Re: Theories of Consciousness
Posted: Mon Jan 27, 2025 8:08 am
The way I see it is that you have identified what amounts to a weakness in my use of language according to the linguistic gymnastics that you've performed. Recognizing such a weakness would normally make me want to shore up my use of language but I doubt there's any way I could do that to your satisfaction, so let's move on to my first question since this is the issue of relevance to me.Noax wrote: ↑Mon Jan 27, 2025 12:19 amYou said "it's impossible for me to doubt the existence of my consciousness", and that you welcomed constructive criticism, so I showed a valid view where consciousness (however defined) does not meaningfully exist (with 'exist' defined the way you did). I did what you labeled 'impossible'.
I kind of don't use it at all since little of what I said is specific to it. I can define it if it comes up and one is needed.1. how are you using the word "consciousness"?
Standard procedure is to identify the problem and then propose explanatory hypotheses. If such an hypothesis makes empirically testable predictions then we can "do science." If not then we must either wait until new technology permits such testing, or else we are constrained to "do metaphysics" instead. So the problems have been identified (the Emergence Problem and the Generation Problem) and we need to move to the next stage: can we "do science"? On my use of the word "consciousness" (which I described earlier in our converstation) we cannot. You have not yet revealed how you are using the word "consciousness" but (as I said earlier) from the nature of your objections I conclude that it must be very different to my use.Noax wrote:OK, so a god-of-gaps style argument just says it's there, with no explanation of how it can possibly work.Andy Kay wrote:what needs to be accounted for is how consciousness can have "emerged" in a world that was initially devoid of it, and can be "generated" by a primarily non-conscious organ.
Yes that much has become clear to me. What has not yet become clear to me is how you are using the word "consciousness," so I am presently unable to understand what leads you to make such a claim.I don't see the improvement. I don't see what prevents a physical device from doing the same, so I don't see a problem,
I really do need a description of how you're using the word "consciousness" if I'm to make any sense of this.Recollection of the past (and not the past itself) is fetched from somewhere. It does not just arise, unless you're my mother. So if it is fetched from consciousness itself, then it was already there, but sometimes a memory takes time to recall, suggesting that it doesn't come from consciousness, but rather somewhere else a bit more difficult to access.the past is just a present memory arising in consciousness
All one needs to do is to LOOK at how the words "physical" and "mental" are used to see that they are not synonymous, so there is consciousness of the physical and consciousness of the mental.There is a division in language, and yes, language does strongly influence the way we think about these things, which is evidence of deception. One has to discard what language adds to our intuitions and look at actual evidence instead, quite hard to do when the biases are already in place.
I have not seen a demonstration of a division otherwise, that what you call mental is separated from physical. I also do not assert that this division doesn't exist, but being the more complicated model, it requires justification.
What you've done here is to identify a problem... we can call it the Information Problem if that suits you. So now we must create explanatory hypotheses to assuage our demand for explanation, and we may hypothesise the existence of a domain external to consciousness in order to do so. The next question is "can we do science with this hypothesis?" and the answer depends on whether or not we can extract empirical evidence from this putative external domain. Since empirical data is one of the categories that the constituents of consciousness fall into, the answer is clearly in the negative, so we are constrained to create metaphysical hypotheses only.You are an archaeologist who has uncovered an ancient city/civilization full of writings on the wall. You've studied them for decades, unable to decipher most of it, but you've studied it for so long you could reproduce it all by memory. That writing constitutes information that is outside your consciousness. Your consciousness knows it only as lines and symbols, but without the meaning. Then one day a key is found (sort of like the Rosetta stone) and suddenly all that writing that you can reproduce by memory can be read, and the meaning of it all becomes clear.
I really do need a description of how you're using the word "consciousness" if I'm to make any sense of this.That meaning did not come from your consciousness since a mind cannot produce meaningful text that it cannot read. The meaning was demonstrably prior to your conscious idea of that meaning.
I really do need a description of how you're using the word "consciousness" if I'm to make any sense of this.If they have information that you don't, then the evidence is that yes, other people are outside your consciousness.Are you proposing that the REAL "other people" are somewhere outside of my consciousness?
Yes, but both are categories of the constituents of consciousness.Perceptions are different than ideas?That's because I have an IDEA of people communicating over the internet, but when other people arise in my consciousness they arise primarily as perceptions (e.g. when I'm in face-to-face conversation) and only secondarily as ideas (e.g. when there are no other people arising in my consciousness as perceptions).
Once again one only has to LOOK at how these words are used to discern their meaning. If you accept that people are physical organisms, and that they self-refer using these terms, then what else is there to say?Funny, but I personally don't buy that. Those words refer to an ideal, a shared one, sure, but not to anything physical. At least that's the case to me. Pragmatically, few worry about the difference since the two are the same, but when you get into the details, the physical thing does not hold the identity necessary to apply those pronouns to it. I'm in no way telling you that you're wrong. I have a strange view that started from scratch and had to find out how the identity fit back into things enough to render such language meaningful.The non-illusory part of the concept of self is the physical organism that uses the words "I," "me," and "self" to refer to the physical organism that is doing the referring.