What is "Mind?"

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Largo

Sport climber
The Big Wide Open Face
Topic Author's Reply - Mar 30, 2015 - 01:49pm PT
Looking at something is different than trying to find out how it works.
---


The rub is there are some aspects of reality that you cannot "look" at and measure in the normal way. For instance, you could look at neural functioning at the molecular level all you want and never find the subconscious mind, or our primary self system (our various "I's"), or instinctual energies, etc. We all understand clearly that many on this thread hope and pray that maerialism will "explain" all of reality, while at the same time denying such fundamental realities such as qualia and one's own subjective experience. It would seem that such people simply cannot or will not acknowledge the difference between objective functioning and mind. Poor old MR2 mentioned that meditators looked at the mind for centuries but never saw objective functioning at the molecular level, while at the same time being totally blind to the simple and incontrovertible fact that meta level reality - where our subjective and identifiable lives actually take place - is not disclosed solely from a molecular level view.

Another interesting thing here is that Ed and others keep discounting the specialness of human mind, but have never provided any correlate that is not just more objective functioning. Real time self-observation (presence) not fused to content is unlike any other phenomenon in the known universe. The only viable refutation to this is to simply say such a "thing" does not really exist.

And where is the peer-reviewed article proving that gravity is "created" by matter?

So far there is a lot of wu coming from the yard-stickers.

JL
kaholatingtong

Trad climber
therealmccoy from Nevada City
Mar 30, 2015 - 01:50pm PT
It is through human thought and human reason the universe comes to know itself.
Wow. That's quite a statement. And if you believe the other thought train to be "romantic" what would you label such a statement? Narcissistic?
Tvash

climber
Seattle
Mar 30, 2015 - 01:50pm PT
Intelligence isn't homo sapiens only salient survival feature, of course.

Many think of humans as 'weak' animals, but the opposite is true. Thanks to our bipedal phenotype, we rank at the top of the animal kingdom for long distance endurance and the ability to operate in the midday heat - both critical advantages for hunting, avoiding predators, foraging, and migrating. We're also serviceable swimmers and climbers.

Our senses, on the whole, are decent, and our thumbs are pretty useful, too.

The scrotum's a definite weak point, though. WTF?

No free lunch, I reckon.
Tvash

climber
Seattle
Mar 30, 2015 - 02:05pm PT
"The rub is there are some aspects of reality that you cannot "look" at and measure in the normal way. For instance, you could look at neural functioning at the molecular level all you want and never find the subconscious mind, or our primary self system (our various "I's"), or instinctual energies, etc. We all understand clearly that many on this thread hope and pray that maerialism will "explain" all of reality"

No cigar again.

The first claim is specious on its face - you can't know that science will never connect the hierarchical dots between neural level function and meta function. You're not even trained enough in any of the neurosciences to speculate about that with any credibility whatsoever.


"Another interesting thing here is that Ed and others keep discounting the specialness of human mind"

No stuffed pink bunny, either.

No one has discounted the 'specialness' of the human mind, whatever that means. It's uniqueness and capability, at least on this planet, is obvious and hardly needs an intro. What some have stated is that the process of evolution doesn't do 'special' - it does 'survival', and our mind may not continue to be an evolutionary advantage in that regard should the environment change radically enough. Regarding the success of homo sapiens - we've just gotten started and are hardly a proven design. Ants? Well, that's a different story. Successful by any (evolutionary) measure. They can't paint worth a damn, though.

Furthermore, no one has 'hoped and prayed' for anything, here. We've simply challenged your claims - invariably made with absolute certainty, with a simple requirement for repeatable evidence rather than "I really, really believe that my no-thing is not simply another mental state but represents some fundamental aspect of the universe that will never be accessible to science". Don't feel bad - no one on earth could credibly support this claim without resorting personal experience - the most fallible 'evidence' there is.


Tvash

climber
Seattle
Mar 30, 2015 - 02:15pm PT
Mostly, the 'science sausages' have made no claims at all, really. They just don't seem to buy your poorly supported claims, LG, and yes, therein lies the rub.

Now, you could leave things at 'this is what I experience and its cool' and no one would say boo. Why would they?

But you take it one step further and fall of the edge of what you can possibly know - and into the realm of what will never be possible (because it looks daunting now in practically prehistoric 2015 and you're knowledge of the science just isn't there).

We observe your legs freewheeling in space and conclude that you simply don't know what you're talking about.
Jan

Mountain climber
Colorado, Nepal & Okinawa
Mar 30, 2015 - 02:17pm PT
Interesting if obtuse discussion which I have no time to reply to in depth, except to say that the great Schrodinger was wrong with his mountain analogy. Gauri Shankar (23,406 ft.) and Everest (29,029) are definitely two distinctly different mountains. At one time the British had them confused, thinking Gauri Shankar was the highest. The locals however, always knew the difference. It would seem to be a case of trusting second hand experience at a distance (what mountains look like to British surveyors from the plains of India) rather than the actual experience of seeing them up close. Yet another case of a biased preference for "fact" from a trusted scientist rather than listening to those with the closer, more subjective experience?
Tvash

climber
Seattle
Mar 30, 2015 - 02:25pm PT
A healthy dose of Western science, engineering, and organization got both locals and foreigners alike up that mountain for the first time, though.

