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Eliminating Qualia

We can only observe our own mind and for ourselves but we can observe other people's brains, and to some extent our own, and, crucially, compare our observations with that of other people. So we can only observe a mind subjectively while we can observe brains objectively.

Sure. One caveat. Empathy is an interesting and quite amazing phenomenon, if we are prepared to swop 'observe' for 'detect' (and why shouldn't we be?).

I grant you that it's unrelaible, but when it works well, it seems to be a way of experiencing what someone else is experiencing. We can never be sure that the two experiences are exactly the same, but it would seem reasonable to say that they are probably often at least an approximation, or else surely there would be a lot more practical confusion (you thinking that the other person is happy when they are in excruciating pain, etc) and empathy would be so useless that it might be discarded. After all, we share a heck of a lot of biology.

One could imagine a hypothetical machine by which your brain and someone else's could be 'hooked up' so that you do actually access their thoughts and feelings. Empathy might just be nature's best version of that. Mirror neurons and their operation have been observed in several animal species and are hypothesised to have several useful advantages.
 
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The brain as experiencer has several things going for it that the mind doesn't. It is more of a 'thing' in that it can be observed, and it can be active, and its activity can be measured. Also, we know better what it's made of. Sure, of course there's no way to say for definite that it can experience, but why can't it?

Yet I would myself count my own subjective experience as observation of my own mind, provided I pay attention.

So, rather, we come back to the distinction between subjective and objective. We can only observe our own mind and for ourselves but we can observe other people's brains, and to some extent our own, and, crucially, compare our observations with that of other people. So we can only observe a mind subjectively while we can observe brains objectively.

I would say myself that both points of view have advantages and disadvantages.
EB

Sure. One caveat. Empathy is an interesting phenomenon. I grant you that it's unrelaible, but when it works well, it seems to be a way of experiencing what someone else is experiencing. We can never be sure that the two experiences are exactly the same, but it would seem reasonable to say that they are often at least an approximation, or else surely there would be a lot of practical confusion and empathy would be so useless that it might be discarded. After all, we share a heck of a lot of biology.

One could imagine a hypothetical machine by which your brain and someone else's could be 'hooked up' so that you do actually access their thoughts and feelings. Empathy might just be nature's best version of that. Mirror neurons and their operation have been observed in several animal species.

You all have seen, no doubt, those pain charts in emergency rooms, where a number matches a level of pain. At a meeting of all personnel at the hospital I worked at, one of the big wigs, the COO I think, brought those charts up. He made sure to emphasize to everyone working in the ER to not waffle on that. If a person describes their pain as an 8, you treat it as an 8.

Of course they are also trained to know when someone is just looking for an opiate or painkiller. These are commonly frequent flyers, and their names are in the system.
 
Yes William, when it comes to accuracy or measurement of for example pain, we don't have a way, and even our own subjective assessments of our own pain can be awry too, never mind those of others. The latter gets us back to the OP and the idea that while we can't (it seems to be agreed) say that qualia (eg pains) do not actually exist, our understanding of them via subjective/introspective experiences might be very flawed, with some going as far as suggesting that they are so flawed that the concept needs to be drastically revised (to the point, apparently, of some suggesting that 'qualia' is a redundant term). Which I am not yet convinced about, because I'm not sure the 'very' is warranted before 'flawed'.

At the moment, when it comes to other minds especially, we guess, to the extent that we not only rationally guess what another is thinking, but experientially too (our guesses involve feeling a version of what they may be feeling). Especially in a social species, good 'guessing systems' of that sort might have advantages over bad guessers, so good guessing might be a viable candidate trait for survival and replication.

Where possible, and if the other mind is open to communication by other means, some of the guessing can be supplemented with something at least a bit more empirical, such as checking by verbal communication (asking for a report). Such as what doctors do with awake patients.
 
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The brain does change with LSD. The chemicals in the brain (including blood) are as much part of the brain when they are present as what we like to think of as the 'fixed' structures.

