Comments

  • Cryptocurrency

    It appears that a lack of regulation inevitably leads to disaster in markets of this type. Or do you think some entities are just more upstanding than others? And if so, how would you identity them?
  • The inclusivity of collectivism and individualism.
    Not to mention the wars on the First Nations, colonialism, manifest destiny. Collectivism, through and through.NOS4A2

    American collectivism came originally from the need for defense.
  • The inclusivity of collectivism and individualism.
    I suspect through family and kinship.NOS4A2

    In a number of ways the English North American colonies were deeply divided and distrustful of one another. The South had a different type of economy from the North, along with slavery, the small colonies were defensive about being bullied by the larger ones, and for whatever reason, Massachusetts and NY just hated one another.

    Family ties? No.
  • The inclusivity of collectivism and individualism.
    But collectivism isn’t.NOS4A2

    How did we end up with a collective with no collectivism?
  • The inclusivity of collectivism and individualism.
    Individualism demands that you be a selfish asshole who doesn’t give a damn about the world outside the self.Mikie

    Not really. A strong argument against collectivism is that information is used more effectively in a free market. Concern for the welfare of both individuals and society is in play in this theory.

    Striking out against it as selfish assholedness is a waste of time. Counter the argument by pointing out why it's wrong, or even if it's right, why there's a better idea.
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?
    What role does science play from that perspective?Paine

    I don't understand the question.
  • The inclusivity of collectivism and individualism.
    It means to me that individualism is more inclusive, that it concerns itself with more human beings, even all human beings, whereas collectivism is exclusive, that it inevitably pits individuals against other individuals.NOS4A2

    Strictly speaking, no. A collective of some sort is required for the defense of civil rights.
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?
    When you say: "There isn't any phenomenal aspect to the third person account, that is to ignore the role of paying attention to phenomena has in moving toward that prize of objectivity. One can recognize the difference without pitting them against each other in a zero-sum game.Paine

    I wasn't pitting them against one another. Hyperion was saying that when you look out at the world, this is third person data. It's not. It's first person.

    Third person data has no POV per se. It's usually thought of as a construct.
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?

    We have very different views of that issue. :chin:
  • The inclusivity of collectivism and individualism.
    Are there any objections to this?NOS4A2

    I'm just not sure how this observation is significant. Maybe you could share what it means to you.

    On the far end of the spectrum of individual freedom, we have, say, feudal Europe, where there aren't any cities to speak of. There are individual manors which are so isolated they're like tiny worlds until themselves. All industry takes place in these small holdings and there's little in the way of trade. Travel is so dangerous that you'll have to be armed. The only libraries are in monasteries, which have thick walls to withstand raiding.

    You can see from this picture that a lack of any collectivism, or as you say, submission, means that might always makes right. There are no civil rights because there is no government capable of assuring them.

    Collectivism comes to Europe in the 1000's. Trade routes open back up and communities of free tradesmen come into being. These communities build cathedrals, which stand as symbols of collectivism. The cathedral is the town hall, the university, the theatre, and of course, the house of God with windows that let light in from the outside world in a marked contrast to the dark, closed monasteries. Rule of law isn't here yet, but civil society has appeared which will act as the foundation for forms of government that can ensure rule of law and human rights.

    The world we live in has both of these as its heritage. The pendulum keeps swinging.
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?
    When we observe anything in the world, we are observing it from a third person perspective. That is a component of our first person perspective, what it is like to be us.hypericin

    There isn't any phenomenal aspect to the third person account. It's the God's eye view. If you read a novel that's in third person, it's from a POV that no individual could have. Like:

    They all knew that sooner or later the aliens would come back. What none of them realized was that the aliens were already among them, having shed their exoskeletons and invaded the local chickens.

    That's third person.
  • A re-think on the permanent status of 'Banned'?
    So the multitude goes – like the flower and the weed
    That wither away to let others succeed;
    So the multitude comes – even those we behold,
    To repeat every tale that hath often been told.

    For we are the same things that our fathers have been,
    We see the same sights that our fathers have seen,
    We drink the same stream, and we feel the same sun,
    And we run the same course that our fathers have run.

    The thoughts we are thinking our fathers would think,
    From the death we are shrinking from they too would shrink,
    To the life we are clinging to, they too would cling –
    But it speeds from the earth like a bird on the wing.

    They loved – but their story we cannot unfold;
    They scorned – but the heart of the haughty is cold;
    They grieved – but no wail from their slumbers may come;
    They joyed – but the voice of their gladness is dumb.

    They died – ay, they died! and we, things that are now,
    Who walk on the turf that lies over their brow,
    Who make in their dwellings a transient abode,
    Meet the changes they met on their pilgrimage road.

