Of course a physical cause cannot cause a non-physical thing which is how I know my conscious experience is not caused by the physical. Our difference is more semantic than metaphysical. You regard everything that actually is as physical, so if there are conscious experiences they must be physical (or totally explicable in physical terms) while I only regard what I can directly perceive (directly see, hear, feel, etc.) or can deduce directly from or about what is perceived as physical and everything else I know exists (life, consciousness and mind) as real existents, (not enitities), but can neither be perceived or explained in terms of what can be perceived. The fact I cannot perceive them or know them that way does not mean for me there is anything mystical or supernatural about them, they are just additional natural but unperceivable attributes of the same physical reality.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Mon Mar 14, 2022 8:18 am Thanks again. I'm not denying that we, along with some other species, experience what we call consciousness. I'm saying there's no reason to think that what we call consciousness is a non-physical (or abstract) thing or experience. And its physical privacy is irrelevant; that doesn't make it non-physical. No one else can experience my having my leg cut off either.
How can a physical cause (for example, neural activity) have a supposed non-physical effect? What is the causal mechanism?
I'm wholly sympathetic (intellectually, not emotionally) with your dislike of anything that suggests supernaturalism and I think most people do have a mystical view of things like life, consciousness, and mind. The supernatural view of such things (turned into notions of the, "soul," and, "eternal life," and all other superstitious nonsense) is exactly what I oppose. Just because most people's understanding of something becomes a superstition, does not mean I must reject my own conscious experience to evade their mistake.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Mon Mar 14, 2022 8:18 am Both claims invoke the idea of something non-physical. And just as the second exposes supernaturalism as merely an appeal to magic - a childish superstition - so does the first.
That's the fundamental problem with the pseudo-science of psychology. It cannot study the mind because it is not observable. The best a psychologist can do is rely on the testimony of those whose, "minds," he is supposedly studying, but can never study a mind itself, the actual experience of the one providing the testimony. A patient can describe his own conscious experience but the psychologist cannot actually observe what is being described and can only understand it, if at all, in terms of his own conscious experience. A patient can say, "I have this taste in my mouth that tastes like lemon," but if the psychologist has never tasted a lemon, he cannot possibly know what the patient is describing, and if he has tasted a lemon, he can only assume the patient's experience is the same as his--but he can never know it and can never observe it.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Mon Mar 14, 2022 8:18 am I think the shock of behaviourism - and not just Skinner's - was its scary rejection of the legacy dualism that still plagues psychology. How can you study the mind - the psyche - if you reject the claim (the ancient, supernaturalist delusion) that the mind is a separate, identifiable and observable thing?
You are right, that almost all views of those aspects of life that are not directly amenable to direct perception are mythical and mystical. I assure you, mine isn't. My views are not learned from anyone else, and as far as I know, there is no one else who holds the same views in these matters that I do. I began where you are, assuming everything could be explained in terms of the physical until I ran into the contradictions--that facts that I am conscious, have knowledge, and consciously choose all my behavior.Peter Holmes wrote: ↑Mon Mar 14, 2022 8:18 am As I say, the myth of so-called abstract (or non-physical) things runs deep and strong through our explanations.
I have often thought, perhaps all those who are certain there is only the physical and that everything, including their own conscious minds can be explained as some kind of physically caused phenomena are right, at least about their own minds. I cannot argue with someone else's experience. I only know my own conscious mind is not a physical phenomena, and if I'm the only one in the universe for whom that is true, so be it.