What is "Mind?"

Search
Go

Discussion Topic

Return to Forum List
This thread has been locked
Messages 22081 - 22100 of total 22307 in this topic << First  |  < Previous  |  Show All  |  Next >  |  Last >>
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
May 10, 2019 - 03:44pm PT
word salad, Largo...

capseeboy

Social climber
wandering star
May 10, 2019 - 03:46pm PT
Italians have such a great sense of the moods of life. They live in and relish them. As Americans, we seem to believe that moods are faults.

My daughter had an Italian exchange student. I asked her if my daughter and husband's heated arguments bothered her (I felt it embarrassing). She said it was nothing compared to her own parents.
Largo

Sport climber
The Big Wide Open Face
Topic Author's Reply - May 10, 2019 - 03:53pm PT
Ok Ed, forget the word salad and answer this:

If awareness "emerges" from the brain's global activation (as Kurzwiel proposes), is the emergent awareness more than, or in any way different from, the measurable activation purported to create said awareness?

It's universally held that physicalism and emergence are incompatible, so I'm curious how you might square the two.
zBrown

Ice climber
May 10, 2019 - 05:43pm PT
That neurotransmitter activity isn't consciousness ITSELF.

That is what Searle said alright.

Skippin' over the Ocean Like a Stone

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2AzEY6ZqkuE


zBrown

Ice climber
May 10, 2019 - 06:22pm PT
Is a brain required for consciousness?

Does a rock have consciousness and/or a brain?


Help

I am a rock?

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=Ukbu9dmmzJg
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
May 10, 2019 - 07:50pm PT
It's universally held that physicalism and emergence are incompatible...
an opinion of philosophers, talking about something very specific
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/physicalism/

the argument I think you refer to is found in this section:
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/physicalism/#SupSufForPhy

I don't see the strong statement that you make, and it is apparently not universal.

Largo

Sport climber
The Big Wide Open Face
Topic Author's Reply - May 10, 2019 - 08:29pm PT
That's not the argument I'm making, Ed. And for the record I'm not and have never argued for point of arguing, only that from my experience, and reasoning this through for ages and with many people, there's no way to square physicalism with emergence, and neither provide the much hoped for linear-causal link to consciousness, where brain is fundamental and consciousness is essentially the output of brain. No one can unpack that because it's not so.

Emergence implies something EXTRA emerges that, in the case of mind, is in every way categorically different than brain/objective processing. This is never the case with physical metaphors or examples where this observable object or force gives rise to that object or force or physical effect off which we can pull a measurement. Physicalism is bottom up, and the top is never more than a sum of the parts. Ergo precluding something extra which "emerges" that is not identical from the imagined or purported physical source. Sticking to this first assumption gives rise to all the blarney about brain and consciousness being identical.

In a wider sense, in terms of "creation" or original emergence, the big bang has to include void and potential. So on a cosmic scale, the all emerged from nothing and non-objects. But that's not the end of the story. On the quantum level, particles continually emerge from a field, which also is a non-object. Subjectively, there's no way to posit awareness as an object or as information or content of any kind. That's why most people who have looked at this issue at depth use terms like field of consciousness and so forth to try and describe the void of awareness in which the content of consciosness arises. My sense of it is that whenever any phenomenon arises, void is a fundamental factor - be it the emergence of matter and so-called space-time, particles, thoughts and feelings and so on. Trying to peg consciousness to the sole output of brain will always perforce leave out the defining charicteristic of mind itself, which is awareness. We can never make the linear-causal link to void from objects because objects don't source void. Stuff is the time-bound impermanent side of void, and void is the timeless, uncreated side of stuff. Reality is the integration of both, of nothing and something, of time and timelessness, and where there is one, there is always the other. Trying to fashion a world based entirely on one or the other will always dead end at some point.
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
May 10, 2019 - 08:44pm PT
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Emergence

you aren't taking into account that the thing you identify as something, like a neuron, could be different than the thing which is identified as many neurons...

your argument, it seems to me, says that a collection of things can't have properties beyond the individual things.

the point of emergence, at least as used by physicists, is that the collection of things could have properties that the things themselves do not have.

What is solid about a water molecule? what is liquid about it, what is gaseous about it? nothing, but when they interact together in large numbers, that collection is readily identified as ice, water, steam.

And that is not a "magical" process, it is a physical process having to do with the things and their interactions.

jogill

climber
Colorado
May 10, 2019 - 08:58pm PT
JL: "and neither provide the much hoped for linear-causal link to consciousness, where brain is fundamental and consciousness is essentially the output of brain. No one can unpack that because it's not so."


Prove that it is not so. You seem so certain about these things. Admirable up to a point.

Emergence:

WBraun

climber
May 10, 2019 - 09:34pm PT
No ...

The onus is completely on YOU.

You, gross materialists, are the ones making all the claims and always masquerading as authorities of knowledge with your so called modern science ......
jogill

climber
Colorado
May 10, 2019 - 09:49pm PT
For those few who have an interest in theoretical time, here's part of a note I wrote a couple of years ago. Nothing serious.
MH2

Boulder climber
Andy Cairns
May 10, 2019 - 10:57pm PT
"People talking" implies a conversation, with semantic content,

So what? I was using an analogy to compare EEG recording of populations of neurons to recording the activity of individual neurons. In my analogy "talking" is just sounds that people make. No more.
MH2

Boulder climber
Andy Cairns
May 10, 2019 - 11:09pm PT
Very nice, John Gill.


