Thanks for the reply. I'm not sure what ethics has to do with the belief in other minds, — GLEN willows
Simply put - I have a thought. I have a body. How do they interact? How does my conscious decision to "stand up" turn into actual physical movements? — GLEN willows
So you're saying it's a wholly materialistic activity? Consciousness is within the brain and acts on the body? — GLEN willows
rather than going back and forth, first let me know if you understand the classic mind-body problem, and Elizabeth of Bohemia's critique of dualism. — GLEN willows
I understand panpsychism. So do you believe that when you die, you’re consciousness, as in your perceptions abd experiences, will carry on? — GLEN willows
Not mine. On my view, identity is lost, not consciousness. So I no longer exist. But the functional unities that persist are conscious still, just as they still have mass. I'm a functionalist about identity, but not about consciousness. When I die I lose the functional unity that is bert1 forever. I might also lose it when I am in a deep sleep perhaps, or get knocked out. But it gets rebooted again.
9m — bert1
We think alike bert1. A good explanation of the nuances between panspychism and personal conscious awareness. — Benj96
Its more sensible to consider perhaps that descartes dualism like all dualisms, had better explanatory power than monisms.
Having 2 explanations is better than having 1 afterall. — Benj96
so you believe we create reality. Do you believe there is any material world, outside of our perceptions? — GLEN willows
you'd need to point out why thoughts cannot be physical, — Manuel
The problem isn't two explanations, the problems is that they have to end up in the same sphere - the material — GLEN willows
Yes, it's an important distinction to make I think. In a lot of conversations about consciousness, 'losing consciousness' when brain function is disrupted is taken as overwhelming evidence that consciousness is a brain function. Understandably so, if we don't make this distinction between consciousness and identity. It's also understandable that identity is seen to persist when someone 'loses consciousness', because from everybody else's point of view, the living body remains. There still is a sleeping bert1, with legal rights and spatio-temoral location etc, from Benj96's point of view. bert1 seems to still exist. But there is no bert1 from bert1's point of view. The deeply sleeping body has no point of view of its own, temporarily, and it is in that sense that identity is lost. — bert1
If only the material is real we ought to dismiss innovation, lateralised thinking, creativity and invention as these things precipitate into the material world from the "non material sphère- the mind". — Benj96
Not really, all those things are material, those things (symbols, meanings, etc.) are in our brains within neural-traces that combine always following physical laws (in some case deterministic, others are not, ... physics and biology are very complex).
And as such those things can be manipulated, like we can eliminate or induce ideas, words, concepts in your brains, we can as well see where and how they re located, etc... we can induce and create a "religious" brain since religious thinking is quite understood today (see Ramachandran's studies), and a long etc... And we can manipulate in traditional ways (talking, educating, ...) or in more sophisticated ways (using chemicals, electromagnetic fields, brain-surgery, etc.)... — Raul
In essence of your were a God, would you prefer to manipulate others beliefs to be in alignement with your own (autocracy), or would you rather discourse, where people are allowed to object and explain the grounds for doing so? (democracy). — Benj96
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