Soupie
Paranormal Adept
What you thought I said was the opposite of what I said. What you said is what I said.?Did I say something stupid? Please let me know what it was.
NEW! LOWEST RATES EVER -- SUPPORT THE SHOW AND ENJOY THE VERY BEST PREMIUM PARACAST EXPERIENCE! Welcome to The Paracast+, eight years young! For a low subscription fee, you can download the ad-free version of The Paracast and the exclusive, member-only, After The Paracast bonus podcast, featuring color commentary, exclusive interviews, the continuation of interviews that began on the main episode of The Paracast. We also offer lifetime memberships! Flash! Take advantage of our lowest rates ever! Act now! It's easier than ever to susbcribe! You can sign up right here!
What you thought I said was the opposite of what I said. What you said is what I said.?Did I say something stupid? Please let me know what it was.
With all do respect Constance, you've regularly misunderstood pretty straightforward things that have been said here in this thread. Most recently before me, you misunderstood smcder's rhetorical question about introspection.And yet we both apparently speak English.
Illusion is too strong of a word. Our phenomenal experiences of reality are filtered and subjective. That is, the information we receive and integrate from the environment will be different from all other organisms, including humans for a plethora of reasons.
Thus, our inner world isn't so much an illusion as it is a filtered, specialized version of the totality of what-is.
I read the following two papers and while they were interesting, I found them ultimately unsatisfying. Also, both seem to take a physicalist stance. And both are restricted by the limitations of language: the first gets bogged down over the meaning of thing/object, the second over the meaning of substance. Both papers I feel suffer from lacking a Whiteheadian approach to the nature of reality.
Galen Strawson: The Self
(iii) The discussion of materialism has many mansions, and provides a setting for considering the question ‘What is a thing or object?’ It is a long question, but the answer suggests that there is no less reason to call the self a thing than there is to call a cat or a rock a thing. It is arguable that disagreement with this last claim is diagnostic of failure to understand what genuine, realistic materialism involves.
http://www.timcrane.com/uploads/2/5/2/4/25243881/inaugural.pdf
Persons are substances in this sense, beings with a special balance of psychological and bodily characteristics. It is worth noting that something like this idea is suggested by some famous remarks of Descartes, which are rather out of harmony with his dualistic view of soul and body:
‘I am not lodged in my body like a pilot in his ship, but, besides ... I am joined to it very closely and indeed so compounded and intermingled with my body, that I form, as it were, a single whole with it.’
Hm, that quote by Descartes dovetails nicely with the information philosophy theory of mind, in my opinion, as the physical brain and the informational mind share just such a relationship as described.
I haven't read the following yet but it's on deck: https://ethik.univie.ac.at/fileadmi...__T._1990_There_is_no_quest.._Physicalism.pdf
However, I'm not too interested per se as I don't think our understanding of the physical world is complete by any means, and I think any dualistic version of reality is false. What I'm saying is that any suggested dichotomy between mental/physical or mind/body is a false one.
Regarding the value of phenomenology and introspection: I do value it, however I think it's value is finite. We know that what people think and experience is often not isomorphic with reality, indeed, as per above, cannot be. Furthermore, cognitive distortions and sensory illusions are well documented. I don't think I need to list them here.
Furthermore, while phenomenology can be used to explore the structure of the mind from the inside, what it can tell us about its nature and origin is limited.
I'm sure the following will fall on deaf ears but I was recently considering working memory: Working memory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Roughly speaking, working memory is an important facet of intelligence. It's the process/system by which an organism (brain) temporarily holds "information" in mind for on the fly use and manipulation.
For instance, one is using WM when they are doing mental math, trying to recall a phone number they were just told, or trying to mentally picture a room and rearrange the furniture.
Some people have a much stronger WM capacity than others. Many people who struggle with math have poor WM and thus struggle with mental math, etc.
For example, if you were to ask people to visualize the following list of animals as you read it out loud and ask them repeat the list back to in reverse, you would find that people would have varying amounts of success:
Pig horse dog mouse cat fish shark whale
My wife would be able to repeat the list back to me in reverse with almost no problem. I would probably only recall the first two. Honestly.
