I don't agree that consciousness is primary; only a small part of experience is conscious experience. What is primary is our experience, both conscious and unconscious or subconscious, of being in a world with others. — Janus
So how are you a physicalist then? — Noble Dust
I'm confused at this point.
You're posting a lot of stuff in this thread, and I've kind of lost the thrust of it, as well as my own interest in it.
I was responding to a very specific problem I thought I saw, and kept my comments very specifically about that (consciousness), but at this point I'm having a hard time understanding your views on any of these topics.
But, in return, I'm not interested in hearing from people who aren't interested, so let's not hear from you agaIn, O Noble Dust. — Michael Ossipoff
maybe we'll wrangle again elsewhere at some point. — Noble Dust
But conciousness is constant, at least in waking life. Consciousness just means the state of your mind right now as you read this; it's the same state when you go clean the kitchen, go to work, have sex, etc. At least that's my conception of it; it's a very broad, basic state of existence; the only basic one, in fact. Of course it's also a spectrum; if you're sleep-deprived or drunk, your conscious experience kind of obtains in a different way. The subconscious and the unconscious are "fundamental" to experience, if you will, but I can't see the use in saying that they're a significantly larger portion of experience itself. — Noble Dust
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.