    Yea, hope and despondence, and pleasure and pain,
    Are mingled together like sunshine and rain:
    And the smile and the tear, and the song and the dirge,
    Still follow each other like surge upon surge.

    ‘Tis the twink of an eye, ’tis the draught of a breath,
    From the blossom of health to the paleness of death,
    From the gilded saloon to the bier and the shroud –
    O why should the spirit of mortal be proud!

    William Knox
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?
    Epiphenomenalism asserts that metal events are caused by physical events in the brain,Joshs

    Epiphenomenonalism appeared in the 19th Century before we clearly understood that physics is unfinished. I don't think it violates the spirit of epiphenomenonalism to allow the explanation for consciousness to stray from the little spot between our ears. We can still call that cause, whatever it may be, physical, if that's important to someone. The point is that we end up with property dualism. The only question is whether an individual human has the power to alter the course of the universe, or if the universe is an unchanging block. I think I know your view on that.

    Enactivist approaches to cognition informed by phenomenological philosophy reject this ‘mind-mind’ split.Joshs

    That's their prerogative, but I don't think their view is the only workable one. Do you?
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?
    Hard determinism has worked well for the natural sciences , but it isn’t such a great fit for elucidating psychological processes such as intentionality, mental illness, motivation, affectivity, empathy and learning.Joshs

    What part of the psyche doesn't fit with epiphenomenalism? I mean, when does freedom of the will become necessary to understanding?
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?
    If communication requires common experiential ground, this seems to rather imply the privacy of experience. If experience were communicable, then the relevant experiential background could be communicated.hypericin

    Well... it's that we couldn't communicate all without any preceding common ground. There may be little nuances about your experience of say, seeing the stars at night, that I don't and possibly couldn't know about, but I must largely know what that experience is like in order to talk to you about it, right?

    Aphantasia is kind of a special case. Our experience of our inner world echoes our experience of the outer world. Our inner monologue echoes the sound of us (or someone) talking, and our inner visualization echo (faintly,to be sure, for most) the experience of seeing.hypericin

    I see what you mean. I think Chalmers is including all of that as phenomenal consciousness, of the outer world and the realm of imagination.

    Experience is only revealed from the internal, first-person perspective. That is, to the organism.hypericin

    Would you agree that the third person view is a construction?
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?

    I'm a hard determinist, so I don't share that concern.
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?
    So do you experience them as public, external, effable?hypericin

    Are you familiar with Meno's paradox? It basically concludes that communication is always a matter of pointing to facets of your audience's experience. You can't really communicate something that's outside their available data because communication is a matter of pointing. Explanation is a matter of channelling focus.

    In short, communication requires a common experiential ground. There could be cases where experience varies significantly, as with people with aphantasia, but knowledge of that implies some commonality in order to communicate it.

    So if experience is truly private, there's no way we could know that. See what I mean?

    As for "internal". I just don't understand what it's supposed to be internal to. My skull?

    doubt this will convince you. But this is my view, and it is quite hard for me to think outside of it. Especially the denialists, they are incomprehensible to me.hypericin

    And that's what's interesting to me. When we scrub the conversation of animosity and distrust, we come up on the ways that we differ in terms of conception.
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?
    Science, as a practice, developed through a lot of discussion about separating causality from coincidence. Given that we are creatures who base much of our knowledge upon lining up what happened at the same time as evidence of a cause, it was only through suppressing this tendency that we became aware of systems that were not simply extensions of our assumptions. Establishing what is happening and building models for why it did was the beginning of looking for functions rather than accepting we have been shown what there is to know.

    After some time of doing this, the method starts to consider what it dismissed at the beginning of its enterprise; The inclusion of observations made isolated from other people.
    Paine

    It's as if we started creating a documentary film, then forgot about the guy behind the camera. We wanted to remove personal bias from the account, and we ended up removing the person altogether.

    Now we want to put the cameraman in the documentary?
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?
    How do you experience it? I don't ask that as a trick question. I am not accusing anybody of misrepresenting their experiences.Paine

    I just meant that I don't grasp what it means to call experience internal. I'm not trying to be a pain in the ass when I say that. I just really don't.

    Something deliberately built to avoid a problem was turned upon the potato deemed too hot to pass around.Paine

    Could you expand on that?
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?

    Something odd I've recently noticed is that I don't really understand why people say phenomenal consciousness is private, internal, and ineffable. I really believed Dennett was being disingenuous when he assigned those properties to it.

    Now I'm starting to realize that many people actually do experience things that way. I think now that Dennett was being honest, so it's easier for me to believe now that NOS is being honest.