What is going on here? Why can some brains maintain phenomenal mental images of these animals and some can't? It's not that these people (brains) can't produce phenomenal images of each animal individually, because they can. It's just that the can't maintain these phenomenal images all at once while some people can.
My conclusion is that there must be some intimate relationship between brains, phenomenal experience (mind), and information. As noted, I believe the mind is information.
Re: NDE and sustained personality change. Similar phenomenon have been recorded with DMT and psilocybin trips.
If you're suggesting that this phenomenon means physicalism is false or that dualism is correct, I don't follow.
Likewise with psi phenomena.
Illusion is too strong of a word. Our phenomenal experiences of reality are filtered and subjective. That is, the information we receive and integrate from the environment will be different from all other organisms, including humans for a plethora of reasons.
Thus, our inner world isn't so much an illusion as it is a filtered, specialized version of the totality of what-is.
I read the following two papers and while they were interesting, I found them ultimately unsatisfying. Also, both seem to take a physicalist stance. And both are restricted by the limitations of language: the first gets bogged down over the meaning of thing/object, the second over the meaning of substance. Both papers I feel suffer from lacking a Whiteheadian approach to the nature of reality.
"Hm, that quote by Descartes dovetails nicely with the information philosophy theory of mind, in my opinion, as the physical brain and the informational mind share just such a relationship as described.
I haven't read the following yet but it's on deck: https://ethik.univie.ac.at/fileadmi...__T._1990_There_is_no_quest.._Physicalism.pdf
However, I'm not too interested per se as I don't think our understanding of the physical world is complete by any means, and I think any dualistic version of reality is false. What I'm saying is that any suggested dichotomy between mental/physical or mind/body is a false one.
Regarding the value of phenomenology and introspection: I do value it, however I think it's value is finite. We know that what people think and experience is often not isomorphic with reality, indeed, as per above, cannot be. Furthermore, cognitive distortions and sensory illusions are well documented. I don't think I need to list them here.
Furthermore, while phenomenology can be used to explore the structure of the mind from the inside, what it can tell us about its nature and origin is limited.
I'm sure the following will fall on deaf ears but I was recently considering working memory: Working memory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Roughly speaking, working memory is an important facet of intelligence. It's the process/system by which an organism (brain) temporarily holds "information" in mind for on the fly use and manipulation.
For instance, one is using WM when they are doing mental math, trying to recall a phone number they were just told, or trying to mentally picture a room and rearrange the furniture.
Some people have a much stronger WM capacity than others. Many people who struggle with math have poor WM and thus struggle with mental math, etc.
For example, if you were to ask people to visualize the following list of animals as you read it out loud and ask them repeat the list back to in reverse, you would find that people would have varying amounts of success:
Pig horse dog mouse cat fish shark whale
My wife would be able to repeat the list back to me in reverse with almost no problem. I would probably only recall the first two. Honestly.
What is going on here? Why can some brains maintain phenomenal mental images of these animals and some can't? It's not that these people (brains) can't produce phenomenal images of each animal individually, because they can. It's just that the can't maintain these phenomenal images all at once while some people can.
My conclusion is that there must be some intimate relationship between brains, phenomenal experience (mind), and information. As noted, I believe the mind is information.
Re: NDE and sustained personality change. Similar phenomenon have been recorded with DMT and psilocybin trips.
If you're suggesting that this phenomenon means physicalism is false or that dualism is correct, I don't follow.
Likewise with psi phenomena.
And yet we both apparently speak English.
Illusion is too strong of a word. Our phenomenal experiences of reality are filtered and subjective. That is, the information we receive and integrate from the environment will be different from all other organisms, including humans for a plethora of reasons.
Thus, our inner world isn't so much an illusion as it is a filtered, specialized version of the totality of what-is.
I read the following two papers and while they were interesting, I found them ultimately unsatisfying. Also, both seem to take a physicalist stance. And both are restricted by the limitations of language: the first gets bogged down over the meaning of thing/object, the second over the meaning of substance. Both papers I feel suffer from lacking a Whiteheadian approach to the nature of reality.
Hm, that quote by Descartes dovetails nicely with the information philosophy theory of mind, in my opinion, as the physical brain and the informational mind share just such a relationship as described.