Clueless is clueless in any culture.
Tvash

climber
Seattle
Mar 30, 2015 - 02:29pm PT
With respect, NASA's gravity thing is not accurate per general relatively. Massless photons effect the curvature of space time due to their high energy of momentum. In fact, general relativity contains no reason why pure photons in sufficient densities could not form a black hole.
paul roehl

Boulder climber
california
Mar 30, 2015 - 02:31pm PT
Wow. That's quite a statement. And if you believe the other thought train to be "romantic" what would you label such a statement? Narcissistic?

I'd label it a reality. Humanity is the only earthly species capable of such knowledge and understanding, and humanity is nothing if not a product, part of, piece of the universe itself.
Tvash

climber
Seattle
Mar 30, 2015 - 02:36pm PT
I suppose it's helpful to consider such a statement in the broader context of the conservatively estimated 100 billion galaxies in the observable universe (not the entire universe)- roughly 7 x 10^22 stars.

We're 'special' because we deem it so. We're currently confined to our little planet and our human experience. I think we're special because I'm one of the 'we'.

We can't make the statement that our evolution was somehow preordained, but we can claim, after the fact, that the probability of our evolution at some point is greater than zero. The two are not logically equivalent, however. The first is meaningless, the second is obvious.

paul roehl

Boulder climber
california
Mar 30, 2015 - 03:00pm PT
We can't make the statement that our evolution was somehow preordained, but we can claim, after the fact, that the probability of our evolution at some point is greater than zero.

Given infinite opportunity and infinite material and recognizing that it (mind) does, in fact, exist how is it not, as you say, "preordained?" I would say inevitable. The inevitability of mind is a sublime consideration as it says something slightly disquieting with regard to the certainty of the atheist.
healyje

Trad climber
Portland, Oregon
Mar 30, 2015 - 03:00pm PT
Well, the conversation is certainly more diverse now.

We have those who project their needs and desires onto the void sure it's returning the favor. Those who think humans are oh-so special. And those who think we are somehow near to transcending ourselves with evolved mechanical Turks.

And then there's this gem:

It is through human thought and human reason the universe comes to know itself.

It's a breathtaking pageantry of anthropocentric arrogance.
Tvash

climber
Seattle
Mar 30, 2015 - 03:10pm PT
The inevitability of something that has already happened is a self eating watermelon. It is logically meaningless, given that inevitability is, by definition, a predictive, not observational, quality.

It's a simple misuse of the language, and nothing more.

Now one can misuse English or make up one's own language, but one cannot do that and expect to be understood by anyone else.

We don't really know what gravity is, actually. We don't know how it behaves at short distances, nor do we even know if it effects objects at various energies (the various colors of the rainbow, for example) the same or differently. We don't know if it 'leaks' between parallel universes or into 'hidden' dimensions. We don't even know where most of it comes from (dark matter).

The latter is one of the things the LHC mini black hole experiment is trying to explore.



paul roehl

Boulder climber
california
Mar 30, 2015 - 03:14pm PT
It's a breathtaking pageantry of anthropocentric arrogance.

That nature is virtuous and humanity, particularly civilized humanity, is corrupt and arrogant is a philosophical system manifested to fill the vacuum of a discredited Christianity in the 19th C. and is religion no less than Christianity itself.

And thank you, it is a gem.

The inevitability of something that has already happened is a self eating watermelon.
That's not what I stated and the operative word here is infinite.
cintune

climber
The Utility Muffin Research Kitchen
Mar 30, 2015 - 03:18pm PT
WBraun

climber
Mar 30, 2015 - 03:34pm PT
We don't really know what gravity is, actually.

In the future you will know.

Just build a bigger machine with more slide rules on it.

Warning ---- This has been a Tvash style post ......
Ward Trotter

Trad climber
Mar 30, 2015 - 03:48pm PT

Well played Mr.Braun.Well played indeed...
Tvash

climber
Seattle
Mar 30, 2015 - 03:55pm PT
Given infinite time and infinite material you get infinite nonsense.

Tvash

climber
Seattle
Mar 30, 2015 - 03:57pm PT
I'm not going anywhere with gravity other than around the earth, sun, and galactic center. To my knowledge, anyway.

There are other theories that provide more solid footing for discussion of science - since we really don't have a rigorously tested theory of gravity at this time.
Tvash

climber
Seattle
Mar 30, 2015 - 04:04pm PT
Even Jesus couldn't open that cockpit door.
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