After all, if consciousness is not a process but in fact an entity in its own right, then the reification criticism is unjustified, is it not? — Art48
- it seems to me you don't understand that reduction entails emergence. You cannot reduce something that wasn't priorly emergent.(as a corollary of material reductionism). — Pantagruel
it seems to me you don't understand that reduction entails emergence. You cannot reduce something that wasn't priorly emergent. — Eugen
In which case you have reduced the concept of emergence to simple analyticity. That is discussed in the article regarding the weaking of the concept of weak emergence. — Pantagruel
Can you just clarify why you feel that emergence is a problem of some kind? — Pantagruel
It is either question-begging or self-contradictory. — Pantagruel
I’m not familiar with Joscha Bach but I’m looking at some web pages about him now. What I’ve read so far reminds me of Bernardo Kastrup’s theories. — Art48
For the last time, no, it is not! I am not embracing or dismissing emergence. — Eugen
- so irrelevant.Which makes it very strange that you are concerned whether or not there are theories of consciousness which "manage to bypass emergence" then. — Pantagruel
Actually, I can, in principle, agree with that. Still... I personally don't see how this affects emergence.Oh, and things are processes. — Pantagruel
Actually, I can, in principle, agree with that. Still... I personally don't see how this affects emergence. — Eugen
Emergence is not well understood in all its varieties.
In Wikipedia Mark A. Bedau observes:
Although strong emergence is logically possible, it is uncomfortably like magic. How does an irreducible but supervenient downward causal power arise, since by definition it cannot be due to the aggregation of the micro-level potentialities?
At its simplest level it is characterized as an automobile, which involves a pattern or arrangement of parts. Under downward causation in Wikipedia:
Downward causation does not occur by direct causal effects from higher to lower levels of system organisation. Instead, downward causation occurs indirectly because the mechanisms at higher levels of organisation fail to accomplish the tasks dictated by the lower levels of organisation. As a result, inputs from the environment signal to the mechanisms at lower levels of organisation that something is wrong and therefore, to act.
Downward causation might be a key to understanding consciousness, but mathematically it is not well understood. The explorations I have done in infinite compositions of functions might eventually play a minor role, especially inner compositions which relate mathematically to the convergence of continued fractions. Don't worry, I won't get started. :nerd: — jgill
That’s where the hierarchy of scale comes in. It represents an artificial division of the universe into manageable pieces.
— T Clark
Reductionists and holists mean different things when they talk about hierarchical order.
Reductionists think only in terms of upwards construction. You start with an ultimately simple and stable foundation, then build upwards towards increasing scales of complexity. As high as you like.
But a holist thinks dualistically in terms of upwards construction working in organic interaction with downwards constraint. So you have causality working both ways at once, synergistically, to produce the functioning whole.
The hierarchy thus becomes not a tower of ascending complexity (and arbitrariness or specificity) but it itself reduces to a "basic triadic relation" (as hierarchy theorist, Stan Salthe, dubs it). The holist account reduces all organisation to the interaction between an upward constructionist flow and a downward constraining history or context, plus then the third thing which is the relation that those two causal actions develop in a stable and persistent fashion.
So many key differences to reductionist metaphysics follow from this connected causality.
For example, it makes everything historically or developmentally emergent - the upward construction and the downward constraint. There is no fundamental atomistic grain - a collection of particles - that gets everything started. Instead, that grain is what gets produced by the top-down constraints. The higher order organisation stabilises its own ground of being in bootstrap fashion. It gives shape to the very stuff that composes it.
A simple analogy. If you want an army, you must produce soldiers. You must take average humans with many degrees of freedom (all the random and unstable variety of 18 year olds) and mould them in a boot camp environment which strictly limits those freedoms to the behaviours found to be useful for "an army". You must simplify and standardise a draft of individuals so that they can fit together in a collective and interchangeable fashion that then acts in concert to express the mind and identity of a "military force".
So in the holist view, there is no foundational stability to a functioning system. The stability of the parts comes from the top-down constraints that shape up the kind of parts that are historically best suited to the task of constituting the system as a whole. The parts are emergent and produced by a web of limitation.
When it comes to the metaphysics of science, this is why we see thermodynamics becoming the most general perspective. The broad constraint on all nature is that it must be able to self-organise its way into stable and persistent complexity. And thermodynamics or statistical mechanics offers the basic maths for dealing with systems that develop negentropic organisation by exporting entropy.
From particle physics to neuroscience, thermodynamics explains both simplicity and complexity.
Well, it does if you let it. — apokrisis
1. Do you think a process is fundamentally different from ''a thing"?
2.Do you think processes are so distinct from the rest of reality that they are neither fundamental nor emergent?
