I am not aware of any events taking place in the realms of organic chemistry or evolutionary biology that are not reducible to fundamental particles. — Patterner
I don't know what Metzinger says about psychogenesis, though it would surprise me if he believed the self is "genetically baked in" - considering his minimal phenomenal selfhood idea doesn't contain a self as usually construed. And specifically, tonic alertness is construed as an essential component (and precursor of) what we'd normally construe as a self - which is the autonomous cortical feedback of that blooming, buzzing confusion of impulses and reflexes. — fdrake
I read Metzinger as saying essentially this. Up to and including the self/world distinction as a bodily modelling process with environmental feedbacks. — fdrake
I see little difference between what apokrisis is saying about the self and world being a modeling relation and what is presented by Metzinger in Being No One. — Janus
The socio-cultural aspect is simply an amplification of the self/ world modeling. — Janus
That said, I hesitate to say the human level is "higher" or "better" than the animal level. — Janus
Those insects don't have parties, entertainment, festivals, the arts, religion, science, philosophy and history though. — Janus
We are blowing through the world’s fossil fuels and mineral gradients in a couple of hundred. — apokrisis
The functioning of an internal combustion engine motor vehicle cannot be understood in terms of the fundamental particles that constitute it. — Janus
I don't think so; in any case it's not just a matter of knowing you are looking at an engine or whole motor vehicle but of being able to explain all its functions and macroscopic interactions and inter-relations in terms of the understanding of fundamental particles.
Even if it were possible, it would be such a complex task, I think it could hardly be referred to as "reductionism". — Janus
Indeed. I've been arguing that it does not suffice to explain consciousness, or even make the attempt. It addresses only the physical activities.You are aware of ‘reductionism’, though, right? It is 'the practice of analysing and describing a complex phenomenon in terms of its simple or fundamental constituents, especially when this is said to provide a sufficient explanation.' — Wayfarer
Can you give me an example of this kind of self-assembly or enzymatic activity?Organic chemistry, for instance, involves the study of molecules and their interactions, which can give rise to emergent properties such as self-assembly or enzymatic activity. These properties cannot be accounted for solely on the basis of the physical analysis. — Wayfarer
You would have to pull the engine apart and examine the components and analyze their functions and inter-relations in the overall process of its running.to understand how it works. — Janus
I already said the engine is easier to understand being far less complex, and also because our models are mechanistic, and it just may not be possible to understand how the brain gives rise to consciousness mechanistically. What more are you angling for? — Janus
That's true, and I wonder if we would have achieved such spectacular levels of "entropification" if we hadn't discovered fossil fuels. That discovery has arguably enabled a massive population explosion. — Janus
When animals, notably apex predators, proliferate and overuse abundant resources, they are naturally knocked back, but we are so clever at abstract thinking we have so far avoided that. — Janus
we would have realised how we had allowed fossil fuels to hijack our reasonably clever human social systems for its own mindless purpose. — apokrisis
It seems obvious to me that the alien/machine intelligence could know every physical fact there is to know about brains, and still not know the most salient fact: they're conscious. Do you agree? Doesn't that put brains in an entirely new class of things: things you could know all the physical facts about and still not understand them completely? — RogueAI
Firstly, I doubt it's possible to know all the physical facts about anything let alone brains, and secondly most of what we call physical facts are conceptual models given in mechanistic causal terms. — Janus
You don't need to know all the physical facts of an engine to figure out what it is and what it does. The same should be true of brains, but it's not. No matter how much an alien/machine intelligence studies a working brain, it will not know if it's conscious or not. — RogueAI
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