Materialism and Consciousness.

I see alot of Cg and Gothmog making other references of other fellow posters in the OT.This is surely a demostration of politics.A person who follows true philosophy does not need support(making statements of other OT posters) to give more weight on arguments.Why can't you guys make a argument without referring someone else on your side.No individual persuit of truth in here.All it consist is to make alliances and deny other single point of views.
 
jonatas said:
@ Sidhe, if you know as much about QM as you do about the Gospel of Thomas, which you were talking about in a thread a while ago on this site, then you're in trouble. Your misrepresentations then were atrocious, and made in the same invective tone you talk about QM. I don't think you have any credibility.

OK so I say one bad thing about QM from a misunderstanding the rest is right though? 1 bad comment deos not make a complete fallacy of everything else I said, I find it sad yes I don't understand the Gospel of St thomas in detail but I fail to see the relevence, can you go back over all my points about QM and destroy half of them 90%? This is libel of the worst kind. I make one mistake and everything else I said is complete bull.


@Gothmog you spend far too much time referring to vagueries and opinions that you expect to not have to explain either because you went over them before on an unlinked thread(bad practice in a discussion, link your ideas, we don't all know what your referring to) or you seem to expect people to accept your opinion at face value. I find it hard to really get any sense of what your trying to say. I read back over some of your stuff and i'ts very vauge and unsubstantiated. Read some of the links that have been posted in here, good papers go into detail on their points.

Saying things like I am a combination of my thoughts and experiences and my DNA or whatever, is not a good argument, it has no flesh to it's bones. why in what way do your experiences affect you and your decisions, what is it about your nature that makes you express your thoughts and to what extent? Sorry but I find you terribly obtuse.

CartesianFart said:
I see alot of Cg and Gothmog making other references of other fellow posters in the OT.This is surely a demostration of politics.A person who follows true philosophy does not need support(making statements of other OT posters) to give more weight on arguments.Why can't you guys make a argument without referring someone else on your side.No individual persuit of truth in here.All it consist is to make alliances and deny other single point of views.

Yes I agree atm it's a popularity contest, with people agreeing with Gothmog regardless of what he actually says. It's like watching a load of sheep at times. I'm sure he's worthy of this adulation. But so far I've yet to see why?

Attack me, saying Gothmog is a great blah blah blah, but try and discuss why you think I must be wrong because Gothmog is always right?
 
Ayatollah So said:
Let's focus on "the hard problem" by substituting "pain" or "the subjective smell of a rose" for "consciousness". I don't think materialism can explain why these qualia, rather than others or none, arise at the particular point where they do. But it can explain why it can't explain that. In fact, the inability to look at a brain and say "aha, it's completely transparent that such neural activity is painful," is exactly what you would expect if materialism is true.

A few generalities about neurology first. There are many overlapping neural groupings in the brain, where activity in some of the neurons in that grouping tends to activate others in that grouping, more than in the brain at large. Stimulating some of these groupings leads to particular sensations and stimulating others leads to other sensations, or memories or feelings or ... . Asking a subject to remember the smell of a rose, or a pain, often (always?) leads to activity in some (not all) of the same neural groupings that activate when actually smelling a rose, or feeling pain. And, if you pick two sensations, or a sensation and a concept, at random, the odds of those two things picking out highly similar neural groupings at a detailed level, are small.

According to the materialist thesis, roughly speaking, the subjective experience of rose smell IS activity of certain types of neurons in certain parts of the brain. And, remembering or contemplating that experience is also activity of neurons, partly overlapping with those same activities of neurons involved in the smelling of an actual rose.

Now contrast the understanding of the neurology of a particular brain area. On the materialist thesis, this understanding also involves activities (or maybe just the ready potential for activities) of parts of the brain, but probably very different parts. Looking at an MRI of brain activity activates very different neurons than does remembering the smell of a rose, even if the brain being MRI'd is involved in smelling a rose, or remembering. Therefore, of course you don't make the intuitive connection between what you see on the MRI and the subjective smell of a rose. Why should anyone expect that looking at this brain activity magically causes you to undergo this activity? That is exactly what would have to happen in order to have an intuitively satisfying grasp of why this particular brain activity leads to that particular sensation.

This is an example of a small point gone over in detail, this is far better than making loads of loose generalisations and saying yes well we discussed this before?
 
Birdjaguar said:
Repeat my previous post for CartesianFart.