I haven't read the following yet but it's on deck: https://ethik.univie.ac.at/fileadmi...__T._1990_There_is_no_quest.._Physicalism.pdf
However, I'm not too interested per se as I don't think our understanding of the physical world is complete by any means, and I think any dualistic version of reality is false. What I'm saying is that any suggested dichotomy between mental/physical or mind/body is a false one.
Regarding the value of phenomenology and introspection: I do value it, however I think it's value is finite. We know that what people think and experience is often not isomorphic with reality, indeed, as per above, cannot be. Furthermore, cognitive distortions and sensory illusions are well documented. I don't think I need to list them here.
Furthermore, while phenomenology can be used to explore the structure of the mind from the inside, what it can tell us about its nature and origin is limited.
I'm sure the following will fall on deaf ears but I was recently considering working memory: Working memory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Roughly speaking, working memory is an important facet of intelligence. It's the process/system by which an organism (brain) temporarily holds "information" in mind for on the fly use and manipulation.
For instance, one is using WM when they are doing mental math, trying to recall a phone number they were just told, or trying to mentally picture a room and rearrange the furniture.
Some people have a much stronger WM capacity than others. Many people who struggle with math have poor WM and thus struggle with mental math, etc.
For example, if you were to ask people to visualize the following list of animals as you read it out loud and ask them repeat the list back to in reverse, you would find that people would have varying amounts of success:
Pig horse dog mouse cat fish shark whale
My wife would be able to repeat the list back to me in reverse with almost no problem. I would probably only recall the first two. Honestly.
What is going on here? Why can some brains maintain phenomenal mental images of these animals and some can't? It's not that these people (brains) can't produce phenomenal images of each animal individually, because they can. It's just that the can't maintain these phenomenal images all at once while some people can.
My conclusion is that there must be some intimate relationship between brains, phenomenal experience (mind), and information. As noted, I believe the mind is information.
Re: NDE and sustained personality change. Similar phenomenon have been recorded with DMT and psilocybin trips.
If you're suggesting that this phenomenon means physicalism is false or that dualism is correct, I don't follow.
Likewise with psi phenomena.
Illusion is too strong of a word. Our phenomenal experiences of reality are filtered and subjective. That is, the information we receive and integrate from the environment will be different from all other organisms, including humans for a plethora of reasons.
Thus, our inner world isn't so much an illusion as it is a filtered, specialized version of the totality of what-is.
I read the following two papers and while they were interesting, I found them ultimately unsatisfying. Also, both seem to take a physicalist stance. And both are restricted by the limitations of language: the first gets bogged down over the meaning of thing/object, the second over the meaning of substance. Both papers I feel suffer from lacking a Whiteheadian approach to the nature of reality.
Hm, that quote by Descartes dovetails nicely with the information philosophy theory of mind, in my opinion, as the physical brain and the informational mind share just such a relationship as described.
I haven't read the following yet but it's on deck: https://ethik.univie.ac.at/fileadmi...__T._1990_There_is_no_quest.._Physicalism.pdf
However, I'm not too interested per se as I don't think our understanding of the physical world is complete by any means, and I think any dualistic version of reality is false. What I'm saying is that any suggested dichotomy between mental/physical or mind/body is a false one.
Regarding the value of phenomenology and introspection: I do value it, however I think it's value is finite. We know that what people think and experience is often not isomorphic with reality, indeed, as per above, cannot be. Furthermore, cognitive distortions and sensory illusions are well documented. I don't think I need to list them here.
Furthermore, while phenomenology can be used to explore the structure of the mind from the inside, what it can tell us about its nature and origin is limited.
I'm sure the following will fall on deaf ears but I was recently considering working memory: Working memory - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Roughly speaking, working memory is an important facet of intelligence. It's the process/system by which an organism (brain) temporarily holds "information" in mind for on the fly use and manipulation.
For instance, one is using WM when they are doing mental math, trying to recall a phone number they were just told, or trying to mentally picture a room and rearrange the furniture.
Some people have a much stronger WM capacity than others. Many people who struggle with math have poor WM and thus struggle with mental math, etc.
