So, we’re dependent on the (physical) brain to be able to cognise such ideas, but the ideas themselves are not the product of a material process, rather, they are what must exist prior for any material process to occur (hence ‘a priori’). — Wayfarer
If I wanted to do that I'd be a reductionist and I'm not. I have made an argument that the brain can be considered the cause of the mental. Not that it can be used to describe the mental.My argument is that you can't provide an account of reason on the basis of physico-chemical reactions or activities, — Wayfarer
But the argument is based simply on an analysis of the nature of reason and meaning - no spooky stuff required. — Wayfarer
since, again, what you’d derived didn’t justify your presupposition, nor vice versa, but it was in direct opposition to, thus being INCONSISTENT with, your presupposition. — aRealidealist
Excuse me. Logic is a part of rationality. Even the Greeks, who made the first distinction between sciences, like Aristotle, do not place logic as "the" reason. Traditionally, various forms of rational reasoning are distinguished, including science, philosophy, technology and even rhetoric. This is my starting point. "Reason" is said of many things.I don’t agree that logic is a rational method, for logic is the rational method. — aRealidealist
You actually affirm this, that “logic IS reason,” later in your reply. — aRealidealist
I don't think I said that. Logic is a form of thought associated with philosophy, generally allowing to pass from one statement to another by means of formal rules. There are different types of logic. It is even said that there is a logic of common sense. And a formal logic and a mathematical logic. All this is logic. I don't think it's an abstraction like the concept of reason.Moreover, I don’t agree that logic or reason is an abstraction; — aRealidealist
Its more subtle than that. We don't actually know everything about matter. — Punshhh
See! That's what I mean. There's a cultural reflex, that if it can't be understood in scientific terms, then it's spooky - it's 'panpsychist' or 'spiritualist'. — Wayfarer
The contradiction involved is obvious: IF reason is BS, THEN you can’t use to prove that reason is BS. — Olivier5
"Reason" is an abstraction. There are several methods that we call rational. Logic is a rational method. Analysis is a rational method. Inductive generalization is a rational method. The hypothetical-deductive method is a rational method.
Through a meta-analysis of the results of these methods I can conclude that they are useful in solving certain problems. For example, they are useful in finding the remedy for certain diseases. Or to solve the problem of the origin of the solar system.
Continuing with my meta-analysis I can conclude that reason is a better tool than other irrational resources such as faith or intuition. — David Mo
Among other things. It is also the power to divide problems. Traditionally, the reason is said to be both synthetic and analytical.Reason is the faculty that makes abstraction possible. — Wayfarer
It takes a fair bit of work to re-frame it so as to understand the root of the issue. — Wayfarer
That is just the fallacy of circularitynot because of circularity, but because of inconsistency; for, to use reason to disprove reason already PRESUPPOSES its veracity, — aRealidealist
"reason is useless", then there is a contradiction. — Olivier5
I’m not arguing for neurological reductionism. — Wayfarer
Yes, but you used two properties of reason to draw this conclusion. T — Isaac
And what is panpsychism if not spiritualism or vitalism? A spiritualist doesn't have to be Victorian. There are very modern ones. But equally spiritualistic.Now why on earth do you feel the need to introduce ‘spiritualism’ to the conversation? — Wayfarer
is that it's just assumed that science has an in-principle grasp of the relationship, — Wayfarer
So the argument I’m deploying is that the nature of logical necessity — Wayfarer
Indeed. Neither you could investigate the functioning of an eye through your eyes, nor analyze speech using language... etc.o in doing that, you’re deploying the very faculty that you are claiming neuroscience can provide an account of. — Wayfarer
As far as ‘theories of consciousness’ are concerned - that’s really what we’re talking about here - I think we need to situate the whole discussion in relation to some school, approach or domain of discourse, rather than trying to develop an entire system de novo. — Wayfarer
it’s conflating the physical relations between synapses, with the logical relations between terms. — Wayfarer
This -more or less:It depends on what you mean by mind. — Mickey
