Point is, the data you refer to can't indicate what I conjecture to exist. You can call that a dark tower lord fantasy, but the conjectured internal is very real, though non-explicable. Well... a scream explains what I mean. — EugeneW
That's a problem with your argument, not mine. — Garrett Travers
Again, I accept your position, I just need to figure out how it can be empirically validated for my to adopt it. That's it. — Garrett Travers
Well, I made it a little more dramatic ... It was a joke, anyway!Acknowledge, not granting. — Garrett Travers
This is exactly what I was talking about: How can one be concerned about the structure, etc. of something if one cannot define this something or even know what this something is? One can talk about the structure of DNA because one knows what DNA is. If one had no idea what DNA is, could one talk about how it functions? It's totally absurd.for years people have been trying to pin down what structure(s) actually produces consciousness — Garrett Travers
OK, but where? One shouldn't have to read and read and read down the article to find out how these guys define "consciousness", what does it mean to them, etc. Because maybe they talk about a (totally) different thing than what "consciousness" traditionally and generally means. In fact, in such a case they should better used another term. Same or different term, a disciplined mind --esp. a scientific one-- defines that term before starting to talk about it so that the reader know what he is talking about!They do define it. Just not in terms that align with traditional views on the subject. — Garrett Travers
The title of the paper is "Consciousness: New Concepts and Neural Networks". If you look the term "Neural Network" in tthe Web, you will see that it is a very known AI (Artifical Intelligence) term: "Artificial neural networks (ANNs)". And they apply that to "the network of consciousness". And again, I ask, how can they talk about a network of consciousness if they cannot --or do not-- define what conciousness is. My reasoning is clear, simple and straight down the line.What? Network? Do they talk about Neural Networks in the field of Artificial Intelligence? And this, again, about something that they cannot even define?
— Alkis Piskas
Qualify these questions, they don't make sense to me. — Garrett Travers
This is exactly what I was talking about: How can one be concerned about the structure, etc. of something if one cannot define this something or even know what this something is? One can talk about the structure of DNA because one knows what DNA is. If one had no idea what DNA is, could one talk about how it functions? It's totally absurd. — Alkis Piskas
OK, but where? One shouldn't have to read and read and read down the article to find out how these guys define "consciousness", what does it mean to them, etc. Because maybe they talk about a (totally) different thing than what "consciousness" traditionally and generally means. In fact, in such a case they should better used another term. Same or different term, a disciplined mind --esp. a scientific one-- defines that term before starting to talk about it so that the reader know what he is talking about! — Alkis Piskas
The title of the paper is "Consciousness: New Concepts and Neural Networks". If you look the term "Neural Network" in tthe Web, you will see that it is a very known AI (Artifical Intelligence) term: "Artificial neural networks (ANNs)". And they apply that to "the network of consciousness". And again, I ask, how can they talk about a network of consciousness if they cannot --or do not-- define what conciousness is. My reasoning is clear, simple and straight down the line. — Alkis Piskas
Well, I will not annoy you anymore with my remarks on your topic. Maybe some day you realize what's going on with science and consciousmness. I might as well do the same, and get a new perspective on the subject., Let's see! :smile: — Alkis Piskas
you will see that it is a very known AI (Artifical Intelligence) term: "Artificial neural networks (ANNs) — Alkis Piskas
Considering the attempt to empirically validate it, it will be advantageous to neuroscience. For example, in the field of trying to understand the conscious aspect of vision or hearing, and the associated neurological processes, it can offer valuable knowledge which might even be a priori to experimental verification (or falsification, naturally). But such is the case in most empirical or theoretical sciences. — EugeneW
Thank you for accepting my position. That's all you needed to do. You don't have to adopt it! :smile:Again, I accept your position, I just need to figure out how it can be empirically validated for my to adopt it. — Garrett Travers
Thank you for accepting my position. That's all you needed to do. You don't have to adopt it! — Alkis Piskas
Now that looks an interesting article. Thanks for the link. How did you find that? Just Googling? (Goggling?) — EugeneW