Bir Jaguar when we want your opinion we'll ask Gothmog to give it to you.:lol:
 
I detect that people are arguing, but I don't know what the argument is about.

Is there a central question around which all this arguing is taking place?
 
Read the previous posts backward,El machinae.Then you will see what it is all about.I need an objective view,since i am swamped into it.
 
@CartesianFart
Heh, you see no discipline in me. You don't know me.

I guess you missed it again, but I am saying that our biological lineage is mostly represented here on earth. If trying to understand the basics of our brain, I would start with unicellular bacteria and work my way up from there. Indeed, that is what I've done.

The posts I linked to contain additional posts writen by me on this topic. So I don't have to type them out again. They could give you additional insight into what I believe, and why, and where I accept uncertainty.

Disagreeing is fine, but personal attacks are not.

Please point out even one time that I refered to other posters to support my argument. The only time I even quoted anyone was quoting punkbass in a response to cg because I liked the way he turned the phrase.

@Sidhe
Actually if you accept that pretty bizarre **** happens in QM like particles appearing to spontaneously appear or disappear it is a fairly good argument for free will regardless of any interpretation.
So you keep saying. I fail to see the link between the theoretical and consequences of energy conservation and the uncertainty principle (i.e. virtual particles) and free will. There is simply no connection that I can see, and you have failed to provide one.

Please enlighten me, how does energy conservation relate to free will?
How about the uncertainty principle?

Note that (as I said before), the uncertainty principle is a simple consequence of how much you must necessarily interact with a system in order to make a measurement of it along with what we believe to be the smallest quanta of the property in question.

If you feel that CartesianFart is pointing out holes in my philosophical ideas better than you can, then we may as well stop here. He hasn't pointed out dick.

On a forum such as this, discussing topics of this magnitude, there will always be sweeping statements. The hope is that we share some intellectual background and don't have to go over every detail. Then some back and forth usually transpires to find out the root of any disagreement. I never never attack someone unless they are blatantly lying (as in your statements about QM), or they attack me first.
can you go back over all my points about QM and destroy half of them 90%
I thought I did that, actually all of them 100%.

To summarize what I am currently feeling: whatever dood.

@El Machinae - AFAIKT Sidhe was put off by my correcting his understanding of QM and decided to go for a personal attack.
 
Gothmog said:
@CartesianFart
Heh, you see no discipline in me. You don't know me.

I guess you missed it again, but I am saying that our biological lineage is mostly represented here on earth. If trying to understand the basics of our brain, I would start with unicellular bacteria and work my way up from there. Indeed, that is what I've done.

The posts I linked to contain additional posts writen by me on this topic. So I don't have to type them out again. They could give you additional insight into what I believe, and why, and where I accept uncertainty.

Disagreeing is fine, but personal attacks are not.

Please point out even one time that I refered to other posters to support my argument. The only time I even quoted anyone was quoting punkbass in a response to cg because I liked the way he turned the phrase.

@Sidhe
So you keep saying. I fail to see the link between the theoretical and consequences of energy conservation and the uncertainty principle (i.e. virtual particles) and free will. There is simply no connection that I can see, and you have failed to provide one.

Please enlighten me, how does energy conservation relate to free will?
How about the uncertainty principle?

Note that (as I said before), the uncertainty principle is a simple consequence of how much you must necessarily interact with a system in order to make a measurement of it along with what we believe to be the smallest quanta of the property in question.

If you feel that CartesianFart is pointing out holes in my philosophical ideas better than you can, then we may as well stop here. He hasn't pointed out dick.

On a forum such as this, discussing topics of this magnitude, there will always be sweeping statements. The hope is that we share some intellectual background and don't have to go over every detail. Then some back and forth usually transpires to find out the root of any disagreement. I never never attack someone unless they are blatantly lying (as in your statements about QM), or they attack me first.
I thought I did that, actually all of them 100%.

To summarize what I am currently feeling: whatever dood.

@El Machinae - AFAIKT Sidhe was put off by my correcting his understanding of QM and decided to go for a personal attack.