I call this empty substrate that you speak of "consciousness" and it consists simply of realizing my position in the world. I can only directly capture my consciousness and infer other consciousnesses because their attitude is similar to mine. (Some philosophers say that this capture of other subjects like me is immediate. I won't argue with that, if it's not necessary for your argument). If I have to infer a consciousness of the universe it will have to be because the universe acts in a similar way to mine. This is absurd for two reasons:let us call it pure awareness without content, — Mickey
An empirical inference is not logically included in the data that serve as a premise. It is a knowledge that advances synthetically on those data by providing new knowledge. Because we are not talking about a judgment that proves itself true, but a reasoning based on experience that produces a conclusion where before there was a hypothesis. That synthesis is the discovery of unity from diversity, so to speak.There’s a vicious circularity in that which I don’t think can be overcome even in principle. — Wayfarer
Our holistic, referential world of significance is what is most basic for Heidegger. It is does not involve awareness, thought, or subject-object duality. This is the same type of holism described by panpsychists. — Mickey
Once the thought is formed a qualia arises. — Pop
The ownership of ideas is closely related to the ownership of labor and the means of production, because if one company owns the idea of doing some work a particular way, then nobody else is permitted to do that unless they pay the owner of the idea of doing that. — Pfhorrest
There is no misinformation in the Wikipedia definition. It is the use that the major dictionaries collect and the use in tens of thousands of psychological and philosophical articles and books. For them, what you call "consciousness" is called "mind". I would say that it is your use of the word that produces some verbal confusion. As I explain below.If consciousness is fundamental, then it cannot be part of the set of mind as described below. Mind must be a subset of consciousness.
As a consequence the following wikipedia quote would be misinformation:
" Mind: The mind is the set of thinking faculties including cognitive aspects such as consciousness, imagination, perception, thinking, judgement, language and memory, as well as noncognitive aspects such as emotion." — Pop
This is true, if you include in consciousness more than thoughts, as your own definition suggests. That is, "consciousness", in your definition, would be active when some unconscious activities are functioning: desires, emotions, dreams, associations of ideas would be part of this "consciousness" or we would need another word to designate them. Freud called it "unconscious" to oppose it to conscious. In my concept of mind, this would fit in nicely. How does it fit in with your concept of consciousness? Because it sounds strange that there's an unconscious part of consciousnessThat consciousness arises at the same time as a thought is formed, and that this is the fundamental first step of all thinking. — Pop
The idea that consciousness is a subset of mind is a nonsense — Pop
Consciousness 1. awareness or perception of an inward psychological or spiritual fact: intuitively perceived knowledge of something in one's inner self
• inward awareness of an external object, state, or fact
2. the state or activity that is characterized by sensation, emotion, volition, or thought.
This ambiguity permits the mind-body problem be treated in the articles "Mind" and "Consciousness" at once.Mind: The mind is the set of thinking faculties including cognitive aspects such as consciousness, imagination, perception, thinking, judgement, language and memory, as well as noncognitive aspects such as emotion.
You continue to evade the proposition posed to you, this is getting tiresome. — Pop
You are bound to stay confused whilst you continue to use outdated concepts such as mind. — Pop
As far as location is concerned, I don't see the mind having a different place from the whole nervous system (there are neurons in my bowels, also). I don't see my mind thinking from the table or from the back of the room. When my nervous system moves, my mind moves with it.Somewhere between my mind and my brain. — Wheatley
I say the mind is empty. — Wheatley
basketball isn't a container. — Wheatley
The below is all confused: — Pop
Experience = Thought + Emotion
Consciousness = Thought + Emotion — Pop
Yet you take instruction from them! — Pop
Why can't consciousness be empty then? — Wheatley
Experience is not passive, it's an activity. — Wheatley
These are expressions of consciousness — Pop
The below link leads to a video: — Pop
Consciousness is emptiness! A very strange kind of emptiness. — Wheatley
How can you separate experience and consciousness? — Pop