Question for 180 Proof: Are you taking as axiomatic that consciousness is a process ? Isn't that the basis of the reification criticism? After all, if consciousness is not a process but in fact an entity in its own right, then the reification criticism is unjustified, is it not?
I'd believe whether consciousness is a process or an entity is an open question. Agree? — Art48
No, there is The One and there's its manifestation. Two things.But if everything is a manifestation of universal mind or Brahman or The One, then everything could be considered a process. — Art48
It seems you agree with me that The One and the process are different.In a monist ontology, there is only one "thing" and everything else is a process, an action of The One. — Art48
If everything is a manifestation of The One, then processes are not fundamental but might be considered emergent. — Art48
then I'd say the whirlpool is an emergent process because a whirlpool fundamentally differs from water. — Art48
I don't know what the difference could be between proto-consciousness and consciousness. There's no conceptual space in between consciousness and non-consciousness for it to exist in. — bert1
- so irrelevant.Which makes it very strange that you are concerned whether or not there are theories of consciousness which "manage to bypass emergence" then. — Pantagruel
Actually, I can, in principle, agree with that. Still... I personally don't see how this affects emergence.Oh, and things are processes. — Pantagruel
I’m not familiar with Joscha Bach but I’m looking at some web pages about him now. What I’ve read so far reminds me of Bernardo Kastrup’s theories. — Art48
In which case you have reduced the concept of emergence to simple analyticity. That is discussed in the article regarding the weaking of the concept of weak emergence. — Pantagruel
Can you just clarify why you feel that emergence is a problem of some kind? — Pantagruel
It is either question-begging or self-contradictory. — Pantagruel
- it seems to me you don't understand that reduction entails emergence. You cannot reduce something that wasn't priorly emergent.(as a corollary of material reductionism). — Pantagruel
After all, if consciousness is not a process but in fact an entity in its own right, then the reification criticism is unjustified, is it not? — Art48
"Impossible to predict" equals "currently unable to predict". Which is what I said. — Pantagruel
- No, it doesn't.Your OP conflates two questions into one — Pantagruel
- I don't care what your personal belief is. There is a clear description for both of them: "Weak emergent properties are said to be properties of a large system that can be predicted or derived by computing the interactions of the system's constituent parts. Strong emergent properties of a system are said to be impossible to predict by computing the interactions of its constituents."To be clear, there is a clear distinction amongst people who agree that there is a distinction. I don't agree. — Pantagruel
No, it isn't. There's a clear distinction between them.the distinction between weak and strong emergence is really just a question of degree — Pantagruel
What "false accusation" are you falsely accusing me of making? — 180 Proof
- where had I reified it before you mentioned that?As long as you reify "consciousness" (into a humuncular folk concept), — 180 Proof
Are you guys disputing whether it is possible for something to exhibit fundamental features of consciousness without actually being conscious? — Pantagruel
I think "functionalism" (e.g. a tangled hierarchy) comes closest. — 180 Proof
(A less metaphysical and more frankly fuzzy version seems feasible to me, by the way.) — green flag
I would adopt weak emergence. And I'd jump straight to functionalism. I didn't think functionalism was a subset of identity theory. I thought Identity theory was that the mind is the brain, or something like that. — bert1
Token-type identity? Which side is the physical, which the mental? I don't think I've understood this one. I did a quick search and nothing immediately came up. — bert1
but I thought multiple realisability was one of its features, not a bug. — bert1
I disagree with you here. In principle one could have two identical brains realising the same function. In that way we would have two experience of the same type, assuming functionalism. They would be qualitatively identical, but quantitatively distinct. Have I misunderstood you? — bert1