The brain does not change one bit just because LSD is running through the blood.

It is the exact same brain. Every cell is the exact same cell.

What changes is the distribution of neurotransmitters which changes the activity of the cells.

The activity changes, not the brain.

You seem to think a thing and it's activity are the same thing.

There is the brain. The cells and what is contained in the cells.

And there is the activity of the brain. The cells emitting neurotransmitters. Cells depolarizing and polarizing. The activity within cells. Blood moving.

A car and it's movement are not the same thing.

A brain and it's activity are not the same thing.

The mind arises because of activity. Not simply because there is a brain. The brain is just the instrument that supplies the needed activity.

In your model though, the mind is present during dreaming sleep.

And as we notice when there are no dreams there is no awareness of anything.

Yet the brain is active. But it is not presenting the mind with anything.

And since experience is both that which can experience and the things it can experience when you take away the things it can experience there is no experience.

When the brain stops presenting the mind with things there is no experience.
 
The brain does not change one bit just because LSD is running through the blood.

The brain does change, because what's in the brain changes it physically. A 'cell' includes the chemicals within it. Proteins, lipids, carbohydrates........ etc. Cells are a mixture of things. Some of them are fluid (in fact most of the cell is fluid). Most of them are mobile, and entering and leaving the cell continuously, because even the cellulose wall is semi-permeable. Also, most cells are not permanent either. And then there is neuroplasticity, and epigenetics. One way to describe the brain is to say it is in a constant state of flux at the micro level.

The brain of a drug addict is not the same as a non-drug addict, and sometimes, the changes/damages are not temporary (or at least they last until a cell replaces itself, and sometimes not even then).

Neurotoxins specifically are known to damage the structure of the brain, and can even cause cells to die, and/or prevent the generation of new cells. A toxin chemical in cigarettes is thought to be capable of this, and also of making white blood cells attack other cells.

It is the exact same brain. Every cell is the exact same cell.

See above.

You seem to think a thing and it's activity are the same thing.

Nope. I don't. Well, it depends what you mean by 'thing'.

There is the brain. The cells and what is contained in the cells.

Yes and a cell with different contents is physically different. That is why its activity will alter. Are you suggesting the activity can alter without any physical change to the cell?

A car and it's movement are not the same thing.

Yes, but the movement is not independent of the car.

A brain and it's activity are not the same thing.

That depends what you mean by 'thing'. It is not a separate thing. Like the car movement. That is a feature/property of the car. Brain activity is a feature of the brain. So is consciousness (both qualia and thinking, all the contents of mind in fact) in the generally accepted models, but not yours.

The mind arises because of activity. Not simply because there is a brain. The brain is just the instrument that supplies the needed activity.

I don't think anybody disagrees about that.

And as we notice when there are no dreams there is no awareness of anything.

I don't think anybody disagrees with that either.

Yet the brain is active. But it is not presenting the mind with anything.

Yes, it would seem there is no 'presentation'. (caveat: there is the possibility that the brain is aware but the awareness is not laid down in memory, as per the discussion on anaesthetics).

And since experience is both that which can experience and the things it can experience when you take away the things it can experience there is no experience.

Ok. But this is getting us no further at all as to why the brain can't be the experiencer.

As said, the mind being the experiencer introduces a problem with regress of 'experiencers', and is a less parsimonious model (more 'things', more interactions between them). If thoughts are qualia, that is more parsimonious. There is no need to posit the creation of one mysterious thing (mind) and it somehow mysteriously being able to perceive another mysterious and also created thing (qualia). There is only one mysterious thing in the accepted model, albeit in different flavours, all experienced by a not-so-mysterious, regression-proof thing, the brain. Not as mysterious in that it's more objectively a 'thing'.

When the brain stops presenting the mind with things there is no experience.

Or, when the brain stops generating qualia for itself, there is no experience.

