Suppose a mathematical theory/system T.
G=This sentence is not provable in T
Either G is provable or not provable
1. G is provable. So G is unprovable
2. G is not provable
So, there is G in the theory T
Have I got it right? — TheMadFool
So, if people like this emerge and write about it, would we even be aware they exist, would we even consider their work? — Skalidris
Or are we stuck with slow changes? And by slow changes, I mean derivations from the main method that don't challenge it to the core.
P.S. I'm guessing a lot of people would disagree with premise 4, especially since philosophy seems so intuitive for some people that it would be hard to imagine how it could be done differently.
What say you? — Bob Ross
There is a matter of perspective here. You should have seen the state of things 36 years ago, when I started looking into the subject. The progress in understanding since then has been substanantial. Considering the complexity of the subject under study, the technological difficulties in gathering detailed information, and the (IMO) warranted ethical restrictions faced by researchers, I'd say we social primates are doing pretty good. — wonderer1
1)The universe cannot be perpetually reducible. — AlienFromEarth
2) of course, if the universe is perpetually reducible, there is no smallest particle.
3)The universe must have some kind of fundamental level of existence. In other words, it can't be reduced beyond a certain point/
4)This fundamental level of existence must therefore have some kind of shape.
So what is the scope for original possibilities and are there questions which have not been touched upon at all. Or are we coming to a dead end in this post postmodern era. — Jack Cummins
How does making consciousness prior to experience eliminate the hard problem, which results from separating body and mind, subject and object? It seems to me that your approach reifies dualism by hardening the separation between these aspects of being. Dont we need to find a way to think subject and object, mind and world, inside and outside, feeling and thinking, experiencer and experience together, rather than giving one side priority over the other? — Joshs
I am sorry, I don't feel there is much fruitful to be gained in continuing this specific conversation. I find it very difficult to engage with your way of writing, it all seems very vague — Apustimelogist
Maybe, that's sort of the perennialist take on Eckhart. But the man maintained throughout his life that his doctrine was in keeping with Catholic orthodoxy, granted we could imagine this was partly due to social pressure and threats.
Personally, I can't buy it. The man's work is too covered in scriptural references, practical references to living in the type of Christ, love as loving Christ in others, etc. I'm by no means an expert on his vast corpus, and I originally got into Eckhart reading the perennialist interpretations, Eckhart as a pantheist, but Bill Harmless and others make a pretty convincing case for a more orthodox Eckhart based on his correspondence and practical advice.
I think we can know for sure. He writes with great care and clarity.But we can't know for sure, right?
Theology is cool in that way, a bit freer than philosophy is some ways.
If there is a sense in which we are and a sense in which we are not then you can simply clarify those senses in a bivalent way by breaking the statement down into atomic propositions. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Of course not. But most people would say that the statement 'We are and are-not; is a contradiction and find it difficult to see how it can not be one. .Of course, it is not a violation of logic to say that a natural language sentence appears contradictory, but actually isn't.
And I think this is what is meant in some statements that might seem contradictory or heretical at first glance. Like Eckhart's claim that he preexisted God. This is a claim about the potentialities within God, including humans, pre-existing creation, versus the human conception of God as God only existing temporally. No contradiction there.
But Saint Denis's claims about a light that is darkness doesn't yield to the same sort of breakdown.
I'm not sure what you mean by "rules of logic," here. There are many logical systems. Multivalued logic is not any less rigorous or less logic. Second, I don't know what you mean by "nondualism" here. Generally the term refers to ontological dualism, in which case, yes, Plotinus and Plato are absolutely dualists in key respects. But it seems like you might be talking more about rejecting bivalence?
Have you examined the suggestions of the Buddha, Lao Tzu and the Upanishads? Afaik there is no other explanation for consciousness that works. .Who actually has a suggestion though? — Apustimelogist
When I say experience is primitive, I just mean in a kind of epistemic sense - experiences are immediately apparent and intuitive to us and they don't have an explicit characterization... I just see blue, I cannot tell you what it is/
My whole experience (tentatively I would say consciousness) is just a stream of these things. They cannot be reduced further... they are the bottom and foundation for everything I know and perceive. That is to say nothing about reality but just that experiences are the primitive, irreducible foundation of what I know and perceive.
Not sure what you mean by experience-experiencer duality beyond conventional dualism. I am not sure what "experiencer" means.
Again, my notion of primitiveness just relates to the immediate, irreducible apprehension of experiences after which there is nothing more basic epistemically.
I don't think you can have consciousness free of information nor do I understand why you think this is required for a solution.
I don't think there is priority here. If there is information, it exists on an information space; n information space is defined by the information in it. One doesnt come before the other
I don't see what your alternative suggestion could possibly be if you don't believe dualism is true. Regardless of what you think the fundamental reality is, the evidence is overwhelming about how consciousness relates to or can be characterized in terms of brains in a functional sense (I hope you understand what I mean when I say functionally). What is your alternative characterization?
I am starting to think you haven't understood anything I have said at all. Its hard to believe now that you could have said my previous post was perceptive and a good summary if you really understood it. Neither have I been trying to think about some fundamental theory that resolves the hard problem. My initial post said that I didn't think the so called hard problem could be solved at all.
