The goal is to describe how things are in reality, not to produce mutually exclusive categories.
Do you agree or not?
I disagree that there’s no ghost in the machine and the mind is only a virtual machine program.
Do you agree, that if you divide that line at C, it then consists of the parts AC, CB, and is therefore not a continuous line from A to B?
Libet finds that conscious volition is exercised in the form of 'the power of veto' (sometimes called "free won't"[10][11]); the idea that conscious acquiescence is required to allow the unconscious buildup of the readiness potential to be actualized as a movement. While consciousness plays no part in the instigation of volitional acts, Libet suggested that it may still have a part to play in suppressing or withholding certain acts instigated by the unconscious. Libet noted that everyone has experienced the withholding from performing an unconscious urge. Since the subjective experience of the conscious will to act preceded the action by only 200 milliseconds, this leaves consciousness only 100-150 milliseconds to veto an action (this is because the final 20 milliseconds prior to an act are occupied by the activation of the spinal motor neurones by the primary motor cortex, and the margin of error indicated by tests utilizing the oscillator must also be considered).
This doesn't support the "bear" example the way you like but it does point towards determinism or scientific determinism. The latter i would agree with.
The problem is you have drawn conclusions that cannot be drawn from the Libet experiment. Humans may not have a say in their future decisions based on billiards table effect of the universe, but your interpretation of the "bear" example is not found in the Libet experiment.
However, it cannot actually be divided anywhere or else it is not continuous.
what keywords do i google?
Do you have an article?
Nope. Try again. Perhaps you are misinterpreting WebMD or is that your own philosophy? That doesn't line up with reality
The above quote encapsulates an argument against free will for if we didn't chose our preferences (likes and dislikes) and all our actions are determined by our preferences then it follows that we're not free; we are automatons, each with its own preprogrammed set of dispositions that will ultimately determine every course of action that we'll ever choose in the course of our lives.
Also, I never said I believe in panpyschism. But it is worth considering.
However, what happens when you see a sad movie. You obviously don't start crying before processing its content and experiencing the mental state of 'sadness'.
To answer the first point, I say that the mind is the ego; the I as it meant in the original Latin. Cogito ergo sum as Rene Descartes said.
Given that there is enough evidence from the medical literature that the mind can still act and perceive in states without any brain activity; it’s a foregone conclusion to me that the mind cannot be reduced down to the brain.
What is the mind?
What is being measured in brain scans like MRIs?
The present is not distinct from the past and the future, it is an indefinite moment such that we directly perceive the continuous flow of time.
Right, an "instant" is not a real part of time, and that is why time cannot be continuous. There is something which breaks the continuity, which is called the "instant".
Indeed, and if time is not composed of instants, then it must be continuous.
Time is a real law that governs existents
Are you familiar with Zeno's paradoxes. The substance of his paradoxes is that what is described in theory does not occur in practise. In theory Achilles cannot reach the tortoise in the race, in practise this is not so. The paradox is resolved by realizing that the theory is based in faulty premises, the infinite divisibility of space and time.
I get my information from studying philosophy, where continuity is the feature of an undivided existence. So when mathematicians look at the divisibility of the undivided, it produces the paradox I described. The paradox is maybe easier to understand in Zeno's terms.
I can promise you even people who stay and don't run from the bear are still scared, its not that simple.
If you go by panpyschism or functionalist panpyschism, then all of those are conscious.
Sure, anything that can reasonably be considered an object can also be considered a subject of experience.
The functionality of things is what groups them. The way information flows through systems, the causal connectedness or isolation of them.
There is no such process here.
Emergentism claims that consciousness is more than the sum of its parts. Or put another way, that the parts are a necessary, but not sufficient condition for (self) consciousness.
Panpsychism claims that the parts (or a part) are sufficient for consciousness, but in order to make this claim its proponents need to redefine consciousness as two different things; phenomenal and access. Phenomenal consciousness being a necessary condition of access consciousness. Or, put another way Access, or self-consciousness, emerging from phenomenal consciousness.
Put this way there seems to be little or no difference between the two positions apart from the convoluted terminology required in order to argue for panpsychism.
When we talk about consciousness aren't we really talking about self-consciousness? After all, what could non self consciousness possibly be?
If you think that continuity is defined by infinite divisibility, then you misunderstand continuity.
So the continuity, in theory is divisible anywhere (infinitely divisible), but in practise (in reality) it cannot be divided anywhere or else it would not be a continuity.
DNA does not work by being a sign, but mechanically. Hence, it needs no interpretation or interpreter.
We use words analogously to cover new needs. As a result various uses need not mean the same thing, and what they name need not work in the same way. Normal instructions and rules are signs which must be interpreted by a mind before they can be implemented. There is no such set of instructions in human physiology. Rather, there are laws of nature that act on initial physical states to produce later physical states without need of interpretation. So we must be careful not to be fooled when the same words are used with differ meanings in different cases.
I am, however, glad that you see that the laws of nature are works of Mind.
No, programs implement the intentions of their programmers. They themselves are signs requiring human interpreters to actually signify.
Aside from the fact that this claim is wholly unsupported by data, there is no reason to suppose simulating physical (simulation) operations can generate intentional operations.
Clearly, anything that can act in any way exist
I have no idea what this means. "Virtual" usually means "potential." Clearly, my actual intentions are not longer potential.
See the OP. The same signals indicating I am seeing an apple also indicate that my retinal state has change.
For example, my intention to go to the store acts to motivate my motion toward the store.
Would you care to show the contradiction? Please define "material" and "existence" and then show that existence entails material. I ask this because on the usual understandings these terms do not mean the same thing.
Your argument simply begs the question by assuming, a priori, that everything must be "made of something."
Of course, but what I am discussing is the first person perspective -- how it is that we know the difference between body states and object states.
While I agree, this does not solve the problem I am raising.