Why aren't we talking about the behavior of neurotransmitters and dopamine? Why is hippocampus not mentioned here? I'm at a loss for how to argue about this because we have gone so far away from the true source. We criticize and shun neuroscience, yet we're willing to turn to physics to make our point. Did we sign an exclusive contract with physics? Or do we think that we're taken more seriously if we use physics instead of neuroscience? — L'éléphant
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. — Gnomon
Which is why physicists refer to the opposite of negative Entropy as positive Negentropy. — Gnomon
So, if you can accept that shape-shifting Information is also the essence of Consciousness, then the so-called "Hard Problem" becomes simpler. You do the math. :smile: — Gnomon
Yes. both physical Negentropy and philosophical Enformy are characteristic of living organisms. And Entropy is characteristic of dying systems. But when Shannon adopted the physics term into his Information (communication of meaning) theory, it had a different context and meaning from Thermodynamic Entropy*1. Likewise, "Negentropy"*2, although superficially similar, applies to a different context. Ironically, the negation of a negative concept may sound like a non-positive concept.Bit confused here. Negative entropy is what life does. From What I understand Positive negentropy is "moreness" of negentropy. Negative negentropy (double negative) is entropy (disorder).
So for me your "what physicists refer to the opposite of negative entropy as positive negentropy" are one and the same. — Benj96
For me change is a property of potential. — Benj96
Not true from my personal perspective/rationalisation. The changing thing is changing. The constant it abides by in doing so - change - is permanent in its phenomenonology.
In this case your statement would be a conflation of the actor (change) with the acted upon (the changed) - they are a dichotomy. — Benj96
I hope i am articulating the concept well. Forgive me if it isn't unclear I'm happy to further elaborate if need be. It's a tricky subject one I've been thinking about for years now — Benj96
You are making a category mistake. You state that change is a property. but then you make change the thing, the actor. — Metaphysician Undercover
You'll have to clear up that issue, stated above, before we can proceed any further toward a mutual understanding — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes. Because energy is (actor) and does (property). The two are united as a singular entity. It "is doing-ness". — Benj96
Just like a coin has 2 faces, is one face any more "coin" than the other? — Benj96
refer to two distinct things. — Metaphysician Undercover
The universe as a whole is a single thing. — Benj96
I speak in terms of unifying closely related relationships. — Benj96
Even making this statement is an act of demonstrating the separation. You have the thing you are talking about, the subject, named as "the universe", and you have what you are saying about it, the predicate, "is a single thing". Therefore your statement implies necessarily, a specific type of separation within the universe which you exist. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes. Thats how language works. I could just say "the universe is the universe" or even more extreme a case just keep chanting "oneness" repeatedly in response to everything you say. But that wouldn't be informative would it - information of course being what i use the distinctions imbedded in language to get across. — Benj96
You pointing out that my language breaks down into little itty bitty pieces that are all separate doesnt detract from the notion - my perspective that the universe is the "whole cake" and everything distinguishable within it is a fraction of that cake. — Benj96
So again, i reiterate, we can go splitting things apart and examining them in isolation like energy and matter as completely seoarate things. Or we can unify them (as einsteins equation does) and approach a singular fundamental, discussing how they are two faces of the same proverbial coin. But it depends on whether you want to accord or discord with me, that will dictate whether the conversation moves forward fluidly or remains static and fixated on particulars. (the dynamic triad i mentioned early). — Benj96
But then what is said about the universe is necessarily something other than the universe itself. — Metaphysician Undercover
The point is, that when you propose that the subject (energy), and the predicate (what energy does), are one and the same thing within the category called "the universe", you leave the thing that you are talking about, the universe as unintelligible due to the incoherency which you create with this proposition. — Metaphysician Undercover
so your proposition is in discordance with reality, therefore false. — Metaphysician Undercover
Something said about another may be correct (ie opinion in alignment with what is) or it may be incorrect (opinion not reflecting what actually is). And what of it? What's your point. — Benj96
I dont see incoherence in energy being a thing and that thing being what it does. I have no issue with action being a thing. Or "doing" being an existant phenomenon (a thing that is). — Benj96
I find this comment puzzling. The true source being the neuroscience. Let's not re-invent the wheel. We have at our disposal a discipline that devoted countless hours to study and explain... the brain.The true source being the human brain according to you? A rather large assumption to make I believe. — Benj96
I don't have a problem contemplating the basics. What I'm saying is, there's our source already. Trying to be creative is another thing -- which I think what you've been trying to do.My suggestion (trying not to sound condescending or. dismissive here) is to really open your mind up to at least contemplating (for funzies) how consciousness could be more basic (time and space perception from matter experiencing energetic impulses/catalytic processes). — Benj96
I find this comment puzzling. The true source being the neuroscience. Let's not re-invent the wheel. We have at our disposal a discipline that devoted countless hours to study and explain... the brain. — L'éléphant
. Trying to be creative is another thing -- which I think what you've been trying to do. — L'éléphant
If you still don't understand the difference, then so be it. I don't see how I can explain any further. The incoherency is due to the fallacy of equivocation which I explained to you earlier. If — Metaphysician Undercover
All you are saying is the language about something, and the actual thing, are not the same. Obviously. That's basic. What of it? — Benj96
I dont see incoherence in energy being a thing and that thing being what it does. — Benj96
What something does, is always what we say of the thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's how we interpret its relations to other things — Metaphysician Undercover
This is absurdity from where I'm coming from. We can speak of definitions (nouns) and actions (verbs) both. By the logic of what something does always being what we say of it, then if we say cats teleport then suddenly they do. Except of course what we say about something (either what it does or is) is independent of what that existant actually does or is. — Benj96
Except one needs to outline that energy is fundamentally all things and their relationships. — Benj96
If this isn't coherent/making sense for you at this stage I think we can just agree to disagree. I'm not saying you're wrong necessarily but I think we are simply coming at the topic from completely opposite angles. — Benj96
*Sigh*. Okay. I'm not interested in continuing. Thanks.First of all neuroscience isn't the source of consciousness. — Benj96
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