Humans create the concept of forest insead of group-of-trees. Then we speak in terms of forest as if the forest actually existed. — Don Wade
↪Pop A single-cell seems to be able to find all kinds of ways to communicate, or find food/sex. I study "Levels", and in levels, communication can happen between cells - as well as higher-level animals (made up of cells). However, the different levels don't seem to communicate. — Don Wade
Now, as usual, a whole bunch of new questions. — Don Wade
Ain't that the truth :cool: — Amity
I believe this to be the best cartoon of all time... — synthesis
If we observe a phenomenon that begins in a state of lower entropy, it is clear why entropy increases - because in the process of reshuffling everything becomes disordered. But why do the phenomena that we observe around us in the cosmos begin in a state of lower entropy in the first place? — Carlo Rovelli
So the 'shape' of the mind in the world is a product of its own mental operations (in a physical context) and not merely a physical product. — Pantagruel
Can it be said that to be truly self-aware means to recognize, itemize, hence understand the necessary grounds of one’s mental activities? And can it be said that a theory of everything would limit itself to the exposition of those grounds, sufficient for any human, rational self to compare against?
If so, I submit Kant’s tripartite critique fits the requirements.
Keyword, of course....theory. — Mww
This makes me think of the distinctions between objective truth and subjective truth. We can assume objectively that we all have self-awareness, but we know with a higher degree of certainty that our own truth is pure subjectivity. — 3017amen
So, all are good, depending of what we're parsing. We must know which hats to wear when questions are posed. Ironically enough, being reasonable essentially means treating like cases likely, different cases differently.
To this end, can you describe your thoughts and interpretations relative to dualism v. monism? — 3017amen
↪Pop Yeah, I'm familiar with all kinds of complexity / systems theories. What Wolfram set out to do, however, is truly radical and much more fundamental than biological or ecological 'self-organization'. I'm not completely sold, however, on his grand project but I've kept an eye on (some of) his work for over a decade now and, as I've learned more from him and physicists like Carlo Rovelli, David Deutsch and Max Tegmark (among others), I've become more interested in the lines of inquiry they're pursuing. — 180 Proof
Why can't lower life forms develop their evolutionary math skills into those of homo sapiens? Is it because we are self-aware Beings (lower life forms have little so-called self-awareness v. pure instinct)? What is self-awareness? Is it something to do with metaphysical Will? An intrinsic need to know something? A sixth sense? — 3017amen
Is ignorance bliss? Why should we care? Sorry I got carried away :joke: — 3017amen
↪Pop Are you familiar with Stephen Wolfram's
computational-complexity theses and book exploring them A New Kind of Science? — 180 Proof
Are you familiar with Stephen Wolfram's
computational-complexity theses and book exploring them A New Kind of Science? — 180 Proof
we have some pockets where this "order" appears. — Manuel
I'm not sure speaking of objects or creatures organizing is clear. Maybe they do, but what does organize mean in this situation? — Manuel
Unfortunately, using logic, the subconscious and conscious mind would transcend common logic. Like the law of bivalence, one cannot clearly delineate the object perceived as being unitary, or describe it in a unitary fashion without contradiction. For instance, driving while daydreaming, then crashing and dying, provides for the phenomenon of the mind performing two functions simultaneously. In that case, either the conscious or subconscious mind was driving, not dreaming of a beach in the Med.. And so in that strict sense neither the conscious nor the subconscious was driving, there was some combination of both at work.
And that suggests, although a great description (yours!) in its own right, a self-organized mind or entity is nonetheless incomplete, in a strict logical sense. And accordingly, we know Heisenberg and /Gödel demonstrated the flaws in logic's completeness and resulting randomness, which perhaps leads us to this... . — 3017amen
QM (and to some degree double slits and PAP-see John Wheeler) has also taught us that there is such a thing as an open system in the universe. — 3017amen
But what do these thoughts represent? Are they images, and intellectual concepts (among other things) from sense experience only coming back to 'haunt us'? Or are they innate features of consciousness (novel synthetic a priori knowledge), where in this case, they may simply be both. Does the hard drive represent Kantian intuition? — 3017amen
Perhaps consciousness is only as convoluted as the myriad of metaphysical systems under which it is viewed. Favor a system, find consciousness in it, define its parameters or its logical relations......done deal. — Mww
Self-organization carries the implication that consciousness is some sort of cognitive faculty susceptible to reason, but I rather think consciousness is the quality of the manifold of that which is reasoned about, which makes consciousness passive rather than the active self-organization implies. — Mww
Much as red-ness is the quality of the state of being red, fit-ness is the quality of the state of being fit, so too consciousness is the quality of the state of being conscious. — Mww
for otherwise I must have as many-coloured and various a self as are the representations of which I am conscious....” — Mww
Given this (favored) rendition of what consciousness is, the rest of your comment can be seen as otherwise, re: we have no consciousness at birth, consciousness has nothing whatsoever to do with perceived truth, consciousness does evolve over the course of a life time, it does remain faithful to the established self, because it is the established self — Mww
You must have missed this link I provided in my previous post – Autopoiesis. It's a physical topic and not metaphysical except, maybe, analogously. Thoughts? — 180 Proof
Interesting. What is constructivist psychology? — 3017amen
1. The point I'm making is that if we consider consciousness a self-organized being, then it implies Kantian pure reason. Graph with all the change and in our discussion pure reason has its limitations viz. Heisenberg, Godel, etc..