3. Do you think ''emergent process" would be a non-sense concept? — Eugen
No, there is The One and there's its manifestation. Two things.But if everything is a manifestation of universal mind or Brahman or The One, then everything could be considered a process. — Art48
It seems you agree with me that The One and the process are different.In a monist ontology, there is only one "thing" and everything else is a process, an action of The One. — Art48
If everything is a manifestation of The One, then processes are not fundamental but might be considered emergent. — Art48
then I'd say the whirlpool is an emergent process because a whirlpool fundamentally differs from water. — Art48
Question for 180 Proof: Are you taking as axiomatic that consciousness is a process ? Isn't that the basis of the reification criticism? After all, if consciousness is not a process but in fact an entity in its own right, then the reification criticism is unjustified, is it not?
I'd believe whether consciousness is a process or an entity is an open question. Agree? — Art48
consciousness is not a process — Eugen
I'd believe whether consciousness is a process or an entity is an open question. Agree? — Art48
It seems to me ↪180 Proof he doesn't have logical arguments, but rather he's driven by psychological biases. He's against the idea that consciousness is somehow fundamental. He doesn't arrive to this conclusion by logical reasoning, he simply doesn't want this to be the case. At the same time, he seems to acknowledge the problems of materialism, so the only way is simply to re-define consciousness. Hey, consciousness is a process, there is nothing like to be X. He's basically moving the same problem to another level. If tomorrow he were convinced processes don't do the job anymore, he'd find another escape: consciousness is not a process, it's a mambo-jambo. Mambo-jambos escape all problems, so think about consciousness as being mambo-jambos. — Eugen
So the best evidence we have, supports the proposal that consciousness 'emerged' as the result of earlier processes. These processes emerged from very large variety combining in every way possible.
What's the alternative's on offer?
I'd believe whether consciousness is a process or an entity is an open question. Agree? — Art48
Consciousness the entity!!! What entity? ..... god? aliens ( is consciousness panspermic?), are we all holograms? or in a matrix? I think consciousness did 'emerge,' from previous processes, leading all the way back to the big bang singularity, style placeholder. I give far far more credence to that, than to any of the alternative offerings. — universeness
I hope the above quote satisfies your request. — universeness
I can imagine the following:Consciousness the entity!!! What entity? — universeness
Not entity as in a person (god, aliens) but entity as in substance, i.e., something which exists independently, in its own right. In contrast, a process supervenes on its components. For instance, the whirlpool process supervenes on water. The claim is that consciousness supervenes on the brain. "Consciousness is what the brain does." — Art48
No one can disprove hard solipsism, I agree, but notions of god, infinity and nothing, also cannot be disproved. God, infinity, nothing, solipsism are mere placeholders, they serve no other purpose and have no other value than that.Our own consciousness is the only thing we can be absolutely certain exists. We know the external world only through consciousness. I don't seriously say the external world does not exist, but it is a fact that there is some epistemic uncertainty about the existence of the external world, however small. We could be brains in a vat, or victims of Descartes' demon. So, maybe the hard problem of consciousness exists because it tries to explain the absolutely certain, i.e., our own consciousness, in terms of the, however slightly uncertain, i.e., exterior world. — Art48
In what way is your 'consciousness = an independent substance' any more likely or more worthy than the simple god posit for the source of consciousness? There seems to me to be about the same level of evidence for both.It’s Bss Aackwards. (If you don't understand the last sentence, switch the bold letters.) — Art48
But I guess that would be woo in ↪universeness's view, so he wouldn't take it seriously. It's a non-starter for him. — Eugen
By the contrary. That was pure crap from your side to quote me with something I never said. I don't care if consciousness is a process or a unicorn and I have never said consciousness is not a process.
Consciousness the entity!!! What entity?
— universeness
I can imagine the following:
1. An entity that's doing absolutely nothing - a static reality;
2. An entity whose one of its properties is to change - process.
What I cannot imagine is a process without the thing. The process is what the thing does.
AGAIN: I'm not saying consciousness cannot be a process. It just seems to me you're prioritizing processes over things. — Eugen
When it comes to subjective experience, the burning issue is really just one of what *science* will make of it and what kinds of implications this will hold for traditional, intuition-based accounts. The life sciences are mechanistic, so if subjective experience can be explained without some kind of ‘spooky emergence,’ as I fear it can, then all intentional philosophy, be it pragmatic or otherwise, is in for quite a bit of pain. So on BBT, for instance, it’s just brain and more brain, and all the peculiarities dogging the ‘mental’ – all the circles that have philosophers attempt to square (by positing special metaphysical ‘fixes’ like supervenience or functionalism or anomalous monism and so on) – can be explained away as low-dimensional illusions: the fact that introspective metacognition is overmatched by the complexities of what its attempting to track.
Likewise, presence, unity, and selfhood are informatic
magic tricks. The corollary, of course, is that intentionality is also a kind of illusion.
Let's suppose I can't. Then what is your point? That lack of a full and complete explanation proves a hypothesis invalid? Careful. Can you solve the hard problem of consciousness? If not, then you lack a full and complete explanation of how consciousness arises from brain activity, correct? So, is "consciousness is what the brain does" is an invalid hypothesis?Can you envisage the properties of such a 'substance'? — universeness
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