A prescient thought! About 15 years ago, I had a similar idea --- based, not on philosophical or religious treatises, but on Quantum & Information theories --- and eventually wrote a non-academic thesis to expand on the basic premise : that "mind stuff" is the essence of reality. In the late 20th century, quantum scientists began to equate Energy with Information*1. That is the reverse of Shannon's equation of meaningful Information with the dissipation of energy (Entropy). Just as the invisible intangible power behind all change (Energy) was equated by Einstein with tangible Matter (E=MC^2), I proposed to equate Energy with Information*2, and hence with Mind (the knower of information)*3.This "thesis" is about formulating a paradigm that unifies scientific explanations with panpsychist/spiritual or theistic ones. Something that both describes the content or workings of conscious awareness and the physical observable world - the fundamental interactions of the physical world paralleled with a theory of mind explanation, and where the dichotomy between them arises naturally from the same unifying dynamic. — Benj96
So a change in speed/rate is the difference between thought and memory for such a conscious entity. — Benj96
Could you elaborate on that? — Daniel
The proof is in the numbers, so explain how that comes about. — jgill
I never thought of my EnFormAction principle as a "non-Newtonian fluid" (like Oobleck or Flubber), but it is defined as the ability to transform from one "phase" to another. Here's a glimpse of that information-based concept, which is one step toward understanding the Hard Problem. :smile:Okay so I'll try to approach this with another analogy: imagine the mind or conscious awareness as some sort of "non-Newtonian fluid" that can be in both a crystalline phase (structured form) as well as a liquid/fluid one. — Benj96
Sound familiar? For me it sounds like relativity. — Benj96
Thought and memory can then be rectified with one another relativistically. And so the hard problem dissolves.
But it means space and time relationships must change for this to happen. — Benj96
It's a singular "substance" that has the capacity to phase transition between stability (memory) and instability (active thought, imagination, creativity). — Benj96
So treating substance as if it could loose it's stability is to take the substance out of substance — Metaphysician Undercover
The substance fitting that definition is Information.There only has to be one substance with the "stable property" of "change". That is to say it consistently, or constantly transforms. — Benj96
may be onto something in his Energy is Matter is Mind extrapolation. The article below*1 is way over my head, but it seems to connect abstract "Quantum Mechanics" with organic "Metabolism", and with "crystalline solids" ("non-Newtonian fluid" that can be in both a crystalline phase" ). I don't follow everything in his proposal, but the notion that "Phase Transitions" (such as Energy into Matter) are essential to other transformations --- such as Matter to Chemistry, Chemistry to Biology, and Biology to Mind --- makes sense to me. I'll have to leave it to the experts in each field to provide the numbers ("mathematical formalism") that add-up from quantum abstractions (e.g. virtual particles ; wavicles) to concrete Matter, to functional Biology, to imaginary Mind. :smile:↪Benj96
You do understand that Conscious States are a biological phenomenon?
Can you use relativity and QM to describe Metabolism or Mitosis? — Nickolasgaspar
Einstein's framework describes a relation in a way smaller scale.......may be onto something in his Energy is Matter is Mind extrapolation. — Gnomon
Why stop at a transition? Energy is the universal Cause of change. Why not see where it goes after brain states are energized? What "breathes fire" into the brain? :smile:may be onto something in his Energy is Matter is Mind extrapolation. — Gnomon
Einstein's framework describes a relation in a way smaller scale.......
You can say that metabolic molecules produce energy by which brain systems are able to produce mental states...and this is where we need to stop. — Nickolasgaspar
Scientific frameworks describe specific phenomena. We stop because claims about "energy" make no sense.Why stop at a transition? — Gnomon
Nothing breathes fire, your brain "burns" those molecules allowing all its mechanisms to produce our mental states.What "breathes fire" into the brain? — Gnomon
Yes. but my comment was not a "scientific framework"; just a comment on a philosophy forum, about one of the long-running mysteries of the world. I'm aware that for scientists Energy is just a number to plug into their calculations. But for philosophers, Energy is the causal force of all change*1.Why stop at a transition? — Gnomon
Scientific frameworks describe specific phenomena. We stop because claims about "energy" make no sense.
Energy is NOT an agent. Your understanding of what energy is..is very weird. Energy is nothing more than an abstract concept describing the capacity to do work.
It doesn't go anywhere "after brain states are energized". Metabolic molecules provide the energy to our brain to function. — Nickolasgaspar
There only has to be one substance with the "stable property" of "change". — Benj96
Actually, there is one substance in the world with the consistent property of causing change. That universal Substance (Aristotle's essence)*1 functions like an enzyme in the world : it causes Change, but does not itself change. That substance is what we call "Energy". It is invisible & intangible & immaterial, but it's what makes the world go 'round.There only has to be one substance with the "stable property" of "change". — Benj96
"Change" is incompatible with "stable property" — Metaphysician Undercover
"Change" is incompatible with "stable property" — Metaphysician Undercover
You do understand that Conscious States are a biological phenomenon? — Nickolasgaspar
Can you use relativity and QM to describe Metabolism or Mitosis — Nickolasgaspar
It's a little hazardous to form an analogy outside physics with a concept or result in physics — jgill
If change was not a stable or constant property then change would stop. — Benj96
Btw, I think Nicko got banned — Metaphysician Undercover
I understand your annoyance. But jgill's objection makes sense. Without some numbers behind your hypothesis, it remains a metaphorical device. And Physics is useless as a metaphor. Really we shouldn't even reduce consciousness to a metaphor -- as contentious as it is already.I think the single most useless thing one can do is to convince themselves they're not allowed to reformulate or change how they use concepts from "other disciplines" which refer to the "same subject of study" - reality jist for the sake of someone saying "but thats physics you can't do that!". — Benj96
So a change in speed/rate is the difference between thought and memory for such a conscious entity. This means distance must be able to expand/contract and time must be able to dilate/contract from net zero (0)when energy is just energy, to some positive integers when energy converts to mass (ie the emergence of the space-time dimension).
Sound familiar? For me it sounds like relativity.
Thought and memory can then be rectified with one another relativistically. And so the hard problem dissolves.
But it means space and time relationships must change for this to happen. — Benj96
Good point. :up:If we had a world where every discipline was strictly confined and not permitted to borrow from others, we would still be in the dark ages. — Benj96
So, you must have a different idea of "change" than I. — Metaphysician Undercover
BTW, "interdisciplinarity" gets ~6.5 million results in Google. And "interdisciplinary" ... ~405 million! — Alkis Piskas
But for the sake of argument, suppose "change" is a property which is stable and constant, then we would have to say that the changing thing is unchanging — Metaphysician Undercover
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