One says things like 'I am a graduate', 'I am a philosopher', 'I am married', as if one is the ritual.
Identity 'undergraduate' undergoes ritual 'graduation' and becomes identity 'graduate'.
Identity 'misfit' undergoes ritual 'diagnosis' and becomes identity 'schizophrenic'.
Identity 'learner' undergoes ritual 'driving test' and becomes identity 'driver' (or not if 'fails')
Identity 'sinner' undergoes ritual 'communion' and becomes identity 'saved'. — unenlightened
Clearly, agency is warranted, as there is purposeful action, and you've regressed back to your gratuitous assertions. — Metaphysician Undercover
The point being, if you propose that there is a special sort of thing, called "agency", which only beings with complex thought/belief have, i.e. that complex thought/belief is required for "agency", then you need to describe what "agency" refers to, in order to distinguish this special type of "agency" from the type of agency that things like household cleaning agents have. — Metaphysician Undercover
Calling it ‘thought/belief’ only distinguishes it from the same process at a lower level of awareness. — Possibility
Question: how could the proposition be true prior to that determination? — tim wood
Before determination it's a proposition. I'm a blond. Either I am a blond or I am not a blond. So far so good? — tim wood
One is establishing a relationship between two events.. — Possibility
...and the other is being aware of the relationship established as an event/entity, in relation to other relationships. — Possibility
There are reducing agents, oxidizing agents, catalysts are agents, etc.. And "agency" is the act of an agent. — Metaphysician Undercover
As a process, correlation is not dependent on thought/belief, language or self-awareness. It only requires the capacity to integrate information, and so it can occur at every level of awareness, to varying degrees. This, I think, is where we differ. That being said, it is a key component in the more complex and multi-dimensional process by which humans attribute and construct meaning.
Correlation is the building block of the universe - without it, all we have is potential. — Possibility
I want to see true premises, and valid logic, to support your claim that agency in DNA replication is unwarranted, not arbitrary definitions to support a faulty assumption. — Metaphysician Undercover
One ought take care not to portray the senses as a diode, passing information in one direction only. There is feedback here, and hence complexity. Complexity occurs when small variations in the initial conditions are fed back into the system to be magnified and become great influences on the later conditions.
One sees, reaches out, touches, holds, puts down. One is not situated passively, doomed only to absorb information.
Better to think of oneself as embedded in the world.
One does not sit inside one's body, looking at mere phenomena and reacting to them. One is not separate from one's sensations and acts - far from it. One's sensations and acts are constitutive of what one is.
One does not build meaning inside one's head and then transmit it. Building meaning is part of the complex interaction one has with the world. Hence language is not mere communication. It is an integral part of the self-referential complexity that creates oneself, the other, and the various things in our world.
This looping is not simple; it is strange. It traverses from level to level, between syntax, semantics, and pragmatics unexcused. It provides the illusion of free will. It is not limited to the self, nor the mind, nor the body, nor the various items that together make up the physical world. — Banno
Is it a bit like creativesoul's "thought/belief" that wants it's language before it can speak? — Banno
...there is agency in inanimate activity. — Metaphysician Undercover
There is a tendency to reduce [our understanding/explanation of] the process [by which we make meaning] to the individual neural connections in the brain [or, more generally, the physical correlation of information]. — Possibility
But the way I see it, meaning is not only correlation - it’s much more than that... — Possibility
Correlation is only part of the process by which we attribute meaning. In my view, systems can still correlate and integrate information without being fully aware of meaning, let alone having the capacity to attribute it - even if the system acts as though the information is meaningful. This why I use the term ‘correlation’. — Possibility
What do phenomenal concepts have in common such that that commonality makes them count as being phenomenal, whereas the non phenomenal concepts do not have/share this same common denominator or set thereof?
— creativesoul
Phenomenal are creature dependent. — Marchesk
Information can have meaning, but it does not follow that information is meaning (or the same as meaning). Likewise, a demonstration can be peaceful, but a demonstration is not peace.
Furthermore, meaning needn't be informative. I can understand the meaning of a word or a sentence without it informing me of something; without it teaching me or providing any facts about something. This informing, or information moving, is the context of use in the OP, which is why information should not be conflated with meaning here. — Luke
Consciousness is not the problem. Our account of it is.
— creativesoul
Obviously it's not a problem for nature. It's a problem for humans because we can't figure out what the proper account of consciousness is. And depending on what the proper account is, our ontology or epistemology might need to change to reflect that. — Marchesk
What is the difference between those and that which does not count as being those?
— creativesoul
Phenomenal: color, sound, smell, taste, pain, pleasure, hot, cold, thoughts, beliefs, desires, dreams, feelings.
Non: shape, space, time, composition, number, structure, function, computation, information, empirical. — Marchesk
...we make meaning to the individual neural connections in the brain... — Possibility
...the harder problem is that human phenomenal concepts... — Marchesk
To summarize, the harder problem is that human phenomenal concepts do not reveal whether our material makeup or the functional role our neurobiology plays is responsible for consciousness. As such, we have no philosophical justification for saying whether a functional isomorph made up of different material such as the android Data from Star Trek is conscious. Even more confusing, we have no way of telling whether a "mere" functional isomorph is conscious, where "mere" means functional in terms of human folk psychology only, and not in the actual neural functions.
So if Data's positronic brain functions different from our own brain tissue, but still produces reports and behaviors based on things like beliefs, desires and phenomenal experience, we have neither the physical nor functional basis for deciding whether he is actually conscious, or just simulating it. — Marchesk
Did anyone notice that I did not use the word "meaning" in the title or OP? — Banno
I do not agree with him(creative) that moving information is moving meaning, nor that information implicitly has meaning. The difference parallels that between syntax and semantics, or between Austin's phatic act and illocutionary act. — Banno
And as I explained to Terrapin Station, this is very clearly a meaningful relation (without it we wouldn't exist). — Metaphysician Undercover
Trouble is, it's the fact that the cat is on the mat that makes "the cat is on the mat" true. — Banno
...the more exact formulation for truth with respect to cognition would be: cognition which conforms to its object is the necessary condition for truth. — Mww