I think that this is an odd tactic. — Moliere
So you have never been unconscious? — 180 Proof
I know I have and that you do not have any grounds to doubt my subjective account of having been unconscious.
So you have never been unconscious? I know I have and that you do not have any grounds to doubt my subjective account of having been unconscious. — 180 Proof
The "identity" of what is "lost"? And if this is the case, then what function does "consciousness" serve? What does it do (or what do we do with it)?[W]hat is lost is identity, not consciousness. — bert1
I do not remember.How did you feel when you were unconscious?
have an understanding of the hard problem. — Moliere
So, whatever that is -- why my red is my red -- that's what the hard problem of consciousness is about. It's the feeliness of the world. And the thought, so my memory of what I was lead to believe at least, is that there is as yet no scientific explanation for why my red is my red (or, perhaps another way to put it, there's no scientific way to tell what my red is -- whether it is your blue or not -- yet I certainly see red) — Moliere
I wouldn't want to deny we have experiences, but this doesn't touch on the 'hard problem'. The hard problem has, as a foundational axiom, the notion that the things we talk about - experiences, awareness,... - ought to be causally connected to the objects of empirical sciences. That it's in some way odd that there's no direct connection. I reject that premise. It seems to me that we can talk of all sorts of things from consciousness, to god, to pixie dust... We all know what each other is talking about to some extent in each case (enough to get by) but it doesn't require any of those objects to correlate with something empirical science might reify. — Isaac
What you're saying is experience causes neural activity. — Moliere
Can you give me an example of a neuroscientist you think is committing this error? — Isaac
So "the hard problem .." is not a scientific problem like I've stated. — 180 Proof
Every event must have a cause. If consciousness isn't supernatural, and the physical state of the brain remains constant, then the inversion would be left without any possible cause. — hypericin
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