“Consciousness, properly an abstract term which, like “happiness”, “graciousness”, or “thoroughness”, refers to some quality of the human being taken in abstracto. However, the hypostatizing tendency of human thinking has led to its use as if referring to something existential. Since a man may be conscious, it is easy to fall into the assumption that he may have consciousness, then that something like a consciousness exists. This tendency to hypostatization has been strengthened by another circumstance. Much psychological interest has been in the description of one’s experiences when he is conscious, his feelings, perceptions, emotions, thoughts; and to arrest such experiences in mid-career, to hold them in static for detailed description, incurs the danger of misapprehending these cross-sectional snapshots as stable and enduring things.”
According to David Chalmers* it is undeniable that “some organisms are subjects of experience”. He says it is “widely agreed that experience arises from a physical basis”. In order to develop a proper theory of experience, it might be better to “take experience itself as a fundamental feature of the world, alongside mass, charge, and space-time”.
The problem is: when we look around for what it is Chalmers is talking about we come up empty-handed. The language isn’t helpful when it comes to pointing to what it is in the world the word “experience” signifies. Despite the claims, nothing “arises”, nothing “emerges”, nothing “gives rise” to anything else. Rather than “something it is like”, there appears nothing it is like. — NOS4A2
What he is able to perceive of it is limited by his perceptual periphery, the fact that most of his sense organs point outwards toward the rest of the world and not inwards towards the mass where all the business of “experience” is occurring.
I'm pretty sure you can directly measure electrical charge with an electrometer. — NOS4A2
Are you browsing encyclopedias as a hobby or for fun? :grin:I was reading through the 1957 edition of Encyclopedia Americana when ... — NOS4A2
But it is something existential. It refers to the human existence as well as to all life.[Re: Consciousness] However, the hypostatizing tendency of human thinking has led to its use as if referring to something existential. — NOS4A2
It's not an assumption. It's not a construction of the mind. It's something that can be experienced. What is a construction of the mind is the concept of consciousness. Together with the effort to be accurately defined, described, explained and proved. If it cannot be scientifically explained and proved --see the hard problem of consciousness"-- does not mean that it does not exist, that it is not a reality. And this is because science, as we know it, in its current state of evolution and development, does not accept the human experience among its tools of analysis, investigation, kinds of proof, etc.Since a man may be conscious, it is easy to fall into the assumption that he may have consciousness — NOS4A2
Right. In psychology --the conventional one, at least the one I know from studies in my college years-- consciousness is taken for granted. Well, this is better than denying its existence, isn't it? :smile:Much psychological interest has been in the description of one’s experiences when he is conscious, his feelings, perceptions, emotions, thoughts ... — NOS4A2
True. And for a good reason! :smile:[Re: HPC] It assumes the existence of “conscious experience”. The language often treats it as actual, if not fundamental. — NOS4A2
I agree.Despite the claims, nothing “arises”, nothing “emerges”, nothing “gives rise” to anything else. Rather than “something it is like”, there appears nothing it is like. — NOS4A2
Where does this refer to? Who is "we"? And how is it connected to the title of the topic "The Naive Theory of Consciousness"?Our Naive Theories of Consciousness — NOS4A2
Well, I would rather say "connection" or "interaction" rather than "gap", since the latter refers to distance, esp. between two things of a similar nature. But these states are totally different kinds of things, of a totally different nature. They can only be connected in the way fear is connected to adrenaline.Chalmers believes there is an explanatory gap between two states in his naturalistic dualism, the biological states and the “states of experience”. — NOS4A2
Do you mean that consciousness is a biological process and/or of a biological nature?But upon an objective analysis we find there is only one state and it is wholly biological. — NOS4A2
In what way "examine a conscious being"? I assume you mean examine the contents of a being's consciousness, right?Practically (and ethically) we do not have the means to examine a conscious being without altering his consciousness. — NOS4A2
Are you coming to a point here, frank? — NOS4A2
This tendency to hypostatization has been strengthened by another circumstance. Much psychological interest has been in the description of one’s experiences when he is conscious, his feelings, perceptions, emotions, thoughts; and to arrest such experiences in mid-career, to hold them in static for detailed description, incurs the danger of misapprehending these cross-sectional snapshots as stable and enduring things.”
The meta-problem of consciousness is (to a first approximation) the problem of explaining why we think that there is a problem of consciousness. Just as metacognition is cognition about cognition, and a meta-theory is a theory about theories, the meta-problem is a problem about a problem. The initial problem is the hard problem of consciousness: why and how do physical processes in the brain give rise to conscious experience? The meta-problem is the problem of explaining why we think consciousness poses a hard problem, or in other terms, the problem of explaining why we think consciousness is hard to explain.
The relevant sort of consciousness here is phenomenal consciousness, or subjective experience. A system is phenomenally conscious if there is something it is like to be that system, from the first-person point of view. — D Chalmers, The Meta-Problem of Consciousness,
Again, nothing has “arisen” from this state, forever discounting the claim that it “gives rise” to something — NOS4A2
He thinks it's a property, like spin charge and mass — bert1
'Reification of consciousness' is definitely a problem, but it is not Chalmer's problem. The root of reification is 'reify' meaning 'to make a thing out of', from the Latin root Res, 'thing'. And it was Descartes that designated the mind as 'res cogitans', literally a 'thinking thing' (not even thinking being.) This has had many profound and deleterious consequences, crystallised in the depiction of the mind as 'the ghost in the machine'. — Wayfarer
there is something it is like to be that system
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.