For example, if you were to ask people to visualize the following list of animals as you read it out loud and ask them repeat the list back to in reverse, you would find that people would have varying amounts of success:
Pig horse dog mouse cat fish shark whale
My wife would be able to repeat the list back to me in reverse with almost no problem. I would probably only recall the first two. Honestly.
What is going on here? Why can some brains maintain phenomenal mental images of these animals and some can't? It's not that these people (brains) can't produce phenomenal images of each animal individually, because they can. It's just that the can't maintain these phenomenal images all at once while some people can.
My conclusion is that there must be some intimate relationship between brains, phenomenal experience (mind), and information. As noted, I believe the mind is information.
Re: NDE and sustained personality change. Similar phenomenon have been recorded with DMT and psilocybin trips.
If you're suggesting that this phenomenon means physicalism is false or that dualism is correct, I don't follow.
Likewise with psi phenomena.
No on both accounts.do you think that information theory will ultimately enable our species to comprehend "the totality of what-is"? And if so, do you think that that totality might be reducible to computationally derived mathematical equations?
The brain is an information processor; the mind is information. Descartes describes the body and mind as being intimately, deeply enmeshed; I see the physical brain and informational mind having such a relationship.What I'm missing is an account of what you refer to as "the information philosophy theory of mind." If you've provided one here and I've missed it, would you link it for me? If not, would you supply a characterization of this theory? I'm especially interested in how you read that quotation from Descartes in terms of 'the information philosophy theory of mind'.
I agree. I think there is a distinction of course. However, it's my view that ultimately both body and mind stem from the same source. (Same disclaimer as above.)It's clear that you wish to hold strictly to (or to ultimately arrive at) one form or another of monism, but that doesn't require that no distinctions can be made between the mental and the physical, the mind and the body.
Hm, I'm not sure what you mean by that.And the types of informational theories of consciousness we've most frequently encountered appear to be reductive in terms of consciousness -- that is, the 'information' originates and develops its integrations outside of consciousness, without the use of consciousness.
I've posted other, non-philosophical articles and papers here before that haven't generated any or much discussion. I didn't think there would be much interested in WM.Why would working memory 'fall on deaf ears here'?
Again, not certain what you mean here. To clarify, I really believe the entire organism and even their environment generate the informational mind, not just the brain. However, I usually write brain/CNS to be concise. But I really believe the entire organism and their surroundings all partake in the generation of mind.Also, to the extent that you appear to think that it is brains that do all the 'thinking' on the basis of their access to 'information', I have to disagree.
I believe reality is a dynamic process composed of a fundamental substance that temporally differentiates into things that we macro humans perceive as objects. An idea that I've stated here many times."Both papers I feel suffer from lacking a Whiteheadian approach to the nature of reality."
What the hell does this mean?
These powerful, inner experiences are life changing?"Re: NDE and sustained personality change. Similar phenomenon have been recorded with DMT and psilocybin trips."
Right ... and ...?
Sorry, I can't find it now (I just skimmed several pages back) but you mentioned the gentleman becoming more moral after the NDE and said it would need to be accounted for..."If you're suggesting that this phenomenon means physicalism is false or that dualism is correct, I don't follow."
Yeah, I don't follow that either, nor in and of itself does it follow ... so I'm not sure why I would be suggesting that ... so I'm probably not.
I understand what you're saying. It's a point you've made many times."Thus, our inner world isn't so much an illusion as it is a filtered, specialized version of the totality of what-is."
The point stands - how does your filtered, specialized version justify your confidence in your position (composed only, as you say, of filtered, specialized content - i.e. your subjective experience) and dismissal of other positions? On this view - a kind of reverse solipsism, no view is any more supported than any other ...
Ah, I see. Yes, that is my opinion, nothing more."What I'm saying is that any suggested dichotomy between mental/physical or mind/body is a false one."
You're not saying it ... your proclaiming it!
Not so much dismissive as not interested.Not to be harsh, but I would say don't bother reading something that you've already taken a dismissive attitude toward based on the title.
In an earlier comment you said (or were quoting):Tell me ... how you have pre-determined that nothing about the nature and origin of the mind can be determined by exploring it's structure from the inside?