You are not getting anywhere in explaining why it can't be the brain which is the experiencer. As such, a lot of your posts aren't relevant and are things which we might agree on. I'm not sure why you bring some of them up.
 
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I'd like to revisit this oft repeated declaration:

No. It is the thing the brain is generating that is experiencing.

If the brain could experience it wouldn't need to make presentations.

Leaving aside the fact that whatever the brain does is necessarily a part of itself, why does the brain generate a "thing...that is experiencing"?

As you note, if the brain could experience, it wouldn't need to transform telemetry data, or make "presentations." Thus, it generates some "thing" that can "experience" and then it makes "presentations" for it to "experience." So how does the brain know (a) it can't "experience" and (b) that the "thing" it created needs "presentations" in order for it to "experience"?

You talk about parsimony, but for your assertion to be true it necessarily requires the brain is self-aware enough for it to know that it can't experience--but wants to, thus it somehow then figured out what it needed to create in order to do so--and it needs to know what the "thing" it created to experience needs in order to experience. That's some first level knowledge about something it apparently knows nothing about on its own.

Not to mention the fact that, it clearly did all of this for a purpose, which was for its benefit. Thus, parsimony would dictate it did so in order for it to experience, not merely for the "thing" it created to experience.

Iow, it would be like you having been born without a right arm, so you then built a robotic right arm in order to fill a need. And yes, that would mean the robotic arm has certain particular qualities unique to its structure and function, but ultimately it would all still be for the benefit of the brain in its use.

So why would anyone separate out the two, much less put the robotic arm in a primary category as you seem to be doing with "mind"?
 
How does the bee know how to make a hive?

How does the bird know how to make a nest?

How do animals navigate during migrations?

The things the brain does, like create a mind and presentations for that mind, arose the same way.
 
So why would anyone separate out the two, much less put the robotic arm in a primary category as you seem to be doing with "mind"?

If you conceived of your mind as being capable, albeit after being generated by the brain, of autonomy (and exercising free will into the bargain) you'd see it as a separate 'thing' too. :)

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How does the bee know how to make a hive?

How does the bird know how to make a nest?

How do animals navigate during migrations?

The things the brain does, like create a mind and presentations for that mind, arose the same way.

I don't think you're saying that bees have minds.

And you are still not explaining why it can not be the brain that is the experiencer.
 
The brain does not change one bit just because LSD is running through the blood.
The brain does change, because what's in the brain changes it physically.

No it does not.

A movement of something inside the cell to outside the cell or vice versa is not a change in the structure of the brain.

Using your logic there is no such thing as an organ.

To you a person has a different liver after every meal.

The structure of the brain is something that changes over time but not every millisecond. Not because a neurotransmitter is inside a cell as opposed to outside.

Activity is something that has meaning to an observer. It is observed change or the observed result of change within a system.

A brain and it's activity are two completely different things.
 
I don't think you're saying that bees have minds.

Why can't they?

And you are still not explaining why it can not be the brain that is the experiencer.

Because the brain and it's activity are not the same thing.

And it is the activity creating the mind and the things the mind experiences.

That is why when the activity is altered by LSD experience changes.
 
The brain does not change one bit just because LSD is running through the blood.
The brain does change, because what's in the brain changes it physically.

No it does not.

Yes it does and I gave examples, which you can read up on by googling for more detail on the well-understood relevant science.

A brain and it's activity are two completely different things.

Is this point related to the previous one in some way?

Because I already replied to it. Yes, they are different. As to whether they are completely different and/or separate or independent 'things', is another matter. "Completely different thing' is open to detailed interpretation.

So, to get back on point. Why can't the brain be the experiencer? I don't want you to tell me you are sure it's not, that it's the mind. I want you to explain to me, and all the scientists and other experts and most of the non-god bothering philosophers, exactly why they are necessarily wrong, with their more parsimonious, non-regression-involving models.

