cgannon64
BOB DYLAN'S ROCKIN OUT!
I have a question about materialism. If I understand it correctly, the materialist viewpoint considers the human mind to be nothing more than a very, very, very complex set of rules. This is all well and good.
I'm unsure, however, of whether it explains how consciousness operates, and why it exists. From what I've read - and though it isn't much, it isn't nothing (I'm nearly done with Godel, Escher, and Bach, a pretty intersting book) - it seems that you have the laws of physics, and complex interactions between them which we can define as a new set of rules, and complex interactions between them, and so on and so forth until - bam - consciousness.
My first question is: Why exactly does consciousness arise at this point, wherever it may be?
My second question is along the same lines, and it comes from a bit of rephrasing. Put another way, the materialist viewpoint is that there is nothing but atoms, etc. obeying the laws of physics. Individual sections of the universe - say, a person - can be explained with different rules which consider a greater scale; but, in the end, there are the laws of physics, and nothing but.
My question is, then: Why would consciousness be present in one grouping of atoms obeying the laws of physics, and not another group?
A bunch of related questions are: If consciousness is something that arises out of a group of unconscious atoms, can super-consciousness arise out of a group of consciousnesses? Could the whole universe be one enormous conscious being, and our own consciousness plays only a tiny role in it, completely unaware - unconscious, you could say - of the greater consciousness?
A final question: How is this any different from a kind-of trippy monism?
(By the way, I'd just like to say that I'm not bringing this all up to try to argue against materialism - I'm not saying, "Materialism can't explain this so it's stupid" - I'm just trying to understand it better.)
I'm unsure, however, of whether it explains how consciousness operates, and why it exists. From what I've read - and though it isn't much, it isn't nothing (I'm nearly done with Godel, Escher, and Bach, a pretty intersting book) - it seems that you have the laws of physics, and complex interactions between them which we can define as a new set of rules, and complex interactions between them, and so on and so forth until - bam - consciousness.
My first question is: Why exactly does consciousness arise at this point, wherever it may be?
My second question is along the same lines, and it comes from a bit of rephrasing. Put another way, the materialist viewpoint is that there is nothing but atoms, etc. obeying the laws of physics. Individual sections of the universe - say, a person - can be explained with different rules which consider a greater scale; but, in the end, there are the laws of physics, and nothing but.
My question is, then: Why would consciousness be present in one grouping of atoms obeying the laws of physics, and not another group?
A bunch of related questions are: If consciousness is something that arises out of a group of unconscious atoms, can super-consciousness arise out of a group of consciousnesses? Could the whole universe be one enormous conscious being, and our own consciousness plays only a tiny role in it, completely unaware - unconscious, you could say - of the greater consciousness?
A final question: How is this any different from a kind-of trippy monism?
(By the way, I'd just like to say that I'm not bringing this all up to try to argue against materialism - I'm not saying, "Materialism can't explain this so it's stupid" - I'm just trying to understand it better.)