It's also the only thing we have direct knowledge of ... your buddy Russell said that.
I'm dubious that a mind can determine its own nature and origin by looking at itself. Kind of like how Peterson had said a person left to themself will grow a wild, bushy narrative that requires interaction with another person to get trimmed down into shape.In phenomenology then we have a philosophy of consciousness built from the ground up on observation of the very thing itself...
To illustrate that it's widely and historically known that ones perspective is limited.What prompted you to quote from Corinthians?
I believe reality is a dynamic process composed of a fundamental substance that temporally differentiates into things that we macro humans perceive as objects. An idea that I've stated here many times.
You introduced me to Whitehead, and I thought his process philosophy held a similar view. Sorry if that created confusion.
Anyhow, in hindsight, I suppose in that paper Strawson was trying to convince his fellow materialists that the mind is worthy of being called a thing or object? I take it that some materialists don't think the mind exists at all. I suppose I was just disappointed to read the paper and have the concluding argument question whether the mind is an object like a banana. On a good day I can recognize that this is (very) important work, and on bad days it comes off as arguing over semantics.
These powerful, inner experiences are life changing?
Sorry, I can't find it now (I just skimmed several pages back) but you mentioned the gentleman becoming more moral after the NDE and said it would need to be accounted for...
Sorry I can't find the quote (I'll continue to look) but I took it to mean you didn't think the NDE and the life change could be accounted for with a physicalist paradigm.
I understand what you're saying. It's a point you've made many times.
Yes, ultimately we can't know anything outside our skulls. But my answer to your question would be replication (by others) and accurate prediction. And yes, we still can't know that the repetition and predication by others is really real outside our skulls.
And this is why I say illusion is too strong of a word; we know that one person's perspective of things is very, very limited... but not a complete and utter nonsense illusion. So, with the help of such tools as the scientific method, some more sense can be made of the reality outside our skulls. (But never a perfect, isomorphic understanding for a number of reasons.)
Also, I'm not as confident in my position as I may appear. I'm very willing to admit that I may be completely wrong, and everyone/anyone else may be completely right.
Ah, I see. Yes, that is my opinion, nothing more.
Not so much dismissive as not interested.
I'm personally not concerned about labels like physical, spiritual, mental, etc. As you know, it is my opinion that everything in reality stems from one source. So while I love reading about theories and models and whatnot, I'm not (super) interested in reading a long paper that argues that there is more to reality than what we currently consider physical, because I already agree.
In an earlier comment you said (or were quoting):
I'm dubious that a mind can determine its own nature and origin by looking at itself. Kind of like how Peterson had said a person left to themself will grow a wild, bushy narrative that requires interaction with another person to get trimmed down into shape.
I think introspection is very important to the study of consciousness; I think we need to look in and out to study consciousness. I agree that only by doing both will we make any progress.
To illustrate that it's widely and historically known that ones perspective is limited.
Ok, I think I get what you're saying. I do think the mind can process information. This would be metacognition, thinking about thinking....this is where @Constance point about reductive theories leaving consciousness out of the integration of information comes in - why on Earth do we have it if we won't let it serve any function?
I believe reality is a dynamic process composed of a fundamental substance that temporally differentiates into things that we macro humans perceive as objects. An idea that I've stated here many times.
You introduced me to Whitehead, and I thought his process philosophy held a similar view. Sorry if that created confusion.
Anyhow, in hindsight, I suppose in that paper Strawson was trying to convince his fellow materialists that the mind is worthy of being called a thing or object? I take it that some materialists don't think the mind exists at all. I suppose I was just disappointed to read the paper and have the concluding argument question whether the mind is an object like a banana. On a good day I can recognize that this is (very) important work, and on bad days it comes off as arguing over semantics.
These powerful, inner experiences are life changing?
Sorry, I can't find it now (I just skimmed several pages back) but you mentioned the gentleman becoming more moral after the NDE and said it would need to be accounted for...
Sorry I can't find the quote (I'll continue to look) but I took it to mean you didn't think the NDE and the life change could be accounted for with a physicalist paradigm.
I understand what you're saying. It's a point you've made many times.
