To name a few, last-Tuesdayism, Tegmark's Mathematical universe, BiV, superdeterminism, and several seriously proposed scientific theories, none of which are 'ism's. You can't use empirical evidence against any of these. Too bad because I really like the Tegmark thing, but it needs to solve that problem. I think he's tried. None are logically self-inconsistent.
OK. I'd call it naturalism then, and yes, science using alternate methodologies kept the world in a thousand years known as the dark ages. Switching to methodological naturalism somewhere around the Renaissance has got us where we are today.Andy Kay wrote:Chalmers was pointing out that physicalism is not problem-free, just as the alternatives are not problem-free. The problem confronting the physicalist paradigm needs to be brought into the daylight because of the widespread preferential treatment for physicalism (probably a result of the spectacular success of scientific methodologies as a means of knowledge acquisition), and I commend Chalmers for his efforts.
You cite problems, but not sure what they are. I for instance don't see a 'hard problem', a problem seemingly created where there wasn't one to justify a view that wasn't needed. Maybe there's a different problem. I can name a few, but they aren't problems with naturalism, but more with say realism. They proved (again) that the universe isn't locally real, so I don't see this as much of a problem.
I was looking for a problem with 'not supernaturalism'. What issue is outstanding that requires essentially a punt to 'magic' (sometimes phrased as god-of-the-gaps), especially given it's low score. Magic used to carry the sun around the sky each day, until Copernicus showed that it wasn't needed. So far, magic has yet to score a point it seems. Evolution: that sure tore down a lot of supernaturalism, to the point where most churches (of whatever religion) these days reluctantly stopped denying evolution.
Well, absent your usage, I'll have a swing at the one from Chalmers with the anthropocentrism edited out. "the way a thing experiences the world, the way it feels to said thing subjectively". Chalmers seems influenced by Nagel (who coined 'it is like to be <X>) and Robert Kirk who came up with the p-zombie (PZ) idea that Chalmers so latched onto. His definition of consciousness seems to be influenced by both of these.Let me just say that I welcome constructive criticism, so I'll await any comments on the above before I attempt a description of how I'm using the word 'consciousness.'
So there isn't a way that a PZ experiences the world. The Roomba is in this category, so the fact that it has sensory input, and processes that input in a way that affects its decisions, is all done without conscious experience. The PZ behaves in a way indistinguishable from a person with the experience. I think Chalmers would agree up to this point.
That means that the experience does not affect the behavior, no? The memory, decision making, the philosophizing, etc. are all the product of physical processes. This answers many of my questions I had posed. The experiencing person make the same choices as the PZ, and hence is equally responsible for those choices, whether free will is going on or not. The PZ argument seems to lead nowhere but epiphenomenalism. The PZ even describes qualia just as accurately as one that actually experiences qualia.
I have claimed multiple times that I am a PZ since I don't see the warmth and such of real experience that is so physically unexplainable by those that have it. I am a poor PZ since I don't behave the same as the conscious ones. Actual conscious people don't run around claiming not to be conscious.
Anyway, I digress. I have not heard how you are using the word and am just running with what little I find about Chalmers with a couple brief wiki articles.