petrichor
petrichor
Tom Storm
bert1
Mww
petrichor
petrichor
petrichor
Moliere
GrahamJ
Patterner
Count Timothy von Icarus
Count Timothy von Icarus

wonderer1
What is your position that doesn't fit any of the options? It seems to me that these five options should cover all positions. There are only four possible combinations of answers for two yes/no questions. I have three yes/no questions, but if you say no to consciousness, the other two questions are pointless. I don't see how there could be any other options.
Consciousness?
If yes:
Causally efficacious?
Evolved? — petrichor
We are conscious, epiphenomenalism is true, and consciousness evolved by natural selection. — petrichor
180 Proof
Wayfarer
petrichor
What about you? — Patterner
petrichor
I would have voted for the first option:
We are conscious, epiphenomenalism is true, and consciousness evolved by natural selection.
— petrichor
...except that I see epiphenomenalism as based on simplistic thinking. My view is similar to the view Peter Tse expresses in this abstract. (unfortunately a wall of text) — wonderer1
petrichor
I guess I don't understand what you're trying to do. I was just curious why you settled on those options. — Tom Storm
petrichor
Your understanding of consciousness is a mess.
One thing is consciousness, another one is the self-consciousness. Read a bit more about the topic... — Raul
Tom Storm
bongo fury
I have a hard time with eliminativism or illusionism. I can't imagine how, if there is actually no experience, there could be a situation where it nevertheless seems that there is an experience. — petrichor
Apustimelogist
GrahamJ
I have often gotten the impression, which is maybe mistaken, that many in the scientific community basically take this position, that consciousness is real, that everything that happens in the brain is fully accounted for by low-level pre-conscious physical causes (and therefore epiphenomenalism must be true), and yet that consciousness evolved by natural selection. This has always seemed to me to be a problematic combination of incompatible beliefs. It makes me suspect that people haven't thought it all through sufficiently. But maybe I am missing something. Maybe, for one thing, they just don't even have in mind the same thing I do when talking about consciousness. — petrichor
wonderer1
What are your thoughts on the compatibility of epiphenomenalism and the evolution of consciousness by natural selection? It seems obvious, at least on the surface, that if consciousness were not somehow causally efficacious, it couldn't possibly make any difference to behavior, and therefore could not be selected for. — petrichor
It makes me suspect that people haven't thought it all through sufficiently. — petrichor
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