Once again 'we' have more examples, and thus further proof, that 'these people', 'back them', really did much prefer to 'look at' and 'focus on' theories, instead of what is actually True, and Right, in Life.Belinda wrote: ↑Mon Nov 10, 2025 9:48 amNo theory is 100% proved to be true. A theory supported by neuroscience is more probable than a theory supported by metaphysical suppositions.seeds wrote: ↑Sun Nov 09, 2025 7:38 pmI could not help but notice the author's use of the words "might"...Belinda wrote: ↑Sun Nov 09, 2025 10:47 am Terminal Feedback Theory: Why Consciousness Arises Where Sensory Feedback Ends
It’s often said that the brain is “just another organ,” yet there’s a crucial asymmetry that might explain consciousness itself: unlike the rest of the body, the brain receives no sensory feedback about itself. If you injure your leg, your brain registers the location and quality of pain — but if you injure your brain, there’s no equivalent feeling of brain pain (the tissue has no nociceptors).
This absence of self-sensation could be more than an anatomical curiosity. It might mark the point where the chain of feedback terminates — where the system can no longer model itself as an object. Consciousness, then, could arise precisely because the brain has no external or higher-order feedback: it is forced to model itself as subject, not as body part.
(as in "...there’s a crucial asymmetry that might explain consciousness itself...")
...and "could"...
(as in "...This absence of self-sensation could be more than an anatomical curiosity..."
In other words, the author of the above claim (Antonio Damasio) offers absolutely nothing other than the equivalent of "educated guesses" that provide not the slightest clue as to how consciousness could have emerged from the non-conscious constituents that form the structural matter of the brain.
All he is showing is how the ubiquitous network of the body's nervous system of which the nociceptors are a part of...
(a network that allows the consciousness of the "I Am-ness" to extend outward from itself and into the fabric of the body in order to take control of the body's musculature, while at the same time allowing the "I Am-ness" [not the brain] to sense the overall well-being of the body)
...simply doesn't extend into the material fabric of the brain itself.
To which I say: "so what?"
Again, none of that offers any irrefutable explanation as to how consciousness emerges from non-conscious matter.
And that, my dear Belinda, is where we cross over into the territory where looms the unresolved conjecture and mystery surrounding what is known as "strong emergence" of which consciousness seems to be a product of, as opposed to the less mysterious "weak emergence."
With another one of those "mights" included in his claim, Damasio goes on to say...Well, there you go.... case closed!The brain might be conscious precisely because it can’t feel itself.
By that reasoning you are conscious because your nervous system does not extend into the tree outside your window or into the core of the sun.
I realize that I too am just guessing when it comes to these mysterious matters, and I will never deny the possibility of my guesses being wrong.
Nevertheless, one of my strongest guesses is that it is the mind's "I Am-ness" that is conscious, not the brain.
Again, you and Hume...
(and now this "active clinician and psychiatrist" [Antonio Damasio] you've cited in this recent post)
...have got things backwards.
_______
(Seeds. you do realise in rebutting both David Hume and Antonio Damasio et al you have hard nut to crack?)
Compared with our resident evangelical whose reasoning is unhistorical, your reasoning is unscientific.
The theory I tried to explain to you is not strong or weak emergence , i.e. the mind emerging from extended matter.
The theory I tried to explain to you is one of mind and extension as aspects of the same which we call brainmind.
Which, again, shows and explains why 'they' took so long to 'catch up'.