wise claims about the world (philosophy). — Nickolasgaspar
reason was not the mind property in question here. — Nickolasgaspar
I don't disagree with the traditional aspect of it. I (and I can only speak for myself) find it a waste of time trying to address unanswerable "why" questions. Its feels like all philosophers are in a race to produce the most unanswerable question in order to guarantee the immortality of their names in the Academia.Nevertheless, in a philosophy forum, one that features people interested say in Plato, Descartes, Hume, Kant, Wittgenstein and so on in the tradition, it is quite important to deal with these why questions, to differing degrees and with different perspectives in mind. It's built into the fabric of the discipline. — Manuel
Its good to know that you also feel baffled by the properties of matter in general. ITs sad to see most people ignoring the real "magic" in our world.And it is a very good list, and I agree that all these things are quite baffling, as I think existence should be.
I am surely not going to get in the way of a scientists and suggest them what they should, or should not do. Science has been a spectacular success story since it lifted off in the 17th century and it should continue as far as it can. — Manuel
-They can and should have a say, but only after justifying their conclusions in relations to the facts made available by scientists.Now, if a scientists were to say, that free will is an illusion or that we don't actually perceive colour, we only think we do, then the philosophers can have say, and rightly so, in my opinion. — Manuel
It depends from the type of naturalism .If you are referring to Philosophical naturalism, then you are wrong.You will always reflexively equate philosophy with naturalism. — Wayfarer
Now we are on a different topic without making any acknowledgements for the previous theses....I mention it because of the very well-known arguments about the apparent conflicts between Darwinian naturalism and the faculty of reason, although if you're not familiar with them, I won't go to the trouble of trying to explain them. — Wayfarer
I am a Methodological Naturalist, — Nickolasgaspar
there aren't any real conflicts between Darwinian Naturalism and reason. — Nickolasgaspar
If the conflict is closely related to a made up "hard problem" based on ''why'' questions, things don't look promising.Have you ever read anything about that topic? Because it seems to me closely connected to the hard problem argument. — Wayfarer
:roll: I can think of several significant cognitive neuroscientists who have plenty to say which is informed by observational data on this topic, unlike philosophers who only speculate about their anecdotal, folk ideas of "phenomenal consciousness". Maybe you should read some of the relevant scientific literature, bert.Neuroscience has nothing to say about phenomenal consciousness. — bert1
"How does brain function necessitate consciousness? What is it about brain function that means it can't happen without consciousness also happening?" — bert1
The easy problems of consciousness include those of explaining the following phenomena:
the ability to discriminate, categorize, and react to environmental stimuli;
the integration of information by a cognitive system;
the reportability of mental states;
the ability of a system to access its own internal states;
the focus of attention;
the deliberate control of behavior;
the difference between wakefulness and sleep. — Chalmers - Facing up to the Problem of Consciousness
Neuroscience has nothing to say about phenomenal consciousness. — bert1
The really hard problem of consciousness is the problem of experience. When we think and perceive, there is a whir of information-processing, but there is also a subjective aspect. As Nagel (1974) has put it, there is something it is like to be a conscious organism. This subjective aspect is experience...
...Why should physical processing give rise to a rich inner life at all? It seems objectively unreasonable that it should, and yet it does. — Chalmers again
The potential problem here is that if there is such a thing as first person consciousness, and if first person consciousness is essentially private, then by necessity there can’t be any sort of public, scientific evidence of or explanation for it. — Michael
This is a great question, and I'm sorry to say I can't even give you an example bare-bones answer. Absolutely no idea. — bert1
if there is such a thing as first person consciousness, and if first person consciousness is essentially private, then by necessity there can’t be any sort of public, scientific evidence of or explanation for it. — Michael
I'm not seeing how that follows. I can see how, if a thing were inherently and unassailably private we couldn't publicly discuss what is is, but I don't see how we couldn't publicly discuss how it came about or what purpose it might serve.
If there were some completely secret contents of a black box but if every time I added a coin to that box it spat out a can of beer, I don't need to know what's in the box to have a reasonable scientific theory that the box is designed (evolved, if natural) to vend beer, and that it does so in response to money being placed in it. I could experiment with different coinage, different currencies. See if there's a relationship between coin and beer type... I could develop a dozen perfectly valid, sound theories about this box, how and why it works, all without having a clue what's in it. — Isaac
I don't see how we couldn't publicly discuss how it came about or what purpose it might serve.