My point was merely that these traditions embrace paraconsistent descriptions as better, if still flawed ways of conceiving of that which is beyond all description. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I don't see it as pessimistic at all or that anything is lost. What does a solution to the hard problem look like? I don't think there is a good one I can think of which doesn't imply some sort of dualism which I fundamentally disagree with. — Apustimelogist
I am not suggesting looking for a fundamental ontology based on computation but an explanation for why knowing about fundamental ontologies are out of reach.
I think the explanation is actually already there, it just has to be articulated and demonstrated. Like you said, experiences are primitive.
We know experiences are related to the functional architecture of our brains. We can transfer or demonstrate the concept of this kind of primitiveness into the architectures and functional repertoires of A.I. We use A.I. to demonstrate the limits of what kinds of information is transferable from the environment, what kinds of concepts are created and what information they don't or can't include, and then see what kind of metacognitive consequences this has. Does a. A.I. come up with primitive phenomenal concepts on a purely functional basis that it cannot explain, similarly to our hard problem? This is a totally plausible research program even if it may not be possible right at this moment.
Not sure what you mean here but functionally, yes we are just intelligent machines. We are just brains.
To be sure, there is a religious tradition, starting more with the Enlightenment, that tries to use a more classical sort of system to analyze God. You see this with folks like Alvin Plantinga, who would be a great person to read on for a classical, bivalent logic based analysis of this sort of thing. But such logic and methodology seems totally alien to the religious thinking of Saint Denis, Saint Bonaventure, Eckhart, Boheme, Merton, etc.
There, you often see paradoxes set atop each other as a mode of description of the divine essence, or even the argument that all description and analysis ultimately causes us to lose sight of God. — Count Timothy von Icarus
If it is primitive consciousness doesn't arise. What would arise is intentional 'subject/object consciousness,f you assume anything is primitive, you can answer the same "how" question. How does consciousness arise? — flannel jesus
Life is a different issue.It's primitive. How does life work? It's primitive (see Vital Force, an idea which lost favour when scientists were able to build up a picture of life working via electro chemical processes).
Why do you think this? It allows us to construct a fundamental theory. This is the answer given by Perennial philosophy, for which no hard problems arise. Rather than giving up this is the only way forward.Some things are primitive, of course, and it may be that consciousness is, but it feels more like a non answer to me than an answer. It feels like giving up.
Maybe it's fundamental, but probably, I think, we just don't have the answer yet, and the idea that it's primitive will start disappearing when we have a picture of the mechanisms involved, like life itself.
There's no possible characterization of consciousness. It is utterly primitive to us as information-processing creatures. — Apustimelogist
I think fundamental ontology is likely impossible to comprehend and the next step is a computational or informational explanation of why that is and for how that hard problem arises in intelligent machines like us in the first place.
I broadly agree, with caveats. There's still a bunch of questions left over with my view. I'm interested though, what explanation do you favour? — bert1
How is this explanation tested? Do any unique predicttions follow from this explanation? Please elaborate. Thanks. — 180 Proof
think your critique of Moore is a bit over the top. — Sam26
he dogma "not yet means never will" (i.e. unknown = unknowable :roll:) has always been mysterian / idealist – pseudo-philosophical (i.e. religious / magical thinking) – nonsense. — 180 Proof
I agree with this, although I think there is a scientific reason of sorts - without an assumption of physicalism, science can't be done. Scientific = measurable (or at least observable) = physical.
That doesn't mean I don't think consciousness experience can be studied scientifically.
18 hours ago
Reply
Options — T Clark
From a scientific perspective, I'd say physicalism should be seen as a working hypothesis for which there is a lot of supporting evidence and a dearth of reliable falsifying evidence. — wonderer1
It seems clear to me that Moore's statement that he knows he has hands is a prime example of a bedrock belief. It's definitely prelinguistic, and it generally cannot be doubted, at least in most contexts without having to doubt the whole of our inherited background. — Sam26
Actually Moore is appealing to what seems to be obvious to all of us, viz, having knowledge of his hands. The skeptic makes the same mistake that Moore makes, viz., not only is there no knowing these Moorean propositions, but there is no doubting them either. The radical skeptic is even further out on the limb than Moore. — Sam26
The effect of general anesthesia in suppressing consciousness.
The effect of mind altering drugs.
The fact that human intuition 'looks like' the result of the way information processing occurs in neural networks.
All sorts of ways minds can be impacted by brain damage. — wonderer1
↪FrancisRay
More wasted time ...Bye, bye for good now. — Alkis Piskas
Because the person took a serious look at the evidence, perhaps? — wonderer1
Actually Moore is appealing to what seems to be obvious to all of us, viz, having knowledge of his hands. The skeptic makes the same mistake that Moore makes, viz., not only is there no knowing these Moorean propositions, but there is no doubting them either. The radical skeptic is even further out on the limb than Moore. — Sam26
The disconnect between mind and matter comes from a "spiritual" view of the world. The brain is clearly material and material processes produce our minds. Hence, the mind is material. — BC
We seem to be in a similar situation: no understanding of physical processes, however complete, explains consciousness. — Art48
I would respect your opinion if it weren't evasive and meaningless: "I don't undestand your comments" means nothing. There's a big difference between us in how we handle comments and debating in general. You would thrive as a (Greek) politician! :smile:
Anyway, it's better this way. We'll both avoid wasting more time. — Alkis Piskas
I don't think that logic can enter in the above example. As I said, the contrassting elements are too abstract to be considered as evidence for truth or falseness. So, saying that neither answer is correct has no meaning. — Alkis Piskas