This requires all contradictory intentions to be suppressed. Some particular attentional focus and state of intentionality emerges.
Then this in turn becomes the general constraint that places limits on habit-level performance. — apokrisis
Attentionally-focused intentionality is the generalised constraint on the freedom of learnt habits and automaticisms that arise to fill in the many particular sub-goals necessary for achieving that greater general goal. — apokrisis
Well my point was consciousness is a confused folk psychology term. And that is why neuroscience tries to sharpen things by tieing what we sort of mean in the standard socially constructed folk view to constructs, like attention and habit, which are defensible as the objects of laboratory research. When we talk about attention, there is an information processing argument to explain what that is and identify it with actual brain architecture.
That is why it is better, in my opinion. — apokrisis
If the constraint is general rather than particular, we are right back at the level of general intentionality, which has the capacity to produce many different particular states of attentional focus. — Metaphysician Undercover
Thought and feeling can be pretty passive. That was my point: not that consciousness isn't involved in habit, intent, and action, but that those things aren't necessary. — Mongrel
The puzzle for me is that in talking in these terms you seem to be adopting the information-processing approach you criticised earlier when I mentioned students of Pylyshyn proposing to dissociate attention from consciousness. — mcdoodle
Attention and habit are characteristics we seem to share with many other animals; consciousness is something we don't seem to share with all that many of them (as I would say), if any (as some say). — mcdoodle
I was thinking about placebo studies, which I read a lot about earlier in the year. However cunning our studies of placebos, we can't scientifically get beyond something irreducible about 'belief' and 'expectation'. The I-viewpoint is not, as yet at any rate, susceptible to an 'information-processing argument'. — mcdoodle
You are just muddling with words to prolong an argument. As is usual. — apokrisis
Another way of putting it is that vague intentionality becomes crisp intentionality through attentional focusing. — apokrisis
They are instead the product of a linguistic cultural construct - social-semiosis.
And that is all right. It is the same naturalistic process - sign-processing - happening in a new medium on a higher scale. — apokrisis
Life against Death.The realm of the unconscious is established in the individual when he refuses to admit into his conscious life a purpose or desire which he has, and in doing so establishes in
himself a psychic force opposed to his own idea. This rejection by the individual of a
purpose or idea, which nevertheless remains his, is repression. "The essence of
repression lies simply in the function of rejecting or keeping something out of
consciousness." Stated in more general terms, the essence of repression lies in the
refusal of the human being to recognize the realities of his human nature. The fact that
the repressed purposes nevertheless remain his is shown by dreams and neurotic
symptoms, which represent an irruption of the unconscious into consciousness, producing not
indeed a pure image of the unconscious, but a compromise between the two
conflicting systems, and thus exhibiting the reality of the conflict. — Norman O Brown
should show there is a separation between attention, memory, habit and the kind of perceptual awareness that we ordinarily associate with "consciousness". — prothero
The assertion here is that "attention" is a primitive neurological function, seen in say frogs and fruitflies. Do we wish to say they are "aware" and "conscious" in the same manner as humans? — prothero
Well at least now we are talking about "mind" and "neural organisational complexity" instead of just attention and habit.. I think it is a difference in scale but then I am a panpsychist (panexperientialist) of sorts. Still a combination problem although neuroscience helps with how things get informationally integrated.Is it a difference in kind or difference in scale? Is mind something only humans have or does the degree correlate with neural organisational complexity? — apokrisis
I am no more sure how to define, interpret or measure "sentience" than any of the other terms. If the organism responds appropriately to information in the environment (and what surviving organism does not) then I would say it is paying "attention" is "aware" or has "sentience". Self-awareness is something different as is consciousness in my mind. The laws of nature may be "habits".Both are reasonable hypotheses. And what we do know is that the degree of organisational complexity actually does correlate with how most people would rank sentience. — apokrisis
Read them all actually; now you can say I did not properly understand them.As to the rest, I don't think you could have read my earlier posts. — apokrisis
I think it is a difference in scale but then I am a panpsychist (panexperientialist) of sorts. — prothero
I object to your insistence on a single approach limited to attention and habit and on briefly reviewing some literature find many other approaches in the field. — prothero
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