Well, it's the best way to put the consciousness issue to rest: there it no matter for consciousness to emerge from! — RogueAI
They're so opposed to idealism, they will seriously consider they might be zombies or "there is something it's like to be a sewer system". — RogueAI
But duality separate the physical and mental in a way that feels too religious for my taste — Christoffer
I expect you know that idea is about 300 years old. Berkeley articulated and defended it. It drove people crazy then. Nothing changes. Curiously enough, he also re-inscribed dualism back into his system.E.g. Mermin: "the Moon is demonstrably not there when no one is observing it." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Or you could make your blocks a slightly different shape.The idea is that you don't get those blocks to form a sphere, etc. unless you radically alter the paradigm, the equivalent of pulling out a Sawzall and some wood glue and tearing your blocks apart. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I don't know enough about these concepts to make a sensible comment. Apart from wondering why people want to start from those starting-points, given that they create problems, rather than resolving them. I guess I'm just a dinosaur.Such a house built with the blocks is reducible to the blocks. You can compute the "possible houses," and their properties from knowledge of the blocks alone. The structure of the house would be analogous to some sort of "weak emergence." Strong emergence is irreducible, and thus "physically fundamental." If substance metaphysics, causal closure, and supervenience are your starting points, "like magic" is often how strong emergence is defined. — Count Timothy von Icarus
How does the 'history' change the actual 'formula' which results in consciousness? — AmadeusD
But then one has to hastily specify that the arrangement/atructure is not an additional element of the house. It is in a different category. — Ludwig V
Perhaps there are just different kinds of matter (a-matter) and (b-matter). b-matter happens to be able to arrange into conscious brains, a-matter cannot. Nothing is necessarily non-physical in this explanation of consciousness. And I don't see why different kinds of matter is controversial or anti-scientific; after all, if you accept physics you would already believe there to be variations in matter such as protons and neutrons and electrons. — NotAristotle
But it is as absurd to claim it is not there when not observed as it is to say that it is there. — Banno
Idealism adds the unneeded ontological complexity of things winking into and out of existence, and the logical complexity of a trivalent logic. — Banno
b-protons and b-neutrons, not sure if that answers though. — NotAristotle
What does this mean? One might deduce the existence of the moon from the tides... — Banno
Emergence, if it is to help us here, has to be akin to "seeing as", as Wittgenstein set out. So once again I find myself thinking of the duck-rabbit. Here it is enjoying the sun.
The duck emerges from the rabbit? — Banno
Am I right, and I seem to recall your saying something like this earlier, that you choose the images that appeal to you aesthetically, from an infinite (indenumerable?) list of mathematical possibilities? So in a way of speaking, the images emerge form some, but not all, of the equations?But, it is virtually impossible to start with the big picture and deduce the mathematical procedure. Viz. the image above. So the imagery emerges from the mathematics. — jgill
I think discussing the claim that the next moment supervenes upon this moment could branch in a lot of directions. It doesn't make sense at face value, I agree. But I think you can make some sense of it. In terms of A properties supervening on B properties, there's probably a wiggle room for calling objects zeroth order properties. — fdrake
There's a wiggle room there too I think. The type of ordering between moments is like "less than or equal to", so a reflexive, transitive and asymmetric relation. So presumably any collection of property classes with a supervenience relation (which is comprehensible), if that supervenience relation is reflexive, transitive and asymmetric, is an example of a supervenience relation which is precisely the type of order between moments.
An example of that would be { biological (supervenes on) chemical (supervenes on) physical }. That's reflexive - no biological changes without biological changes. Asymmetric - every element has a unique predecessor. And transitive - the biological also supervenes upon the physical.
To be sure, it's possible there are supervenience relations which don't behave like orders, but that is one which does behave like an order.
So if you wanted to make the claim that {moment 1 (supervenes on) moment 2 (supervenes on) moment 3}, it's the same order relation as {biological (supervenes on) chemical (supervenes on) physical}. So it can't be disqualified on that basis alone.
Another rejoinder would be that "moments aren't properties", but you can modify the sequence to explicitly make them properties:
{properties at moment 1 (supervenes on) properties at moment 2 (supervenes on) properties at moment 3}
Which seems to parry that.
And as for supervenience changes necessarily being causal? The supervenience relation is reflexive. You get no changes in type A properties without changes in A type properties, but a given change of an A type property is identical with that change, not a cause of that change.
There might be an angle of criticism regarding the sense of possibility. What are the "possible worlds" for moments which the modal necessity of supervenience would be tested upon? Something I'm still pondering. — fdrake
There's a third type of emergence, more psychological than physical. The cat emerges from the single line: — Banno
So in a way of speaking, the images emerge form some, but not all, of the equations? — Banno
It is a function of how your brain is processing the data from your eyes from moment to moment. — wonderer1
Stupid long retained its association with stupor, and its sense of "having the mind or faculties blunted or dulled, struck with stupor, dumbfounded" — Online etymology
Look at my icon carefully. I could not have planned it and then created the necessary math, in my wildest dreams. — jgill
By a moment of time do you mean a duration of time? — Mark Nyquist
Also from a physicalist perspective the past and future don't physically exist. I use past and future as known non-physicals. I think it's an argument that supports physicalism because brain state existing in the physical present can support the ideas of past and future . — Mark Nyquist
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