The questions are:
1. Is the logic of the model correct?
2. There is an alternative to this model, i.e. a model in which ''absolutely anything you could think of" is not fundamental, but it is neither 100% reducible nor strongly emergent?
3. Does this model apply to any type of reality? I mean, if instead of matter we assume that the most fundamental thing is an immaterial computer or information, does this change have any impact on the model? — Eugen
That out of the way, hereunder is my basic stance on the question. Consciousness is fundamental not as a constituent of objects, but as the ground of cognition. And as all objects appear within cognition, objects (and their relations) appear for us. The million-dollar question is whether those objects are real independently of our cognition of them, or whether their reality is imputed to them, by us, on the basis of our experience of them. That is the vital point to understand, because in my view, the idealist argument is not that objects are composed from some mysterious mind-stuff as a constituent, but that whatever reality we impute to objects is dependent on our cognition of them. See the difference? — Wayfarer
I am not trying to find out if consciousness is fundamental or emergent. What I'm asking is if consciousness can be other than: a. Fundamental b. Emergent (weak or strong) — Eugen
Before, you asked for one or the other. Here you’re asking if something other than one or the other. — Mww
1. Is the logic of the model correct?
2. There is an alternative to this model, i.e. a model in which ''absolutely anything you could think of" is not fundamental, but it is neither 100% reducible nor strongly emergent?
3. Does this model apply to any type of reality? I mean, if instead of matter we assume that the most fundamental thing is an immaterial computer or information, does this change have any impact on the model? — Eugen
So where do I exactly try to do that? — Eugen
I need your help on the following matter.
I am not trying to criticize anyone, but I need you to help me understand something. Every time I open an OP containing the words ''consciousness, emergent, fundamental", there's this weird pattern. Basically, ↪180 Proof comes and says ''This OP is nonsense." It's like this all the time. None of you or other people on my other OPs seem to have this issue except him. — Eugen
Well, if you like pain in the ass, go for it. I personally don't have this kind of fetish. — Eugen
Who decides what's a "good, well supported" OP? — Eugen
Does ''anything you could think of" presuppose "ontic entity"? — Eugen
Before, you asked for one or the other. Here you’re asking if something other than one or the other.
— Mww
No, I didn't. — Eugen
….would you agree with me then that these activities are (1) not "entities”….. — 180 Proof
….and therefore (2) that they are neither "fundamental" nor "emergent" (objects / properties)? — 180 Proof
….point out where you think my thinking goes wrong. — 180 Proof
- how can it exist if it doesn't have properties? The property of being must be there at least. Being what it is is a property.I deny consciousness as an entity because it is not identifiable by a set of properties. — Mww
- conceptions definitely emerge, I agree.Still, consciousness, even if only a conception, could be said to emerge from that by which any conception emerges — Mww
- that is the case if you consider noting being fundamental, I'd agree with that. I posted this question on another forum, and someone suggested that we could eliminate the fundamental. Still, we wouldn't get rid of emergence.But that kind of thinking invites infinite regress (where does the thing conceptions emerge from, emerge from) — Mww
how can it exist if it doesn't have properties? — Eugen
conceptions definitely emerge, I agree. — Eugen
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