Maybe I should have simply asked How do we See?, not What does it Mean to See?↪Wayfarer What about a life-form that isn't conscious, like a starfish, that has eyes, but no central nervous system with a brain?
But what does it really mean to See? — SteveKlinko
What it means to see is that you are using light as a source of information about the world. We know this is true because we don't have any information about the world when there is no light. Actually, the only information we have is that there is no light symbolized by our visual field covered in black. — Harry Hindu
First of all Conscious Life Forms like us are Physical Things. That's just a fact. — SteveKlinko
http://www.webmd.com/eye-health/amazing-human-eyeMaybe I should have simply asked How do we See?, not What does it Mean to See? — SteveKlinko
All this means is that physics hasn't described consciousness - yet. It doesn't imply that consciousness has some special quality about it that allows it to be untouched by science. That would be an description of consciousness that isn't based on any facts. It's most likely that consciousness simply hasn't yet been defined correctly.
It's simply not fact. Physical things are describable by physics - up to a point - conscious subjects are not. This fundamental misconception invalidates everything that comes after it. — Wayfarer
All this means is that physics hasn't described consciousness — Harry Hindu
All this means is that physics hasn't described consciousness - yet. It doesn't imply that consciousness has some special quality about it that allows it to be untouched by science. That would be an description of consciousness that isn't based on any facts. It's most likely that consciousness simply hasn't yet been defined correctly. — Harry Hindu
I'm into J J Gibson's 'ecological approach' at the moment. He argues that his approach is non-dualistic and even makes playful reference to ecological physics. This is on the basis that for an animal to perceive an object is for it to see the 'affordances' available from the object, i.e. the natural world is a vast network of mutual relations of affordance, an approach derived from gestalt psychology. — mcdoodle
The visual system uses Nerve signals from the Retina to construct the scene we are looking at with our own internal Conscious Light. — SteveKlinko
...says someone who isn't up to par with the latest attempts of scientists (not physicists, but neurologists and psychologists) to explain consciousness. They are preliminary explanations no doubt, but philosophy by itself hasn't advanced our understanding of consciousness beyond any preliminary stages since it began addressing it thousands of years ago. As usual, we need a different view to understand something better. Thinking about it like we have for the last few thousand years (like it's some special, magical, supernatural property or thing) hasn't gotten us anywhere.It's not in the business of trying to 'describe consciousness'. What it describes is the motion of objects. It's amazing the number of people who don't seem to get that. — Wayfarer
Did you read The Ecological Approach to Visual Perception? — Pierre-Normand
Certainly Quantum Physic has talked about the effect of Consciousness on results of certain experiments. So it would seem like it is well within the jurisdiction of Physics to describe Consciousness some day .All this means is that physics hasn't described consciousness — Harry Hindu
It's not in the business of trying to 'describe consciousness'. What it describes is the motion of objects. It's amazing the number of people who don't seem to get that — Wayfarer
The visual system uses Nerve signals from the Retina to construct the scene we are looking at with our own internal Conscious Light. — SteveKlinko
What organ is that? What signals would it use? — jkop
The Conscious Mind is definitely using the same Physical Signals as the Visual System. The Inner Light (Conscious Light) is correlated with these Signals. It still defies Physical explanation what the Conscious Light is. It can not be found in the Physical Mind (Brain) yet. We have been waiting too long for the Physical explanation of Consciousness. It's time to start thinking in different ways. The Conscious Space and the Conscious Mind concepts are primarily thought experiments to see if there might be some new way of approaching the problem.Regardless of whether we call it an organ or inner light, what signals does it use? If it is using the same signals as the visual system, then whence the addition of "inner light" that is supposedly "looking" at the alleged construction or "result" of the visual system? — jkop
It's time to start thinking in different ways. — SteveKlinko
It's time to start thinking in different ways. — SteveKlinko
Right, so why are you stuck in dualism?
Direct realism is a better assumption as defended by Searle, or Putnam.
Perception has no interface between the brain's causation of becoming aware of what you see, and the causal chain to what you become aware of; the latter sets the conditions for what you will perceive.
The visual system does not produce a "result" that would be "looked" at by some inner homunculus. Instead it produces the looking-part of the experience, whereas the present features of the external object sets the conditions of what the object-part of the experience will appear like. For example, if a door is open, then it will be an open door that you see. Looking at some result of your own brain events would amount to blindness or hallucination — jkop
So it would seem like it is well within the jurisdiction of Physics to describe Consciousness some day . — SteveKlinko
The main problem with Direct Realism is that there never is any explanation of how we directly experience things. — SteveKlinko
So it would seem like it is well within the jurisdiction of Physics to describe Consciousness some day . — SteveKlinko
But, it's a huge and unresolved argument. It's not as if physicists have agreed on what it means - they don't agree at all. The existence of 'the observer effect' is a great unresolved mystery. Here is an essay on it. — Wayfarer
When the appearance that you see is the external object that you see there is no gap to explain — jkop
You can't just say it's true without an explanation. — SteveKlinko
there are neuroscientific questions to explain, but they are not philosophical questions. — jkop
It is called 'direct' because there is nothing by way of which the objects are seen, neither a process nor a mechanism, so there are no such things to explain.
The seeing, however, is a causation of biochemical processes in the brain, and that's the short explanation of how the capacity to see works. Its detailed explanation is the subject for empirical research. — jkop
Relatively simple and small organisms can see, recall, so it should be fairly clear that the conscious awareness that is the seeing doesn't require "a big process in the Brain function".
Whatever is left to explain on how seeing arises from biochemistry is not the big explanatory gap that arises from assuming dualism or representational perception, because a direct realist does not make the latter assumptions. — jkop
We don't know what any other organism sees or does not see. — SteveKlinko
But if it is a Conscious type of seeing then there is a Big Explanatory Gap that needs to be filled even if the organism has a more simple Brain. — SteveKlinko
Ok forget Dualism, how exactly does seeing arise from biochemistry? — SteveKlinko
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