage than reality. — Zugzwang
Are toothache's immaterial? That's a confused question. An 'ache' is a sensation - it is something felt - and feelings are states of mind, not things. Minds are immaterial and feelings are states of immaterial minds. But you weren't actually asking, were you? — Bartricks
What the blue blazes are you blithering on about?? — Bartricks
Does thinking take place in the human brain? — Alkis Piskas
There’s no point to disputing poetry.
— praxis
Are you less of a mind if you're not smelling or seeing anything? That seems easy to answer: no. Do you think the answer is yes? — RogueAI
That's a very good start, Constance! For one thing, it shows thinking! :smile: (Most responses I read to this topic lacked such a thing! :smile:)Begs the question: Where is a human brain? — Constance
If thinking "takes place" in it, it must be somewhere, but to be somehere presupposes meaningful spatial designations — Constance
Of course.So, at the level of philosophical assumptions, the "in the human brain" is spatially indeterminate — Constance
In a way yes. But I wouldn't involve the concepts of 'infinity' and indeterminacy in this. They are too abstract, and we have already other abstract concepts like 'thought', 'mind' etc.! :smile:But this does raise the quesiton of infinity's indeterminacy. Is it? — Constance
In physical terms, you are right. Thought cannot be within something physical. But we must not involve physicality here, otherwise we get back to the spongy brain, with its neurons and all.thought being "in" something loses its meaning. — Constance
Is 'being funny' material? Can humour be weighted or measured in any way? We don't even know what humour is, and yet we couldn't live without it. — Olivier5
It's all too easy to be arguing about appropriate usage as if some profound investigation of hidden things is involved. — Zugzwang
the concept of mind has allowed philosophers to generate centuries of argument without obtaining consensus as to what, if anything, they are even talking about. — Zugzwang
In general, I agree, but in this case there is no science possible without some faith in the capacities of the human mind to understand the world. — Olivier5
I remember some philosopher being described as "asking ordinary questions about peculiar things and peculiar questions about ordinary things." I aspire to be so described. — Srap Tasmaner
We all have some sense of what a mind is, enough to communicate about it every day. If you have some idea of what it may be already, it's probably something like that. If you don't, then we can try dictionaries...? — Olivier5
. It's like a tangle of metaphors. A mind is the something that a thing can be in, like a container. — Zugzwang
A science not of the words (that would be too banal, mere linguistics) but rather of the supposed referents of these words in their crystalline splendor. — Zugzwang
Sorry about the delay of my response. Philosophy of mind has certainly a lot to say about all mental illnesses! It's only off-topic because the subject here is the brain.Philosophy might have something to add as far as insights into troubleshooting psychosis. Maybe just a little off topic. — Mark Nyquist
In what way does brain support mental content, i.e. mind? Is mind a product of and contained in the brain? Or does the brain react to stimuli created by the mind, which is independent of, separate from it?My view is brain supports mental content and mental content is a sort of virtual world that you might call mind. — Mark Nyquist
I hope that I didn't say something bad or that offended you ... — Alkis Piskas
I'm glad to hear this! :smile: (Not that you are "behind in responses!" :smile:)Not at all. I am behind in responses — Constance
No. No explicit questions.Was there a question I missed? — Constance
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