There's just the world-from-perspectives, an utter fusion of the subject and object. — plaque flag
The world from perspectives is not the fusion of subject and object, but the separation of them. — Janus
we are also able to think that the world is, in itself, beyond all and any perspective. — Janus
As far as I can make out, you still don't get it, though it I admit that it's hard to find the right words. — plaque flag
You seem to think (?) of everyone getting their own representation of the world. As if everyone lived in their own bubble of 'appearance.' In other words, the world is X and every person's experience is only f(X), where f is that person's cognition, which never gives X in its purity. So there's Real World out there but we only get the mediated version. — plaque flag
So you claim, but one can also make the phrase 'round square.' I continue to claim that beyond all and any perspective is nonsense. — plaque flag
I am not getting your drift here—I see the question as decidable two plus two does not equal either three or five. If the question is whether reality is foundationally matter or mind, or something else, we cannot answer; and that is what I mean by undecidable. — Janus
The closest we might get to a decision there would be to say the question is inapt, that no answer we give can state the actuality.
I think the same goes for this answer. We don't know, discursively, what "being. consciousness, bliss" is, so discursively speaking it is a non-answer.
One might enjoy an altered state of consciousness wherein one feels and thinks intuitively "Oh, this must be the satchitananda the sages speak of", but this remains an experience, open to different interpretations. Another person might say "I saw God". These kinds of experiences are ineffable and discursive interpretation necessarily distorts them because thought and language are inherently dualistic, and such experiences, in fact I would say all experiences, are inherently non-dual.
... though I'm not convinced we should expect any discursive or analytic investigation to be able to see beyond intentional consciousness.
One might have an experience that convinces one that one sees beyond intentional consciousness, but the belief that one sees beyond intentional consciousness is itself a dualistic interpretation of a non-dual experience.
Yes, I think this is analogous to what Hadot says about some ancient philosophies: that they were systems of ideas designed to be aids to spiritual transformations and realization, not discursive propositions to be debated.
I see every reason to believe that no individual experience nor the totality of individual experiences exhausts the real. — Janus
I'd say it's an empty phrase. If you give it the least bit of content, the contradiction appears. — plaque flag
Of course. Who disagrees with this ? That you bring it up again suggests that you don't understand my point, which is more semantic than epistemological. — plaque flag
What are experiences? At its most primitive, isnt this concept just about immediate distinctions we can make as observers - experiences are or have information in thesense that we distinguish or recognize or can differentiate them. When I see something, experience something, it is a subjective distinction I have made. — Apustimelogist
If thats the case, isn't it plausible that other information processing structures have experiences of that information which are completely different to our experiences? — Apustimelogist
Is an abacus falling through the air, the beads moving this way and that, processing information? Does it have experiences? — RogueAI
Arguably, it could be. I mean, obviously it is a complicated system that we cannot predict easily, but presumably it is actually behaving according to the kinds of regularities that underlie the laws of physics where particular inputs have outputs which are computable. Doesn't seem an inherent difference from what neurons do. Could a system of chaotically behaving abacuses not self-organize into a brain under the right circumstances? Where is the dividing line? — Apustimelogist
I am just making the point that experiences are clearly information for us in a very trivial way. I see something, I am distinguishing something: that is information. — Apustimelogist
I would be interested to hear why you would think this mapping does not hold up, if you did believe that it did not. — Apustimelogist
who's to say that experience is not just what it is like to be information? — Apustimelogist
There needs to be a mind observing the result to make it a simulation. — RogueAI
because there are factors such as judgement, context, interpretation, and so on. — Wayfarer
so any kind of mapping is hardly a simple 1:1 operation[/q]
Maybe not a mapping to physically unique neurons, but surely a mapping to ongoing activity.
— Wayfarer
Speaking of mapping, that doesn't map! The expressions 'what it is like to be a bat' or 'to experience music' or 'see the deep blue of the sea' draw attention to the fact that states of experience are qualities of being. — Wayfarer
When we hear music, that is information transmitted into our heads. — Apustimelogist
Another example: what you're reading right now may be described in terms of 'pixels on a screen' but what it means is something else again. — Wayfarer
The question is what information cannot be experienced and what experiences are not information? I think its quite hard to give examples for any of those things. — Apustimelogist
Information that goes past a black hole's threshold toward the singularity within the black hole cannot be experienced - at least not when at the singularity itself — javra
instead, is a mere direct awareness — javra
Why is that? — Apustimelogist
To me, this is having information. Though I think we are getting into the territory where we will have disagreements about the contents of experience or philosophy of mind generally, which would hinder agreement. — Apustimelogist
Another example: what you're reading right now may be described in terms of 'pixels on a screen' but what it means is something else again.
— Wayfarer
But is there ever a way to describe it in which it is not information? — Apustimelogist
When we hear music, that is information transmitted into our heads. — Apustimelogist
I can provide information which describes it, but remember the point at issue was your claim that — Wayfarer
I am making the point, there is something other than 'information transmission' at work when you hear music, — Wayfarer
Space, time, and matter no longer make any mathematical sense within a black hole's singularity, are often enough said to "break down" at such juncture, and with some affirming that information itself becomes erased therein.
Again, why would information be assumed to survive at such juncture? — javra
Most likely, yes. How do you define information? For me, quintessentially, information is to be defined by that which informs, or else "gives form to" ("form" in the Aristotelian sense). In so holding, I then take awareness to be informed by its percepts but to not of itself be information — javra
No, I don't. Information is part of it, but it is not only that, as I've said already.So you don't think the act or event of distinction itself is information? — Apustimelogist
I am just making the claim that information could be simply what its like to be information. And you just disagree. — Apustimelogist
For instance, some have said they believe in something like pure awareness. I don't believe in something like that. — Apustimelogist
Whether you believe in it is beside the point. It has been documented extensively in books on meditative awareness and trance states. — Wayfarer
The problem with your argument is that it is essentially reductionist. While it aligns well with information theory and cognitive neuroscience, which view experiences in terms of the brain processing and distinguishing environmental stimuli, explaining how physical processes (like neuronal activity and the making of distinctions) amount to subjective experiences is a different matter. — Wayfarer
…It isn't reductionist — Apustimelogist
but it all boils down to making distinctions — Apustimelogist
Sorry to butt-in here, but it seems to me that this "disagreement" is not about "question begging" but about Question Defining. I think I understand what you are aiming-at with the equation of a "bit" of incoming Information, and the "what it's like experience" of meaning in the mind. But, saying that "Information is what it's like to be information" comes dangerously close to a tautology. And strays near the Cartesian Theater's observing homunculus, that has baffled better minds than mine. Because "information" is inherently ambiguous.Well I think its just question begging here either side because I am just making the claim that information could be simply what its like to be information. And you just disagree. — Apustimelogist
I am just making the claim that information could be simply what its like to be information. — Apustimelogist
Sorry, but that is what reductionism is. — Wayfarer
But, saying that "Information is what it's like to be information" comes dangerously close to a tautology. — Gnomon
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