    I think maybe all the people who say they don't know what phenomenal consciousness are telling the truth. They really don't.
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?

    Gotcha. Maybe someday down the road you'll return to it and it will all click into place, but not now. :up:
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?
    I think you don’t have any evidence and are holding out for some odd reasonNOS4A2

    I don't play dirty. I'm telling it straight. If you follow Chalmers' and Dennett's works, you'll find that both are pretty heavily preoccupied with who has the burden of proof.

    The point of the p-zombie and other thought experiments is not about proving a difference between experience and biological function. They only prove that we can't assume they're the same. It's a subtle, but ultimately slam dunk point regarding the hard problem.

    You have to face the fact that we don't know what causes phenomenal consciousness. You can insist that it's equivalent to biological function, but you'll need to provide evidence, ideally of a type that would be published in Nature. You can't just assume it. Do you see why?
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?
    I am willing to change my mind upon further evidence, but there isn’t any. I can only observe and conceive of what it is that you are talking about, and all I can see and all I can conceive of is the biology.NOS4A2

    I'm thinking you saw Pinocchio as a child and said, "This is inconceivable!"
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?
    How do you know that?

    We’ve looked.
    NOS4A2

    Among the many accounts of gravity on the table is that our gravity is bleeding into our universe from another bigger one. Some scientists noticed that the big bang has some of the characteristics of black hole, leading them to wonder if we're actually in one.

    This is the way science works. We don't settle on a conclusion because it seems like the last resort, exclaiming, "We looked."

    Do you find p-zombies convincing? I don’t even find them conceivable. I can’t even think about how such a being could be possible.NOS4A2

    This is metaphysical possibility, not physical possibility. An evil demon or a god could have done it. It's just a test for conceivability. Santa Claus is conceivable, though we would all struggle to explain how reindeer could act as an engine.
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?
    For the simple reason that phenomenal consciousness is not equivalent to anything else. There is no other entity in the universe onto which we can affix the label "phenomenal consciousness" but the biology.NOS4A2

    How do you know that?

    So what would you take to show that they are not equivalent?NOS4A2

    Chalmers has a couple of thought experiments that show that the two are logically distinct. One is the p-zombie. This shows that we don't know apriori that the two are equivalent. We need evidence to show that.
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?
    Take a look. That which is giving its first-person account is the exact same being to which we give a biological account.NOS4A2

    And you take this to show that phenomenal consciousness is equivalent to biological states? Could you explain how? Because I'm not seeing it.
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?
    The biological reality and the first person reality are one and the same thing.NOS4A2

    This may be, but you'd need to provide evidence for it. It's not a logical truth.
  • Bannings
    It should be highlighted that disrespectful behavior towards mods will earn you a ban.Shawn

    Oh shut up.
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?
    Right, and that is a far cry from saying "science needn't bother answering this".hypericin

    Yes, but Chalmers hasn't opined on what science should do, has he? Just on what it would have to do to address the hard problem.
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?
    There is absolutely a need for one to explain the other, if there was no need there would be no hard problem.hypericin

    Chalmers doesn't think that science, in it's present state, is capable of addressing the hard problem. He thinks it will probably take some sort of paradigm shift.
  • Bannings
    Lol. She asked me!Baden

    :grin:
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?


    I'm not looking to do a deep dive on what Isaac thinks because I'd probably bump my head on the bottom of the pool. But he said:

    The use of the word 'consciousness' as it's used here and the study of neurons are not 'in the same world' they don't overlap in their activities. There's no need for one to explain the other, it wouldn't even make sense it'd be like expecting physics to explain what a googly is in cricket.Isaac

    The last sentence is not too far from Chalmers' view.
  • Bannings
    A generalised insult against the whole team by PM.Baden

    Oh shut up.
  • Why is the Hard Problem of Consciousness so hard?
    I don't see how. Chalmers famously labelled it the 'hard problem', didn't he? I'm suggesting it isn't a problem at all. I can't think of any way we could be much farther apart than that.Isaac

    Regardless, your view is similar to his.
  • Bannings
    Yes. That genius truly shines through when you're silent.Benkei

    I thought you were off grid somewhere in France.
  • Bannings

    Not me. I'm always a frickin genius!
  • Bannings

    Olivier was a little high strung (much like you). He would completely flip out sometimes, especially in private conversations.
  • Brazil Election
    This plague of right-wingers is very scary. They're still a problem even out of office.Manuel

    What do you think generates that kind of movement?
  • Brazil Election
    I've gotta good book recommendation if you're interested.
    — frank

    Written by a Portuguese, I am sure...
    Olivier5

    It's a collection of essays and excerpts published by Oxford.