Consciousness is basically a behavior. — T Clark
We see the results of it in other people all the time, in their public behavior and communication. — T Clark
The problem with Bert's and the hard problem approach in general, is that they don't even attempt to enter the room because finding anything appears to be impossible.Then how do you know that the answers given so far are unsatisfactory. If I went into a room searching for something and you asked what it was I was looking for, if I said "I don't know", you might reasonable ask "then how do you know you haven't found it yet? — Isaac
You asked for evidence, not theories. So assume you have two theories to explain how and why it works. What evidence would prove which one is correct, assuming you can never look inside the box, and that both always correctly predict the box's response? — Michael
In my opinion this is a failed attempt to hide behind the subjective aspects of the phenomenon.if there is such a thing as first person consciousness, and if first person consciousness is essentially private, then by necessity there can’t be any sort of public, scientific evidence of or explanation for it. — Michael
By first person consciousness you refer to the subjective content of a conscious experience and because we can not share the exact same experience, your claim is that it makes it inaccessible to science. — Nickolasgaspar
Scientific evidence for what? — Nickolasgaspar
Except in reflection!'the eye cannot see itself.' — Wayfarer
Thankfully, those involved in REAL scientific research, tend to do exactly as you suggest and leave the 'why' aspect of any of the current 'big questions,' as something in the range of personal entertainment to personal psychosis, via their own personal ruminations of such 'why' questions. Be they Philosophers, (who can actually make useful contributions to the ensuing discussions) or theists/theosophists (who offer nothing but woo woo.)As a scientists we should ignore the "why" questions and try to answer the how and what questions. — Nickolasgaspar
And what do you think others would say about, 'pretty well all YOU do here?' as you type from your glass house.Indeed - but that's pretty well all you do here. You basically barge into every philosophical discussion with Look! Science! Can't you see, fools! That's exactly how you responded to me. — Wayfarer
I don't know why you find it so important not to be able to replay from a first person view. Why do you think this is a problem? — Nickolasgaspar
I'm not saying it's important as such. I'm just saying that if the subjective aspect of consciousness is inaccessible to science then nothing would count as evidence that the subjective aspect of consciousness is reducible to some physical phenomena like brain activity. — Michael
Wow that is a huge leap you made there. — Nickolasgaspar
Whether our efforts point to physical mechanisms , that either means the phenomenon IS PHYSICAL or that we don't need to make up additional entities to explain it (parsimony).
Correct, why questions are a slippery slope for...getting back in bed with Aristotelian teleology and enabling the pollution of our epistemology.Thankfully, those involved in REAL scientific research tend to do exactly as you suggest and leave the 'why' aspect of any of the current 'big questions,' as something in the range of personal entertainment to personal psychosis via the personal rumination of philosophers, who can actually make useful contributions to the ensuing discussions and theists/theosophists who offer noting but woo woo. — universeness
Forensic" methods is how we get to know things of events that we can not detect(directly). Its nothing new in Science. From cosmology, evolution to..... quantum fluctuations , we puzzle facts from different aspects and we construct credible models that are able to produce meaningful Descriptions, Accurate predictions and Technical applications of the phenomenon in question. This is also true with Consciousness. — Nickolasgaspar
First of all ,we have access in the evaluation of the subjective aspect of an experience. We have metrics for profiling blood, brain scans, behavior analysis, interviewing.How so? If the subjective aspect of consciousness is inaccessible to science and brain activity is accessible to science then ipso facto the subjective aspect of consciousness isn't brain activity. — Michael
We can change the stimuli, or the biological setup and observe changes in behavior, in brain patterns in blood metrics. We can create the experience by stimulating the suspected brain area and observe changes in our blood profile, behavior , brain patterns etc. — Nickolasgaspar
You can have evidence that stimulating certain nerves in certain ways causes the subject to flinch and say "that hurts", but that isn't prima facie evidence of consciousness. — Michael
So, for you, what is your example above, evidence of? — universeness
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.