A weird experience, involving many processes. What happens, and does that explain the experience? — EugeneW
No, the brain has to keep computing whatever it computes as data to build coherent networks of correspondence. — Garrett Travers
I don't think the brain computes like a computer. It "resonates" with the physical world and can do so in virtual all circumstances (and independently in dreams, thinking, or fantasies). The circumstances leave traces and memories. Learning. Strengthened connections are made. Or present at birth already (a blank mind is an illusion). From birth to death new structures arise, backfiring and shaping reality. While being conscious. — EugeneW
Even if consciousness reduces to neuroscience, what has that proved? All you have done is reduce one complex phenomenon to another one. That doesn't prove one is more fundamental than the other. If anything, the opposite. — Pantagruel
You are implying that neuroscience is productive of consciousness. The reverse may very well be true. It's a question of what perspective you choose. I think that form has the more compelling argument. — Pantagruel
Why should it be more fundamental than the biochemical level that facilitated it? — Pantagruel
It's an arbitrary dividing line in the direction between reduction and complexification. — Pantagruel
There are social phenomena which are as real as consciousness, but those cannot be derived from neuroscience. — Pantagruel
Wakefulness and alertness are what fundamentally characterize basic conscious operation, according to modern science. — Garrett Travers
According to certain scientists working in certain fields, perhaps. Others would regard experience as the starting point of consciousness. Feeling something like heat or a pinprick, or seeing or hearing something. — Daemon
Can you tell us what the Global Workspace Model has to say about that? — Daemon
Or are social phenomena responsible for the evolution of the physical structures? There is no way you can decisively prove the direction of influence, because the actions of organisms decidedly do influence their subsequent evolution. — Pantagruel
Are subatomic particles (whose behaviour is much more stochastic) more real than atoms? Most people would think not. Baryonic matter is the prototype of substantial reality. — Pantagruel
This isn't relevant to complex systems characterized by numerous permutations of matter all operating to generate consciousness and conceptuaization. Unless we're willing to discuss it from its appropriate level, I'm afraid I'm going to have to dismiss your line of inquiry — Garrett Travers
I agree. Your level of analysis is arbitrary, relative to the scope of your claims — Pantagruel
I think the neuroscience field uses terms like "data," and "computes," to describe the process in ways that we can linguistically understand. — Garrett Travers
So, no that's just not what's going on. I mean, you might have some scientists that say such things, but that's not what most scientists say at all about the subject. — Garrett Travers
There you go again, slandering your fellow "denizens". Is that your idea of a philosophical argument? :joke:I have never encountered so many narcissists. — Garrett Travers
So, you place Scientists & Philosophers into the same professional category? Do you make no distinction? Do you hold philosophers to the same standards of evidence as scientists? Is Psychology a scientific endeavor, even though it produces no empirical results of its own? Do you think we are supposed to be doing Science on this forum? Do you have formal training as a Scientist or Philosopher? :nerd:Yes, of course, it is a Category Error because this is a philosophy forum. As if philosophical training isn't science intensive and focused. Unreal. — Garrett Travers
As usual, you missed the point. Did Einstein "validate" his own "claims". How do you define the job of a philosopher? Are we doing science on this forum? Like Einstein, I am skeptical of those who make knowledge claims of Incontrovertible Truth. Unlike wise old Albert, I am not skeptical of Quantum Entanglement . . . are you? :wink:Complete nonsense. Albert Einstein was an open point of skepticism within the scientific strata until.... guess when.... Empirical assessment validated his claims. — Garrett Travers
Quoting GT : "Evidence please". You make such broad general allegations as-if Science is a canonical Bible, but you don't cite book, chapter & verse. Can you be more specific about a particular "unequivocal" Fact of Science that I've "disregarded". What evidence has been "Suppressed". Do you think the general consensus of science is Final canonical Truth. Where is it written . . . . . . ? :cool:Disregarding Known Science — Garrett Travers
Maybe. I was going for pure rational thought, as that which everybody does, or the manifest appearance of a purely rational thinking subject, as that which everybody seems to be, and that having ethical decision-making subsumed under it, so..... — Mww
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