I know you feel sure, but whether you like it or not, you are way out on a limb. As far as I know at this point, you are the only person in the world, possibly apart from woo-heads and the very occasional philosopher, possibly, who has adopted your personal model. You may not care about that. You may think it's cool and special to be almost the only person with your particular theory. The rest of the secular, rational world may want to hold off on that until something more is forthcoming from you.

I mean, at the end of the day, you can keep your model until the day you die. No one can ever take it away from you, and probably no one can prove you wrong. But at the same time I doubt you'll convince others to abandon the more accepted models and adopt yours instead unless you come up with something more.
 
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So why would anyone separate out the two, much less put the robotic arm in a primary category as you seem to be doing with "mind"?

If you conceived of your mind as being capable, albeit after being generated by the brain, of autonomy (and exercising free will into the bargain) you'd see it as a separate 'thing' too. :)

As I think you know, I do conceive of it that way (though I qualify it with the brain imbuing the analogue with a sense of “free will” in that it has the capacity to act across maps), yet I don’t see the self as separate from the brain (or a “thing” for that matter). It’s a construct of the brain used initially for strategic, survival-based “role playing” if you will that has since been repurposed due to our extended life-spans; i.e, “leisure” orientation rather than hourly “survival” orientation.

Just as we find it helpful to discuss problems with each other for feedback, the brain creates analogues to help it solve problems. It’s merely a useful tool to help gain perspective, but it’s all ultimately the brain talking to itself, for lack of better terminology.

If there were ever a situation where a baby survived a crash landing on a deserted planet, I doubt it would ever develop much of a self for precisely that reason; it has no others to emulate/map. There have been many tales of “feral” children (and others that were kept in isolation throughout their childhood) that normally entail a lack of self identity.

Which is all just a long-winded way of saying, I still don’t see what UM is arguing for. Brain generates “mind.” I think everyone itt can agree with that assertion.
 
How does the bee know how to make a hive?

How does the bird know how to make a nest?

How do animals navigate during migrations?

The things the brain does, like create a mind and presentations for that mind, arose the same way.

Oh dear.

So now you are invoking an externalist model. None of these things know any such things. They are set up, by evolution, to interact with the world so, in almost all cases, the world does most of the work in a dialectic with the dispositional properties of the creature.

The striking thing is how theological your models are.
 
With all due respect, Sub, and with apologies to unter if I've ever misspoken by defending him:

The strictly materialist approach to consciousness will never cease to baffle me.

IF we (meaning us collectively, not in the royal sense) are our brains, then WTF is this "illusion" of consciousness being presented to?????

I will repeat: the idea of a brain causing an illusion by itself, to whatever the heck it is the illusion is supposed to be useful for (if not the brain itself), is as illogical as the idea of God sacrificing Himself to Himself via His avatar, Jesus.

Don't just tell me "You just don't understand it." Consciousness needs to be explained coherently. It hasn't been. Not by Dennet, Sam Harris, or anyone else.

The hard problem remains, re Chalmers. And lest we go saying this is theological, remember, please, that Chalmers is an atheist. I've seen his talks, and read several of his papers. He even goes so far as to consider himself, in essence, a materialist.

If we are just our brains, what exactly is the purpose of subjective experience, or qualia? The p-zombie would be just fine without having any subjective experience, like any other strictly functional machine.

Moreover: it would be FAR better off, what without all this needless suffering and pain!
 
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No it does not.

Yes it does and I gave examples, which you can read up on by googling for more detail on the well-understood relevant science.

I know all about the changes that occur to the brain over time with exposure to drugs.

But that is change over time, not activity.

Activity is perceived change in the present.

And activity is something distinct from the structures creating the activity.

You have the structures, the cells, the molecules, the organelles, the proteins. All the tissues and the chemicals contained within them.

And then you have the activity.

The perceived changes taking place in the tissues and cells in the present.

Two things.

It seems all your positions are nothing but pretending that distinct things are the same thing.