Yes, ultimately we can't know anything outside our skulls. But my answer to your question would be replication (by others) and accurate prediction. And yes, we still can't know that the repetition and predication by others is really real outside our skulls.
And this is why I say illusion is too strong of a word; we know that one person's perspective of things is very, very limited... but not a complete and utter nonsense illusion. So, with the help of such tools as the scientific method, some more sense can be made of the reality outside our skulls. (But never a perfect, isomorphic understanding for a number of reasons.)
Also, I'm not as confident in my position as I may appear. I'm very willing to admit that I may be completely wrong, and everyone/anyone else may be completely right.
Ah, I see. Yes, that is my opinion, nothing more.
Not so much dismissive as not interested.
I'm personally not concerned about labels like physical, spiritual, mental, etc. As you know, it is my opinion that everything in reality stems from one source. So while I love reading about theories and models and whatnot, I'm not (super) interested in reading a long paper that argues that there is more to reality than what we currently consider physical, because I already agree.
In an earlier comment you said (or were quoting):
I'm dubious that a mind can determine its own nature and origin by looking at itself. Kind of like how Peterson had said a person left to themself will grow a wild, bushy narrative that requires interaction with another person to get trimmed down into shape.
I think introspection is very important to the study of consciousness; I think we need to look in and out to study consciousness. I agree that only by doing both will we make any progress.
Ok, I think I get what you're saying. I do think the mind can process information. This would be metacognition, thinking about thinking.
The current scientific consensus I believe is that our actions are controlled unconsciously. However, I don't think this means we lack free will.
A paper I posted awhile back offered an interesting theory as to why we have reflective consciousness: To predict the behaviors of others, and also to predict our own behavior.
So while our on-the-fly behavior is controlled unconsciously, I think our ability to meta cognate allows us to physically change our brain and thus our future behavior.
Circling back to phenomenal experience, which I think preceded reflective consciousness in the evolution of mind, my contention has been that zombies are not possible; phenomenal experience will always result from information integrated in the manner performed by organisms.
As I've said in the past, these phenomenal experiences (integrated information) can exist but be non-reflective. That is, there may be no conscious "sense of self" attached to these phenomenal experiences. (It's a question I've been trying to answer throughout this discussion.)
However, once a mind achieves the capacity to self-reflect or meta cognate, access to phenomenal experience occurs and it becomes phenomenal consciousness. There is now a "sense of experiencing self."
These now-conscious experiences are used by the organism to shape future behavior.
This is all just my very humble opinion.
"I'm personally not concerned about labels like physical, spiritual, mental, etc. As you know, it is my opinion that everything in reality stems from one source. So while I love reading about theories and models and whatnot, I'm not (super) interested in reading a long paper that argues that there is more to reality than what we currently consider physical, because I already agree."
1. I'm not sure that's what the article says ... (the argument against MR)
2. I'm not sure you do agree ...
"As you know, it is my opinion that everything in reality stems from one source."
Monism --> materialism (by definition - everything is made of "primordial stuff" that is ultimately simple physically and conveniently complex property-wise, having physical, phenomenal and perhaps informational properties, though I haven't seen anything in your position to prevent us from reducing information to the arrangement of "stuff" just as we've done with the physical and phenomenal) --> determinism (meta-cognition is a lousy place to stick free will, btw, it's the first place determinists are gonna look ...)
So the idea you would need to agree to is that everything cannot possibly be explained by a current or a future physics. Are you taking that step?
In other words, I think where you are being conciliatory is in the "-->" and hoping we won't notice ... ?
The other argument is that for AI to be possible, not mind-machine (cyborg) where we supply the consciousness and not "growing/evolving" hard or wet or soft-ware through evolutionary processes opaque to our understanding ("I don't know how it works - I just put it in and turned the crank twenty million times and voila!") because we don't know what principles might be embedded in those twenty million cranks - if I were Mother Nature, deep time is where I'd hide my secrets from prying eyes) but real true put together by hand AI requires something like physicalism, materialistic monism (the current scientific consensus if you're keeping up with the Jones' and the Kurzweils).
Opposition to either one of those statements puts you in "spooky" territory that I've not seen you willing to go before.