Would it be considered a panpaychism to theorize that what we consider unique about consciousness, its 'aboutness' and 'feeling of what it is like' , is not something inside a mind but the pre-condition for understanding any notion of existing things? — Joshs
You'll find this kind of thinking in its embryonic form in James and Dewey, and in Husserl.
It's been developed in many directions by enactive embodied cognitive scientists and philosophers who are incorporating the ideas of phenomenology. I particularly recommend the work of Shaun Gallagher. Also Francisco Varela and Evan Thompson. — Joshs
Do you have an argument for why something determinate cannot proceed from something indeterminate? — Janus
Continuing your example, say there is a determinable state A followed by a determinable state B, and we call the transition from the first to the second states 'C'. You claim that C must be "nothing". I say that it must be an indeterminable state because "nothing" is impossible. C is something but it is not a determinable something. — Janus
Provocative. But meaningful? — tim wood
What is a "tendency"? What does it mean to say that "everything has a tendency to reach an end"? What is an "end"? — tim wood
Are perfection and end the same, in different words? — tim wood
Or are they different? — tim wood
What is the difference? — tim wood
What is motion, in your usage? — tim wood
Who judges what is imperfect? — tim wood
If imperfection exists and God didn't create it, then where did it come from? — tim wood
And, finally, what do you mean by God? — tim wood
Philosophy, if that is what you're about, is not about being clever. It is about being - trying to be - thoughtful, and engaging others in thoughtful discussion — tim wood
We have of course no reason to assume that our discrete representations are literally representative of a discrete reality undergoing state transitions, for we never observe precise and static states undergoing transition, rather we just see a fuzzy dynamic procession that we carve up into neat pieces for sake of approximate analysis. — sime
So perhaps you argument should be interpreted as a modus-tollens that leads to a rejection this assumption, rather than an argument for a separate mental substance. — sime
I'm not even sure how introducing an overseer solves the problem without introducing it at another level. — sime
I'm not saying that identity theory doesn't have any problems. I'm saying that materialism doesn't entail epiphenomenalism, and so to attack materialism by attacking epiphenomenalism doesn't make sense. — Michael
I'm saying that that is what some materialists will claim. See The Mind/Brain Identity Theory. Contrary to your repeated claims, materialism doesn't entail epiphenomenalism. — Michael
What does it mean to be a physical process as opposed to a non-physical process?
Computers are excellent analogies of the mind-body relationship. What the software on the computer does is dependent on input (bottom-up). The computer then produces output based on the interaction of the software and the input (top-down).
The computer can be designed to learn - to change it's programming on the fly based on new input, which can be it's own output.
The physical vs. non-physical distinction is the illusion. When consciousness is caused and causes, in a relationship with the world, talking about different substances is ridiculous. It is neither physical nor non-physical. It is all information. — Harry Hindu
Do causes even exist?
If causes do not exist, does any question about materialism even matter? — WISDOMfromPO-MO
What I think is important here is that my thought sets off a chain of physical processes that end up with my arm going up. — Cavacava
The brain state is the physical process. That brain state causally influences the world, most notably the central nervous system. All of this can be seen. — Michael
If consciousness is the result certain potential processes of matter which occurs only when matter is constructed in a certain manner this suggests a form of panpsychism. This is the only coherent answer I have found and to believe otherwise I think is to believe in some sort of magic. — Cavacava
I'm just saying that the present-day 'materialist' or physicalist argument is more sophisticated than this. Their argument is that there is a set of explanations that use 'mental' language, as yours does, and that this is a rational set of explanations, but that nevertheless there is ultimately an underlying physical explanation, but without a one-to-one correspondence between the 'mental' event and the 'physical' event. Instead the one supervenes on the other. That's their argument. As I say, I don't agree with it, but in my view you need a better argument than the one you've come up with so far to deny supervenience. — mcdoodle
The study referenced in the article doesn't actually show that. It shows that we're better at learning when we're conscious, not that we're better at learning because of consciousness.
It might be that consciousness emerges from brain state A but doesn't emerge from brain state B and that brain state A helps with learning. This explains the findings of the study without inferring that consciousness plays a causal role. — Michael
This doesn't follow. Under materialism it can be that consciousness has a causal effect because consciousness is a physical process. Your starting assumption – that consciousness isn't a physical process – is anti-materialist. — Michael
Personally I'm not a 'materialist'. But the article you quote can be easily accommodated within a materialist/physicalist account. Either 'conscious awareness' is itself physiologically based, or it supervenes on the physical here. — mcdoodle
If consciousness is causally efficacious then epiphenomenalism isn't correct. Materialism doesn't depend on epiphenomenalism. In fact, materialism probably excludes epiphenomenalism. — Michael
Therefore, even though during the transformation from A to B, neither A or B exist, by B being the only outcome of A's transformation, the transformation will take place by passing through a series of events whose sum will result in the formation of B. — Daniel
THERE ARE NO STATES in continuous movement. Zeno's paradoxes smartly demonstrate this. — Rich
How about it is no longer there, when experienced? Given the time involved in perceptual processing
or It is not as experienced? Given the limitations of perception and the filtering and organization of the perceptual process. — prothero
Does mind create and destroy "Reality"? — prothero
Does mind exist outside of "Reality"? — prothero
Not as I understand the meaning of the terms but we likely have a language problem as well as a philosophical one. — prothero
Consider three movements:
1) S is hypothesized — Cavacava
2) S becomes destabilized as it it is negated (-S) — Cavacava
3) S' the synthesis of S & -S
Determinate negation. — Cavacava
There Mind is creating new forms by use of will and it is recognizing and conceiving forms by use of memory but it is not annihilating. — Rich
I don't think you're paying enough attention to what you wrote. The experience of S is not S, and the experience of S occurs only in the mind that experiences it. — tim wood
There are then two sorts of changes to account for. First, the real change in the experience, and second, the presumed change in S itself. — tim wood
Both accounts are tedious to reproduce. — tim wood
Mainly, your argument is just a riff on Zeno: the arrow doesn't move, Achilleus never crosses the finish and never beats the tortoise, and so forth. The trick is usually in having a correct understanding of the sum of an infinite series. But it's all a twice-told story. Why bring it up (again) here? — tim wood
I have no idea what Laws you are experiencing. I am (my mind) is experiencing all kinds of things, but certainly not Laws. The Mind made up the Laws of Nature as it did God. It is a story. A myth. The Mind likes creating myths and stories. It's fun. — Rich
I followed you through the point where you argued that if State A changed to State B, there had to be some amount of time between those states where either A and B existed simultaneously or where neither existed, but I don't follow your solution that the mind is able to exist without being subject to the same problem. — Hanover