Because I already replied to it. Yes, they are different. As to whether they are completely different and/or separate or independent 'things', is another matter. "Completely different thing' is open to detailed interpretation.

A thing and it's activity are completely distinct "things". They are different classes of "things".

The brain is doing a lot with it's activity. From regulating respiration to contracting muscles.

Creating the mind is only a part.

Is the brain and the "signal" to contract a muscle the same thing?

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How does the bee know how to make a hive?

How does the bird know how to make a nest?

How do animals navigate during migrations?

The things the brain does, like create a mind and presentations for that mind, arose the same way.

Oh dear.

So now you are invoking an externalist model. None of these things know any such things. They are set up, by evolution, to interact with the world so, in almost all cases, the world does most of the work in a dialectic with the dispositional properties of the creature.

The striking thing is how theological your models are.

Please!

A "dialectic"?

Could you possibly say less?

You have no clue how a bird builds a nest. Or how a bee builds a hive.

Of course it is a product of evolution.

That is saying just about nothing.
 
With all due respect, Sub, and with apologies to unter if I've ever misspoken by defending him:

Don't worry yourself, I judge as I find and you are just fine by me. Here's a proper answer.

The strictly materialist approach to consciousness will never cease to baffle me.

What on earth has given you the idea that I am a strict materialist? I'm not. I certainly am a monist, in that I think that there is only one sort of stuff: matter. I certainly believe that everything supervenes on matter, but I don't for a moment think that supervenience implies that, in the conceptual domain, logic follows the same rules as physics. I've argued, with explicit demonstrations of it not doing so that it does not.

My position is a variation of Anomalous Monism as championed by Donald Davidson and refined by Jaegwon Kim. I then, in theory if not in practice, champion a sharp divide between the conceptual and the non conceptual aspects of mind. There's the stuff that goes on in language: logic, intentions, folk psychology, narrative and so on. Then there's stuff that is non conceptual and smeared all over the brain. Here I take a different position which is a more straightforward property dualism: in some areas of the brain, and in some circumstances, physical events are also mental events. They are the same thing seen from two perspectives. To use the old saw c-fibres firing is pain. One is a physical and the other a mental description of the same event. Here, I'm leaning on Rudder Baker's constitution accounts.

Descartes may have 'settled' the issue with his substance dualism, but now that we don't need God to underpin our ontology and substance dualism has been systematically proven profoundly unhelpful whenever it turns up, it flabbergasts me that the parsimonious explanation of property dualism isn't more widely accepted in philosophy and science. If it were then most of the (non) problems simply evaporate.

IF we (meaning us collectively, not in the royal sense) are our brains, then WTF is this "illusion" of consciousness being presented to?????

Ask the wrong question and the world will cheerfully offer up the wrong answer. Information hits the brain from a wide range of sources and has to be bound to be much use. One fundamental problem the embodied brain has to solve is how to unify all of the perceptions in a way that actually allows the embodied brain to act effectively in the world.

In the brain, there is no place where it all comes together, there is no finish line at which afferent becomes efferent and there is no self. What there is, and Chalmers, who I will talk about later, is the easy problem of consciousness: we measure, discriminate, respond and act, for a start. My personal experience, and by methodologically unscientific but entirely pragmatic assumption, is that all of this happens to feel like something to everyone who isn't me.

So let's start with a P-zombie. As it happens, I don't believe human P-zombies are possible because I think functionalism is bollocks and conscious cognition takes both the meat and the motion. However, if we imagine a p-zombie, then that zombie, which you seem happy to imagine, has somehow magically solved the problem of binding all the disparate aspects of its internal and external sensory manifest - that's the hard bit of the easy problem.

More than that, it's somehow developed the ability to talk about a sense of self it doesn't have. Me, I think it would only be able to think of itself in the third person and this would be a bit of a giveaway as it would only be able to respond to its behaviour. A zombie trying to be devious would, presumably, have to whisper, very quietly and hear itself... However, it would be able to apply the intentional stance to the body it was, name it, decide what beliefs and desires that it had and, not just use them for prediction and explanation, but also, cleverly, to work out what to do next, allowing it to use logic to make both tactical and strategic decisions. It would get interests.

