Fair, but that still seems to me like you bend the word "I" to fit — mentos987
I do not think this is happening correctly with "I think, therefore I am". — mentos987
And I do not think that the general population defines "I" like you do, thus leaving room for misunderstanding. — mentos987
And I do not think that the general population defines "I" like you do, thus leaving room for misunderstanding. — mentos987
I don't think the general population even thinks at all, especially in the English speaking world. — Lionino
instead we experience some emergent phenomena of "being" — Christoffer
The illusion is our experience of ourselves to be more advanced than what we really are. We don't see the strings that pulls our behavior, wants, needs, thoughts and actions, we only experience the sum of those strings and it makes us feel like we are in control and have agency — Christoffer
The predictive system can study itself?And so our new layer of predictions analyzed our own emotional behavior and started to mitigate them when needed. — Christoffer
It is as if we were saying our emotions analyzed our emotions, no? — NotAristotle
You're asking the wrong person because I have the same question; I don't think consciousness is an illusion. — NotAristotle
anytime a "ball of energy", supposedly a consciousness, passed from one subject to another, it would find itself completely disoriented, being in a completely different frame of reference, sort of like if you went to sleep in Tokyo and woke up in London, except much more extreme. — Metaphysician Undercover
This would produce all sorts of irreconcilable confusion for the consciousness because it would not be able to distinguish forces of change coming from the inside, from forces coming from the outside, leaving it incapable of intentional activity. — Metaphysician Undercover
the question of qualia and our subjective experience as a consciousness is another discussion that fits this thread better. — Christoffer
Replying to your comment, the "ball of energy" would not be disoriented because it would only carry the energy to "light up" some neural network, to give rise to this "conscious experience". It wouldn't carry the content of the thoughts. It could be like electricity: if you change the charger of your computer, or the battery, the data and programs in the computer stay the same. — Skalidris
If we didn't have the notion of individual, this would indeed happen. But if the notion of individual is simply a structure that the ball of energy "reads", this wouldn't happen. — Skalidris
But this is just a thought experiment to challenge this notion of "individual" and show that it could be separated from consciousness. It's to emphasize that this sense of individual could just be a concept in our brain, just like time, numbers,... From the point of view of the thought experiment, there's no reason to think that whenever there's a flow of electron through a circuit, there must be a specific electronic circuit coding for the concept of individual. For living beings, it makes a lot of sense to have this notion and it's hard to imagine that a living being would function without it, but that doesn't make it part of the flow of energy, it doesn't make it necessary for the "conscious experience", they're independent. — Skalidris
The strings are our emotions - the predictive system; you're saying that's what controls our actions. — NotAristotle
The predictive system can study itself? — NotAristotle
However this is not a generic thread about qualia and our subjective experience as a consciousness, this is, as the title suggests, a thread about challenging our intuitions of consciousness. How is anything that you wrote a reply to my thread? It seems like you are just expressing your opinion about consciousness. — Skalidris
Having distinct and unique thoughts is what produces the idea of individuality. — Metaphysician Undercover
But that's not how we conceive of an individual, as having a a separate "I", the "I" being something general. The "I" is the complete package of the individual. So you propose a separation of the "I", but it's unrealistic. — Metaphysician Undercover
To propose a fictitious one is to say that things could be otherwise, but since the notion of individual is the true concept what purpose does the fictitious one serve? — Metaphysician Undercover
It is a reply in that it focuses on the formation of consciousness, or rather the formation of qualia and individuality. That's a dimension that needs to be included if we are to break down our intuitions of consciousness. — Christoffer
You ask what we think about your reasoning, but there's no clear conclusion you make. It reads more as a speculative meditation on the subject than deconstruction down to a conclusion. — Christoffer
I'm focusing on what consciousness actually is, about explicitly trying to grasp our intuitions about what it is. And you're discussing the how and why, which doesn't make sense in this thread since we didn't even elaborate what it actually is. How can we talk about why and how something was made if we didn't clarify what we're talking about? — Skalidris
The first conclusion is that there are no rational reasons to believe that consciousness always come with the notion of individual. And that therefore, they should be treated as two different matters. The second derives from the first one: there could be several neural networks experiencing consciousness in our brain. — Skalidris
a thread about challenging our intuitions of consciousness. — Skalidris
if you ever want to communicate with the general population — mentos987
We are animals. As long as people what to be good, I see reason to hope. And besides, not everyone has use for this kind of knowledge.close to an orangutang — Lionino
No free will does not mean no responsibility. It only means that you have no responsibility towards the creator.free will and that we are responsible for what we do and what we say — NotAristotle
I don't think people are "problems to be dealt with — NotAristotle
A homicidal murderer running lose is little else but "a problem". There may be more to that person sure, but their defining characteristic in the eyes of society will be: "a problem" to be dealt with.but no person is "a problem" or "the problem." — NotAristotle
Perhaps communication with the general populations is a pipe dream of humble members of the elite who believe they are closer to the average person than the average person is close to an orangutang — and I don't say this as an insult, more as a bitter and unfortunate realisation. — Lionino
Makes life kind of hard when you're aware of it, but it instills a certain sympathy for a huge swathe of previously-irking behaviour — AmadeusD
Facebook seems to be a great aggregator of Dunning-Kruger effects, to the degree that that's an actual thing. — AmadeusD
Negative thinking, patterns of thought, insofar as we identify these things with consciousness, it is easier to see how consciousness is an illusion; it is an illusion just as negative thinking and patterns of thought are an illusion, they are part of a script so to speak. — NotAristotle
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