this word has no clear meaning to me. — Olivier5
What I believe is that the mind is perfectly natural, and that it exists for a reason. It does things. That's why we have one. Same as for your nostrils, your hair and your feet: you have them for a reason, they serve a purpose. — Olivier5
I believe the purpose of the mind is to integrate information from all sources to support decision making. — Olivier5
So to me, the idea of a thing (the mind) having no effect on other things is simply impossible. The mind as you describe it (a dead-end of causality) appears to me a logical impossibility. — Olivier5
They don't. Not without breaking fundamental laws of physics. You're positing a system which defies the laws of physics - despite being well within the purview of physics ("causing neurological changes" - a physical event). If something defying the laws of physics isn't reason to look elsewhere, then what is? Are you seriously suggesting that "It seems that way to me" is a stronger argument the "It is consistent with all the laws of physics"? — Isaac
You called my ideas ridiculous and faulty, — Olivier5
without any other argument that "minds are not physical", which is itself a pretty ridiculous argument because it assumes you know what the mind is made of... — Olivier5
That my memory of the route does not cause me to take it. — Wayfarer
That I only turn right ‘as a coincidence’. — Wayfarer
That nobody can ever do anything intentionally. — Wayfarer
Apparently this is telekinesis — Wayfarer
they are the consequence of symbolic language and abstract thought, are they not? — Wayfarer
To all intents and purposes, you seem to be arguing for materialism, but then you say that you're not arguing for materialism. So it's hard to counter an argument that seems self-contradictory. — Wayfarer
That's why I don't understand how you can say that such things as reasoned argument are physical, or can be seen as 'neural events'. — Wayfarer
Do you recognise the need for two levels? — Wayfarer
So, what happened? — Wayfarer
My explanation was correct, but your mind causes nothing to happen at all, not even understanding, so it has many limitations. — Olivier5
Sure. And what physical impact does that have, precisely? How do you go from the decision to the movement? Where on the causal chain of the movement is the decision? — khaled
You can’t apply physical laws when talking about minds. It’s as ridiculous as claiming your mind has a mass or color. — khaled
Making decisions. — Olivier5
It would also break the law of action-reaction, as I explained already. — Olivier5
You said: biology will one day prove that the human mind "does not interfere"; and yet biology itself is a product of the human mind. — Olivier5
Any time biologists find something, their mind "interferes". Any time they write down a paper, their mind acts on the world. — Olivier5
In the decision to do so, apparently. — Olivier5
When you said:
All of them can be understood in terms of a sufficiently advanced neurology and biology. ... The burden of proof is on you to show that the mind has any room to interfere here. — Olivier5
And what proof do you have of the "net" part? How do you know it doesn't consume say chemical energy? — Olivier5
My mind has a certain velocity — Olivier5
Does light have a mass? — Olivier5
Once it become more advanced, it will provide further proof of the ability of the human mind to understand the world, and itself... — Olivier5
I don't. — Olivier5
It would imply that for a human being, knowing the truth about some case is irrelevant to whatever he or she can do about the case — Olivier5
i.e. that knowledge is powerless. — Olivier5
intersubjective construction of private worlds. — unenlightened
Subjectivity is a social construct — unenlightened
What is the mind, is part of that whole question. You can't assume the answer before solving the riddle. You cannot assume it is some metaphysical or supernatural thing. It looks very natural to me. — Olivier5
I don't think so. Biology is not that advanced. — Olivier5
We are talking of the mind-body problem in a scientific, i.e. 'physical' conceptual frame — Olivier5
That is precisely why you raise physical laws such as the conservation of energy in this discussion. Otherwise, drop that argument. — Olivier5
The very concept of 'proof' requires or assumes that human thoughts and language can say something meaningful and true about the world. It therefore assumes the existence and effectiveness of — Olivier5
It's a principle of physics though. — Olivier5
None of these simple, familiar event can be understood without recourse to some capacity of symbolic language (and thus abstract human thoughts) to produce physical outcomes. — Olivier5
I don't know, but it squares well with the principle of action-reaction. — Olivier5
Never will. — Wayfarer
Have a look at the Schopenhauer quote on my profile. — Wayfarer
I might decide your reply is not worth responding to. Then I won’t respond. The ‘mechanism’ is not really a mechanism, to call it that is itself reductionist. — Wayfarer
In determining meaning, which determines course of action. — Wayfarer
If the body can affect the mind, then it logically follows that the mind can affect the body. — Olivier5
But being able to hold it or see it or weigh it tells you nothing about what it does. — Wayfarer
The reference to ‘embodied’ is with respect to ‘embodied cognition’. And the point of that perspective is that ‘the brain’ in itself, is an inert collection of stuff. Only when it is situated in a body, in a nervous system, and in an environment, is its power realised. — Wayfarer
I dispute that. The brain is an embodied organ. — Wayfarer
The non-reductionist claim is that mind is not reducible to physical principles. — Wayfarer
It doesn’t ‘break’ those laws but says that their scope is limited — Wayfarer
and the subject was always able to differentiate self-initiated action from that which was brought about by the surgeon — Wayfarer
But he could not discover an area associated with a subjects’ own voluntary movement — Wayfarer
Mechanical means explication in terms of cellular actions; as distinct from voluntary. — Wayfarer
You would think that if this process was mechanical then the subject wouldn’t be able to tell if these were a consequence of the surgeon’s activities. — Wayfarer
But if the subject could tell that these movements were being triggered by the surgeon, what would that say? — Wayfarer
Neurons don’t do anything. Attributing voluntary actions to cells or brains or other metabolic systems is called ‘the mereological fallacy.’ — Wayfarer
So what would you expect to see? How would you test for it? — Wayfarer
By 'closed' do you mean to exclude immaterial objects? — Bartricks
If the system includes them — Bartricks
But anyway, you now allow, clearly, that one thing can cause another without transferring any energy to it, yes? — Bartricks
Or on my asking "why did you move your arm?", you reply "Because my c-fibres fired...!" — Banno
1b. My arms move because certain neurons fired
— khaled
Yep. — Banno
I can't avoid the image of you sitting there saying "Ah, my c-fibres are firing - I think I might move my arm!" — Banno
Nuh. You don't think that. SO what's going on? — Banno
No; your decision was not based on your knowledge of the firing of certain neurones. — Banno
You just arbitrarily believe that though material events can cause immaterial events, the reverse is not true. — Bartricks
But a) nothing in the idea of material/immaterial causation violates those laws — Bartricks
b) if it did, then your view involves a violation of them as well. For how, exactly, does a material event cause an immaterial event without that involving a transfer of energy? — Bartricks
I decided - mental event - to raise my arm, and my arm raised - sensible event.
If all the evidence is that my mind is an immaterial thing, then what we have there is evidence that immaterial events can and do cause sensible events. — Bartricks
2b. I decide to move my arm, causing specific muscle fibres to contract.
No issue so far...? — Banno
Two descriptions:
1. My arms move because I decide to move my arm,
2. Certain neurone fire, causing specific muscle fibres to contract.
One event. — Banno