If there were no such thing as time, would that change the emphasis on prediction in testing the merit of physical theory? Could there be prediction without time?


A couple of photos. Taken with my feet on the same patch of ground. But movement seems to have occurred.


MikeL

Social climber
Southern Arizona
May 11, 2019 - 07:22am PT
Ed: . . . it is entirely plausible that similar things happen [emergent properties emerge] with large collections of neurons (and other cells for that matter), so that the behavior of the collective can be quite surprising, based on the interactions of the individual agents.

In business studies, there were two important levels of analyses that we could not bring together very well: economics, and individual decision making. The two fields stayed separate. Scholars tried to bring them together by inventing notions of "utility," but that never bridged the gap very well.

Herbert Simon won a nobel prize in economics for his theory on satisfycing. He said that individual decision makers could not be assumed to be perfectly rational about the economic decisions that they make because they would never have access to perfect information, and their abilities to calculate utilities (the perceived benefits of one choice over another) were limited by their processing power (bounded rationality). It was a great surprise to economics that Simon abandoned economics for cognitive science, where he made important contributions in distinguishing what constituted different levels of knowledge (experts, novices, and naive subjects) among other things cognitive.

Describing what happens in large numbers glosses over (or ignores) individual or specific behaviors and dynamics. In some fields, perhaps, it's arguable that isn't very important. In other fields of investigation and questioning, the differences and distinctions would seem to present altogether different realities conceptually. Saying, for example, what planets are, how they arise, conditions and causes, and what their life cycles seem to be may say nothing whatsoever important about this or that individual planet. Ditto for people, their minds, and their individual behaviors.

Once again, the incommensurability among different areas of research often leads us to make completely contradictory claims that apparently cannot be resolved. Hence, one can imagine that conundrums will always be evident to us.

In cognitive science, there was a time not too long ago when folks thought we could teach people to learn globally or generally--and that was what educational systems were supposed to be oriented to. Teach people how to learn. Unfortunately, research over time on this issue showed us that would not work because what allowed people to learn was site- or domain-specific. One needed to learn the basics in one field to learn more advanced ideas in that same field. Learning to learn was a nice idea that made many educators warm and fuzzy, but it was a grand pipe dream. (Our great love for information, the internet, science,d and experts assume that people can learn anything quick and easilly.) Instead, people need to focus and specialize in an area of study, and that tends to limit greatly their abilities to learn and understand other areas of knowledge and interest (polymaths supposedly withstanding).
Ed Hartouni

Trad climber
Livermore, CA
May 11, 2019 - 07:55am PT
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Agent-based_computational_economics

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Big_data

Wasps Passed This Logic Test. Can You?
Transitive inference in Polistes paper wasps

"Overall, the results of this study add to a growing body of evidence that the miniature nervous systems of insects do not limit sophisticated behaviours [7,25–27]. The capacity for complex behaviour may be shaped by the social environment in which behaviours are beneficial rather than being limited by brain size."
formerclimber

Boulder climber
CA
May 11, 2019 - 10:31am PT
So far, seems like the only benefits of human getting the gift of "mind" was the destruction of the planet, brutal wars and reduced level of enjoyment of life/more anguish and depression. An average wild animal is happier and living much fuller life than average human. So much to "mind". Mind is a plague. Gods of Nature will take this gift away, eventually... humankind will have the fate of Prometheus.
jogill

climber
Colorado
May 11, 2019 - 10:56am PT
"If there were no such thing as time, would that change the emphasis on prediction in testing the merit of physical theory? Could there be prediction without time?"


The word "prediction" itself incorporates a notion of time. I find it impossible to think of reality without the passage of time. But I am simplistic and feel that "time" is an abstraction of "change", which is fundamental, although the perception of time can differ dramatically. How does a bumblebee perceive time's passage? An elephant?

Is there really change? Meditators might have some insight here.


"Time is the separation between distinct events that happen in the same place"

???
Jan

Mountain climber
Colorado & Nepal
May 11, 2019 - 01:01pm PT
I just heard a saying on a Ted talk that it a new mantra of mine.

"Reality is only a small portion of our consciousness".
MikeL

Social climber
Southern Arizona
May 12, 2019 - 07:20am PT
Heh, heh.

And good morning to you, too, Former.

You're not always exactly a ray of sunshine, are you?

:-)

Isn't it interesting that you, me, and others can have such a different view of things? (And, there's mind, hmmmm?)

Be well.
WBraun

climber
May 12, 2019 - 07:57am PT
formerclimber's got the better vision.

Seeing the futility of the st00pid gross materialists trying to make illusion a reality.

That's a real ray of light instead of trying to mental speculate (flashlight) a dream into material reality.

Pappilon knew the only way out was, escape.

The rest of the inmates all resigned themselves to their gross material fate to continue their cycle of birth, death, disease and old age.

It takes hard work, not just sitting there putting on yoga pants and drooling at some defective instrument with endless mental speculation to create our illusionary world of so-called reality .....

Messages 22081 - 22100 of total 22307 in this topic << First  |  < Previous  |  Show All  |  Next >  |  Last >>
Return to Forum List
 
Our Guidebooks
spacerCheck 'em out!
SuperTopo Guidebooks

guidebook icon
Try a free sample topo!

 
SuperTopo on the Web

Recent Route Beta