In time, with practice, it might come to build up a bloody great set of settled beliefs and desires. In time, it could start to look a lot like it had a first person perspective. Hell, it could even mistake that cluster of beliefs desires, folk psychological predictions, experience about the body's dispositions and so on for something more. Now imagine a Watsonian P-zombie. It's internalised that language use and predicts silently, with the brain clamping down on the muscular production of language and simply producing, then interpreting language. That's broadly what we do when thinking in words, by the way. However, again, it's a P-zombie, its behaviour is on an internal feedback loop rather than an external one, but it still doesn't feel like anything. It's got a rich model of what it does that it can use to predict, explain, justify and produce behaviour and it's perfectly capable of modelling others - as if they had intentions desires and interests.

Obviously, this embodied p-zombie brain doesn't really have beliefs and it isn't really there. But it uses the intentional stance to predict and explain behaviour. it will be able to tell stories based on personal history and, living among non zombies, would learn the grammatically correct use of personal pronouns like I. The I, as Dennett puts it, would be the centre of narrative gravity. A convenient hook for the stories. A fictional character written by the p-zombie. Mind you, it would be a fictional character able to respond to its own stories and history. That's starting to feel like a pretty rich (non) mental life.

Now, holding that story in your head, just imagine what would happen if, actually, the unification of all of the perceptions in a way that actually allows the embodied brain to act effectively in the world. happened to feel like something to have. Imagine if, before language happened, pain hurt just because sharing information in a rich manner across a brain happened to feel like something. Now you have two options here: Chalmers' option is panpsychism - all matter has a phenomenal character in the same way it has mass. Personally I see Chalmers' option as incredibly excessive.

All you have to imagine is that, in the brain, some processes that promulgate and bind information across the brain just happen to feel like something when they happen. It doesn't have to be many, because as we saw with the zombie, even a zombie can get a third person sense of self. Most of our sense of self is, as it happens, third person, just like the zombie. However, a little bit of it isn't. It just happens that, in us, it turns us from p-zombies to something a bit richer, with a spark of internal awareness of solving the easy problems that easy consciousness solves. That internal dashboard, is all it takes. all it needs. Most of the heavy lifting is already done by third person folk psychology applied recursively.

So we have two user illusions - a really basic private one that is biology in action seen from the inside (because it feels like something to discriminate, perceive, nocicept and so on) and a public one that is rather similar to the zombie one that allows us to spin stories around this little kernel of biology experienced from the inside. Put the two together and you have something that looks mysterious from the biology (because of the language, intentional stuff and so one) and looks mysterious from the personal (because of the ill understood biology). Obviously, the two are hopelessly intermingled which just makes unpicking it near impossible. As I always say, psychology has not yet had its Newton.


I will repeat: the idea of a brain causing an illusion by itself, to whatever the heck it is the illusion is supposed to be useful for (if not the brain itself),

User illusions are often quite useful. ask any PLC!

is as illogical as the idea of God sacrificing Himself to Himself via His avatar, Jesus.

Only if you look at it the wrong way.

Don't just tell me "You just don't understand it." It needs to be explained coherently. It hasn't been. Not by Dennet,

I'd say Dennett explains it entirely coherently. However, to understand his argument really requires you to be up to speed on his theory of Content as well as his theory of consciousness.

Sam Harris, or anyone else.

I have no idea about Sam Harris, I don't think this is his area.

The hard problem remains, re Chalmers. And lest we go saying this is theological, remember, please, that Chalmers is an atheist.

