Again, I don't see it as presented as a single part. There are many different parts, or distinctions, I can make out. I know these are different parts as I can experience each one by themselves without the other parts. I can close my eyes and focus on a sound only and make that the only part, or close my eyes in a quiet room and think of only one color. The different sensory experiences are themselves the fundamental parts of consciousness. Consciousness itself isn't fundamental. I can imagine different consciousnesses filled with different data and that data represented in different ways based on the kinds of sensory organs an organism has. We can even communicate the different parts of our experience - communicating only parts and leaving other parts out. If consciousness were fundamental and presented as a single part, we wouldn't be able to communicate those different parts to others and they know what we mean.It gets its data from numerous sensory organs, yes, but is "presented" as a single part like a movie. — JupiterJess
But I’m not mixing separate things. I’m just not unnecessarily separating, dissecting, the animal (including us humans) into artificially separate body and Consciousness. — Michael Ossipoff
That was the point (sort of). :)
What choice do we have but the usual local 1st person perspective? There's no self-escape, no becoming whatever else. We're already, always bound by identity
, which sets the stage for "dualistic" (or "partitioned") thinking, like this one:
self: mind, consciousness, self-awareness, feelings, map-making, ...
other: the perceived, the modeled, the encountered, the territories,"
Also, mind does not exist; it is a convenient expression for a set of active and passive functions of intellect and will exercised by a being. Therefore, attributing psychological predicates to a mind is nonsense, and attributing them to a brain is mereological confusion. — Galuchat
As I was saying before, you're using Dualism with a different meaning. You're using it to mean the absence of one-ness with our surroundings.
...whereas the academic Western Dualists use "Dualism" to mean a dissection of the person (the animal) into body and Mind, two distinct substances or entities. ...a belief in Mind as something separate from the body. — Michael Ossipoff
Yes. The being, the animal, has feelings and does actions based on his/her predispositions and surroundings. — Michael Ossipoff
Rather, I meant to account for the apparent dualism monistically, e.g. self versus other — jorndoe
, as simply being due to (self)identity, while still taking Levine's explanatory gap serious.
All the self stuff...
together already is what our cognition is — our self-awareness, 1st person experiences
, thinking, etc (when occurring) — and is ontologically bound by (self)identity
, which sets out mentioned partitioning. We're still integral parts of the world like whatever else, interacting, changing, albeit also individuated.
So, cutting more or less everything up into fluffy mental stuff and other material stuff is misleading from the get-go; monism of some sort is just fine, and perhaps a better categorization is that mind is something body can do
, and body is moved by mind
, alike, which (in synthesis) is what we are as individuals.
No, that's Dualism. — Michael Ossipoff
Yes, but you were still speaking of Mind and body as separate and different, whereas i claim that that is an artificial dissection of the animal. — Michael Ossipoff
.Yes, but you were still speaking of Mind and body as separate and different, whereas i claim that that is an artificial dissection of the animal. — Michael Ossipoff
.A person has a consciousness and a brain. That is a reasonable division of a person into 2 seperate parts.
.Your position I take it is that those two parts are both composed of the same matter, the same substance.
.A reasonable response to that is "who cares"?
.If there are 2 parts composed of the same substance…
., the question still remains of how do you account for such divergent behaviors from the same substance, so much so that we can't even accurately observe or measure the consciousness phenomena but we can the brain phenomena.
.That is, these 2 things are significantly different…
., and simply making a reductionist claim (i.e. at some level they are reducible into quarks or whatever) answers nothing (especially since we really don't know what a quark is).
The body runs itself. — Michael Ossipoff
The separate “consciousness” is Spiritualist fiction. — Michael Ossipoff
I don't think my take presumed or implied anything supernatural or spiritual in particular.
At least I don't think there's any requirement to invoke such things
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