The difficulty with other minds comes about because 1st person experiences are sort of private. Is your red my red? I don't experience your self-awareness, since, well, I'm not you. In fact, I can't — even in principle — not without being you, in which case I'd no longer be me, which is nonsense. Self-awareness is essentially indexical, a kind of self-knowledge, and bound by self-identity. — jorndoe
I think the issue gets too much attention, and it's because of a misreading of Descartes, or perhaps because of some lack in Descartes' development of the implications of the cogito. — Wayfarer
Whatever is, is. — Bertrand Russell (The Problems of Philosophy, Chapter VII)
the leap from the mental process to a somatic innervation — hysterical conversion — which can never be fully comprehensible to us — Sigmund Freud (Notes Upon a Case of Obsessional Neurosis)
the puzzling leap from the mental to the physical — Sigmund Freud (Introduction to Psychoanalysis)
412. The feeling of an unbridgeable gulf between consciousness and brain-process: how does it come about that this does not come into the consideration of our ordinary life? This idea of a difference in kind is accompanied by slight giddiness — which occurs when we are performing a piece of logical slight-of-hand. (The same giddiness attacks us when we think of certain theorems in set theory.) When does this feeling occur in the present case? It is when I, for example, turn my attention in a particular way on to my own consciousness, and, astonished, say to myself: THIS is supposed to be produced by a process in the brain! — as it were clutching my forehead. — Ludwig Wittgenstein (Philosophical Investigations, Part I)
If the hypothesis holds (that the "disconnect" or boundary is due to basic identity), then we may have to contend with our predicament. — jorndoe
Does a neurophilosopher who performs an awake surgery on his own brain to investigate the body-mind problem carry out a thought experiment or scientific research?
...the difficulty in grasping how something like one’s own 1st person experiences could come about, from the world of 3rd person perspective. — wordpress blog
My new pal Heidegger (well I've read 'Being and Time' a second time and seem to understand it) argues we begin with ourselves, our own being, Dasein, and stuff that's present or ready. — mcdoodle
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.