Yeah, an atheist who believed (at the time) that consciousness was a fundamental property of all matter. Even if that wasn't the case, and it is, why does everyone speak approvingly of the hard problem while ignoring the easy one. Chalmers didn't, Newton like, realise that consciousness was hard in the early nineties, surprising everyone else who hadn't realised. He wrote a complex paper pimping panpsychism that no one has ever read but grab three words out of - it's the cogito all over again.

If we are just our brains, what exactly is the purpose of subjective experience, or qualia? The p-zombie would be just fine without having any subjective experience, like any other strictly functional machine.

I disagree, no one has ever given me a convincing reason for thinking that a p-zombie could exist.

Moreover: it would be FAR better off, what without all this needless suffering and pain!

Really? have you seen what happens to people who don't feel pain? I'd have a dig through the literature on that one.

I hope that's a detailed enough answer.
 
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I know all about the changes that occur to the brain over time with exposure to drugs.

But that is change over time, not activity.

Activity is perceived change in the present.

And activity is something distinct from the structures creating the activity.

You have the structures, the cells, the molecules, the organelles, the proteins. All the tissues and the chemicals contained within them.

And then you have the activity.

The perceived changes taking place in the tissues and cells in the present.

Two things.

It seems all your positions are nothing but pretending that distinct things are the same thing.

Because I already replied to it. Yes, they are different. As to whether they are completely different and/or separate or independent 'things', is another matter. "Completely different thing' is open to detailed interpretation.

A thing and it's activity are completely distinct "things". They are different classes of "things".

The brain is doing a lot with it's activity. From regulating respiration to contracting muscles.

Creating the mind is only a part.

Is the brain and the "signal" to contract a muscle the same thing?

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How does the bee know how to make a hive?

How does the bird know how to make a nest?

How do animals navigate during migrations?

The things the brain does, like create a mind and presentations for that mind, arose the same way.

Oh dear.

So now you are invoking an externalist model. None of these things know any such things. They are set up, by evolution, to interact with the world so, in almost all cases, the world does most of the work in a dialectic with the dispositional properties of the creature.

The striking thing is how theological your models are.

Please!

A "dialectic"?

Could you possibly say less?

You have no clue how a bird builds a nest. Or how a bee builds a hive.

Of course it is a product of evolution.

That is saying just about nothing.

That's not what I said. Merely what you understood.

You are right about the nothing though.
 
May the FSM rain his blessings upon you, Sub!

I thank you for clearing a lot of things up for me. May I say, I think the addition of you and Copernicus is going to go a L O N G way in putting a damper on these endless threads about consciousness, freewill, etc, that have been going on for what, 18 years! I've been involved for 14 of them.

I have only a few questions: Mind you these are questions, not challenges so to speak. I concede that you know far more about this than I do.

One, with respect to Harris. Unless my memory fails me, he is a neuroscientist. So, I would say he is emminently qualified. I don't know what his qualifications are in philosophy, however.

Two, I hear you about people who don't feel pain. I've read up on leprosy and there is even a great fantasy series written about a main character who is a leper, and what he goes through every day. He shaves as a daily ritual, making himself sharp as a tack and ultra careful. I believe the author is named Donaldson, though I can't remember the name of the books. My memory is in a shambles. I have to see a neurologist when I get out of the funny farm, since my doctor and councilor both told me I am exhibiting early signs of dementia. YAYY for me!

What I am getting at, and please forgive me if I'm wrong, but a p-zombie has NO subjective experience at all, while a leper does. So, yes, the leper suffers extremely, but does the p-zombie experience any mental content at all? I assumed the answer is no, and that that is precisely Chalmers' point, that, to paraphrase in my own unschooled manner, "Why would the brain concoct an experience when the lack of conscious experience would be just as functional, but without the needless suffering?"

Of course, it wouldn't get to appreciate a symphony either, so of course there's the rub.

Three, I apologize. I thought you were a materialist. I am sort of skimming these threads since I don't have much time before they throw the net over me. Also, YES, I will do as you say and try to come up to speed re Dennet.