2. And so if we were to use this logic, our own sense of logic, it would not be able to explain the nature in this case of [your] self-organization. For that reason it transcends our sense of logic. (The conscious and subconscious mind all working together of course is a whole nother discussion/distinction.) — 3017amen
In any event I was wondering if you we're going to try to link subjectivity and objectivity (in every sense) to some sort of dualism mind-body problem. You know, making a connection between the physical world which is inanimate, purposeless yet determined, whereas the mental world involves consciousness, self-awareness, planning, willing, desiring, etc. — 3017amen
No, we can define it any way we'd like precisely because we don't understand it. Something we don't understand isn't "hard to define" -- it's just nonsense. So the "its" in your sentence refers to nothing. — Xtrix
If we're talking in ordinary conversation, fine -- then everyone knows what consciousness is — Xtrix
You've been going on and on about "self-organization" for a while now, yet have no idea what it means. So now we have two terms we don't understand — Xtrix
If negation is always required for thought, but there is a way out, such that negations are not always required, then some system must be possible that is not a (human) system of thought.
I’m beginning to find that out. Amazing to me, how many people don’t know what it is to think, or, knowing that, choose to re-name it and thereby justify their insistence that that’s not really what they’re actually doing. — Mww
Thus while the rejection of mind-body dualism opens the door to various other ideas, the rejection of all dualism leads ineluctably to mysticism and the single, unique metaphysical doctrine that is non-dualism. — FrancisRay
Consciousness can be anything we define it as, because we don’t understand it. — Xtrix
If a dualist believes in the necessary phenomenon of subjective and objective truth, does that in itself imply a dichotomous cognition?
for the sake of discussion, this question derived from them definitely works for me. — 180 Proof
The only concern on my part is that we try to avoid attributing self organization to the world, when it could be the case that we are the one's doing the organizing e.g. "starmaking", "ways of talking", etc. — Manuel
It's not so clear to me how to distinguish these two when speaking about the world. The phenomena that arise fleeting in my consciousness seem to be fragmented, incomplete, sometimes random and repetitive. But it could be that when we write or speak to others, we are organizing whatever goes on in the head, in a more structured manner.
I assume something like this happens to other people. — Manuel
This again assumes the there's nothing that transcends the logic associated with the mind, or Being. In other words, if we say the essence of consciousness is self-organization then we can easily refer to say Heisenberg uncertainty principle and see that it is something beyond pure reason. — 3017amen
(why do we have this need to wonder about things like causation, etc.), the Will, and other fixed,/innate/intrinsic abstract features of consciousness and self-awareness. — 3017amen
The question, though, is do we have a consciousness or does consciousness have us? — Apollodorus
I can't help but ask questions because it is as if they explode into my [ self organization ] — Jack Cummins
. What, as a part of [ self organization ], is considered a timeless truth? — 3017amen
But there are facets of [ self organization ] that are interesting, even if they're not "theories" in the modern sense — Manuel
The earth’s core generates an electro magnetic force which passes through everything on the surface of the earth and extends for miles beyond the surface. This electro magnetic force protects the ozone layer from being stripped away by the solar wind, and it’s protective action is visible in the northern lights. Perhaps this electro magnetic force, passing through the grey matter in the skull, results in what we call consciousness, by the stimulation of neurons in the brain? — Present awareness
What I don’t understand is that if this is the case where has the energy gone? — Benj96
If it is true that energy may not be created or destroyed, but simply changes forms, then all that is here now, must have always been here now, only in different forms. — Present awareness
I’m not looking to base my philosophy in empirical facts, but in a priori truths. — TheGreatArcanum
My goal is to create my own system of philosophy, so I’ve taken bits and pieces from both of their philosophies to construct my own philosophical system using an original analytic method which allows me to infer, from particular to universal, with absolute certainty. — TheGreatArcanum
I'm looking for books on the logical form and process of thought and its relationship to the logical form of the mind considered in itself, but cannot seem to find any. I'm not looking for books on the relationship between thought and neural or physical processes. Is there even such a thing? — TheGreatArcanum
Vagueness also seems to be an integral part of our thinking even though we believe we are being precise. So, is vagueness itself a philosophy? — Don Wade
I think there is a misunderstanding about Dualism here. — Gary Enfield
I haven't elaborated much either way, because the point was to defend naturalistically compatible emergence of phenomenological experience. — simeonz
I do not postulate any new empirical relations — simeonz
On the other hand, it is well known that thermodynamic entropy is bound to increase globally. Therefore conditional entropy between systems will increase, and information expressiveness, or order is to be lost. Terrestrial life sustains order, because we still have low entropy energy sources. For biological systems, it is predominantly from solar radiation, and for our technology, it is predominantly fossil fuel and atomic energy. — simeonz
That is why I was excited by the recent preliminary findings from CERN, about a 5th force in nature that was previously unknown. — Gary Enfield
To not think there is a collective of some kind seems somewhat absurd to me. I know that I create my own reality but I know I am not the only one creating my own reality. I am also not the only one participating to the destruction of this planet. — Thinking
This woman was living a lie and the lie was keeping her alive. — TheMadFool
Your leap to an information layer of existence, (plus some factor that can rationalise and shape it), may be true - but it is a big leap none-the-less, given the level of evidence available. — Gary Enfield
I don't want to butt into the discussion. I took a peek and realized that what you describe as consciousness is very similar to how I would describe it in panpsychic and pantheistic terms. That is how I should convey their idea, if I were to elaborate it today. I even wrote a post some days after yours, where I summarized my position. I am merely entertaining the idea as a hypothesis, not a claim. Not even a conjecture. — simeonz
Note that what you called information here, if I have understood you correctly, is probably better termed state. It is a small concern, but I think that conventionally information is considered a relation. And in information theory, there are two related terms, mutual information, and conditional entropy. — simeonz