What are particles? Isn't any particle really just an interaction of smaller "particles", which are in turn composed of the interaction of even smaller "particles", ad infinitum? So you never get at any particles, only interactions between smaller interactions, or information/processes all the way down. Particles would be the process of mental modeling of other information, or processes, relative to your own.Information is a material notion. It describes the spatial relationships between particles. — Raymond
Have any examples?Not all words in English language refer to things though. — Raymond
What are particles? Isn't any particle really just an interaction of smaller "particles" — Harry Hindu
How do you know that there is a "fundamental level" of the universe? Any "level" is just a view from somewhere in the universe, so levels of the universe, including the "fundamental" one would just be different imaginary views of the universe from imaginary vantage points in the universe.The process stops at a fundamental level. The fundamentals are massless. They interact and form the massive structures of quarks and leptons. They interact because they contain a charge, which is not a material like we see around us. Not a thing. So the word "charge", in relation to elementary particles, is an example of a word not referring to a thing. It's a non-thing in a thing. — Raymond
Because everytime himans declare theyve discovered the fundamental level of reality we find there are even smaller things, like atoms to protons to quarks.How do you know there is no fundamental level? — Raymond
I can use whatever term you like. Property is a type of information. When you use the terms property, interaction, relationship or process, you are referring to a type if information.That's a property of particles in cooperation. — Raymond
Because everytime himans declare theyve discovered the fundamental level of reality we find there are even smaller things, like atoms to protons to quarks. — Harry Hindu
Besides, how do you reconcile the concept of particles with the concept of the mind (the hard problem)‽ We can refer to the mind with words. Is the mind a thing or particle — Harry Hindu
I can use whatever term you like. Property is a type of information. When you use the terms property, interaction, relationship or process, you are referring to a type if information. — Harry Hindu
Yes. That was the point of my post. Mind & Consciousness are not material things, but immaterial mathematical functions. A "function" is a relationship (ratio ; pattern), not a physical object. We typically refer to those Menta-Physical concepts (ideas ; symbols) with nouns, as-if they are tangible things. But the Mind is an Information Processor (not the machine, but the logical procedure) which receives raw sensory information Input and changes it into symbolic Meaning (significance to Self) as the Output.Dunno. This directs attention away from the matter itself. And, so I think, that's exactly the stuff conscious resides in. — Raymond
nowadays, with the benefit of modern science and an understanding that the source ancient ‘thinking’ that led to dualism was relatively uninformed, we can dispense with the illusion — Brock Harding
First, I need to clarify that the quoted phrase is my interpretation of an interpretation that I don't agree with : that Qualia have no causal powers. As ideas (beliefs) in the mind, Qualia do have a causal role in human behavior.Qualia are caused by physical processes, but have no causal powers of their own. — Gnomon
Hi. Picking on qualia is a hobbyhorse for me lately, so please pardon a question. How would one establish that qualia are caused by something? — ajar
Regarding the "how" of "establishing that qualia are caused by something", you can refer to neuroscience articles such as those linked below. — Gnomon
So some basic conclusions can be drawn from the discussion of information processing so far.
• Information can be in the form of structures or messages.
• The brains physical activity deals with information structures.
• The qualia of our inner conscious world are information messages.
• Structures represent messages.
• Messages can be identified from structures.
• Structures, but not messages, can be transmitted from a sender to a receiver. — second link
and it's hard to gauge a priori whether it's published by cranks. — ajar
I don't know anything about the Frontiers in Systems Neuroscience organization. But, FWIW, the author of the article, Roger Orpwood, is a researcher at the Centre for Pain Research, Department for Health, University of Bath, Bath, UK. The "frontiers" label might indicate a focus on pushing the envelope of Neuroscience knowledge. Whether that qualifies as "crank", I don't have enough information to say.I just browsed the second link. It seems to completely miss the logical-semantic issue (as perhaps you do), and it's hard to gauge a priori whether it's published by cranks.
If you've actually read it, perhaps you'll be willing to summarize the argument for conclusion #3 below, namely the qualia of our inner conscious world are information messages. — ajar
Whoa! Hold on there partner. Can you break-down some of those polysyllabic words, so a non-specialist can follow the logic? I have no idea what all that "hypermeaninglessness" means. :joke:A seemingly secondary but eventually essential theme of Fardter’s critique of cultural objectivism is the paradigmatic hypermeaninglessness of any predialectical 'society.' If our rehabilitated and purified neosemiotic (anti-)theory holds, we have to choose finally between either a conceptualist desituationism or a no less comfortable transdescriptive Conversation. Further, if one can transcend such a surreptitious surrealism synthetically or asymptotically, one is nevertheless nagged by yet another dismaying decision: either accept the aforementioned preconceptual deappropriation or conclude that art is used to marginalize the proletariat. — ajar
Mentioned above that I never made such claim, but I'll also add that the loose use of 'information' is not much better than the use of 'qualia.' — ajar
What about qualia associated with hallucinations? In the case of phantom limb pain, what information message is there? Is it a mistaken information message? What about the beauty of a sunset? — RogueAI
Can you break-down some of those polysyllabic words, so a non-specialist can follow the logic? — Gnomon
Except that qualia are the conscious understanding of the nòn-material content of the two gauge-coupled massless Dirac fields constituting reality. — Raymond
But would not that imply that the subject is recontextualised as a hollow performance within a theory that foregrounds narrativity ? If 'Truth' is indeed capable of significance, reality itself is created
by the proletariate ( but only if reality is equal to culture; if that is not the case, knowledge is intrinsically impossible within a dismal regime of dialectical nihilism). In other words, the subject is interpolated according to a paradigm of consensus that includes language as a whole, with dialectical nihilism as unfortunately or not the only remaining bridge between 'Truth' and society — ajar
I think a different style will make the point easier to understand. The Apparent hypermeaninglessness of the flowing is incipiently instructive. While perceptual reality compliments Subjective self-knowledge, Awareness merely regulates a symbolic representation of Chaos. In other words, a 'formless' Void illuminates essentially infinite Experience. It's no longer cool to admit this, but the secret of the universe is obviously inextricably connected to Immortal Mysteries (as well as, of course, Mortal Miseries.) Though Culture exists as a symphony of boundaries within which Imagination shapes self-righteous Belonging, the Soul maintains its Existential Silence, knowing but not telling that we exist as bio-electricity, a Quantum summoning of primordial Qualia. And yet Death is the wisdom of unbridled human observation. — ajar
PS__It sounds like a political rant or screed, not a philosophical analysis of Consciousness. :cool: — Gnomon
shit, I can't write... I laugh to hard! — Raymond
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.