Perhaps I will read his book in the loony bin. One question: I guess I'm a monist to, in that I am a Spinozist. May I ask, what do you think of Spinoza?

Sure, he went on and on about God, but his philosophy is tricksy, or at least some suggest: ie that he may have been an atheist using God as a placeholder for something which he explains as being beyond human capacity for comprehension, or as a safety net, being that it was dangerous to come out as an atheist in those days. I do know from having read his letters, that he got his knickers in a serious twist whenever anyone accused him of atheism, which he always claimed was an absurd position.

Thank you! :joy:
 
May the FSM rain his blessings upon you, Sub!

I have been touched by his noodly appendage.
I thank you for clearing a lot of things up for me. May I say, I think the addition of you and Copernicus is going to go a L O N G way in putting a damper on these endless threads about consciousness, freewill, etc, that have been going on for what, 18 years! I've been involved for 14 of them.

I don't know, there's some serious quality here too.

I have only a few questions: Mind you these are questions, not challenges so to speak. I concede that you know far more about this than I do.

I'm only really as good as my last argument.

One, with respect to Harris. Unless my memory fails me, he is a neuroscientist. So, I would say he is emminently qualified. I don't know what his qualifications are in philosophy, however.

He just hasn't impacted much on me. Ramachandran sure, Pat C definitely. Sam Harris? Meh.

Two, I hear you about people who don't feel pain. I've read up on leprosy and there is even a great fantasy series written about a main character who is a leper, and what he goes through every day. He shaves as a daily ritual, making himself sharp as a tack and ultra careful. I believe the author is named Donaldson, though I can't remember the name of the books. My memory is in a shambles. I have to see a neurologist when I get out of the funny farm, since my doctor and councilor both told me I am exhibiting early signs of dementia. YAYY for me!

I'm sorry for you. You sound fine to me.

What I am getting at, and please forgive me if I'm wrong, but a p-zombie has NO subjective experience at all, while a leper does. So, yes, the leper suffers extremely, but does the p-zombie experience any mental content at all? I assumed the answer is no, and that that is precisely Chalmers' point, that, to paraphrase in my own unschooled manner, "Why would the brain concoct an experience when the lack of conscious experience would be just as functional, but without the needless suffering?"

The point is that people who don't feel pain tend to get damaged constantly and life expectancy is short. I demonstrated how a zombie with no first person mental life certainly could have interests. Avoiding damage and early demise is one of the more fundamental interests. Not responding to bodily damage is the sort of strategy that is heavily selected against.

Of course, it wouldn't get to appreciate a symphony either, so of course there's the rub.

Of course it could, from the thrid person. There's rather a good, if bleak 'first contact' book called Blindsight that has a protagonist who is effectively a P-zombie, you might like it.

Three, I apologize. I thought you were a materialist. I am sort of skimming these threads since I don't have much time before they throw the net over me. Also, YES, I will do as you say and try to come up to speed re Dennet.

Dennett gets a bad press that he doesn't wholly deserve. Even when he's wrong he's usually interesting and he's readable for non philosophers in a way Davidson or Dummett just are not.

Perhaps I will read his book in the loony bin. One question: I guess I'm a monist to, in that I am a Spinozist. May I ask, what do you think of Spinoza?

I'm not a specialist, I'm afraid. What I know seems interesting I'm more Descartes to Kant, so as to speak.

Sure, he went on and on about God, but his philosophy is tricksy, or at least some suggest: ie that he may have been an atheist using God as a placeholder for something which he explains as being beyond human capacity for comprehension, or as a safety net, being that it was dangerous to come out as an atheist in those days. I do know from having read his letters, that he got his knickers in a serious twist whenever anyone accused him of atheism, which he always claimed was an absurd position.

Perhaps. I'm an atheist, but I have far more time for religion than most here. I think that the baby to bathwater ratio is higher than most.

Thank you! :joy:

Thanks, I'm happy to explain where I'm coming from.
 
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