Precisely mate you expect everyone to know what it is your rattling on about without using refernces, it is not your and a few sycophants forum, you have to link to your ideas, you have to explain them and for a start. Saying the concepts of Qm I've stated are all wrong without arguing why is tenuous. YOu seem to think that if you say something it needs no meat on the bones and that everyone understands your vagueries, we don't and cart is right you are not arguing soundly philosophicaly. YOur not even referencing anything. atm your saying I am right and you are wrong. Dude your not making your case any stronger:lol:

Now kindly do me the decency of adressing your threads and opinions with some substance and I'll kindly do you the decency of not attacking you. It wasn't that I was wrong on one point(and anyway it doesn't destroy the argument of free will and it never did) it was that you weren't justifying any of yours and havent been for about 23 pages.

So a see of QM particles popping into and out of existence will have no effect on a system, ok I think you'll find there are a few physisists that beg to differ?
 
Saying the concepts of Qm I've stated are all wrong without arguing why is tenuous.
Sorry I don't have time to take you through a graduate level course in QM. I did reference the copenhagen interpretation of QM as well as the instrumental one, check them out for yourself. Neither has anything to do with free will, determinism perhaps but not will.

Also, you have refused to answer even simple questions about how you link QM to free will. Look at the questions I pose above, you are making the positive statement, you defend it. I feel that I have done that for my positive statements. If you disagree please ask specific questions, that's what a debate is about.
 
OK we'll have to agree to disagree untill I've studied more fair enough. You still have to substantiate your other arguments on this thread so far you've been skirting with the vague, if you want to get hung up on my points so be it(but they are only a minor part,and an extremely minor one at that)

The fact remains that when you make a point we want to see some meat OK. That was the most important point, I'm sorry if you missed it, but we demand some logic not some tenuous ideas? We can continue now just bear in mind we are expecting the discussion to be well thought out and any mentions to previous threads to be linked so we can see your argument: this is good practice; science should have links to support your claims; philosophy should be discussed and reasoned on to maintain your case. A few quotes and why they apply to your argument would be nice, or just quote the text directly a la Cart and then make a point.

Also if you link a thread, discuss it and say why it supports your case. Unless you bring forward the link to further discussion(not to make any sort of point) We're not asking for evidence, just logic will do. failing that an opinion with some points of merit. Failing that at least make mention that what you are thinking is a tenuous idea and you would ask for anyone to support it if they could.

Thank you for listening:)

a la Cart:lol: a double entendre and a good one:)

If I went overboard at times I apologise, but constructive criticism is not a personal attack.
 
Gothmog said:
@CartesianFart
Heh, you see no discipline in me.
Not entirely,you sometime make statements that is somewhat piecemeal and then totally start writing about your psychology.Which course are you teaching us.Biology or Psychology?Or is it something i am forgeting here?:confused:
Gothmog said:
You don't know me.
What does this have to do with this discussion.Did i struck a nerve? I was being sardonic.If i overstepped any emotional shell that you are carrying,then i am sorry about that.I am only asking questions because i see alot of incoherence statements after statements.It is a muddle of as puzzle i am trying to figure out.Maybe by my questions,i can deliver you a somewhat a better tool brush so in order for you to construct a better painting of words that can help you to be more precise,i find a great good deal stuff out of you that is could be potentially great.I find it incomplete but interesting.If i wasn't interested,than i wouldn't wast my time with you.:)

Gothmog said:
I guess you missed it again, but I am saying that our biological lineage is mostly represented here on earth. If trying to understand the basics of our brain, I would start with unicellular bacteria and work my way up from there. Indeed, that is what I've done.
Nice propositional statements that even child can understand.But when you say unicellular bacteria and the brain.What semblance between these two things have to do with biological lineage?

Gothmog said:
The posts I linked to contain additional posts writen by me on this topic. So I don't have to type them out again. They could give you additional insight into what I believe, and why, and where I accept uncertainty.
If you accept the principle of uncertainty.Then how do you know anything to be certain about?Does that make you incredulous on everything that you say?

Gothmog said:
Disagreeing is fine, but personal attacks are not.
What did i do now,i wasn't intending to be personal.:confused:
Gothmog said:
Please point out even one time that I refered to other posters to support my argument.
Right down here when you mentioned El Machinae

Gothmog said:
@El Machinae - AFAIKT Sidhe was put off by my correcting his understanding of QM and decided to go for a personal attack.
I guess you were right,you are going senile.:mischief:

And last thing first.I ask some questions that you seem to be evading.Please do not get emotional with this.Post #435

a.How can you make a misrepresentation when the method of any given theory be inferred of making someone have a misunderstanding on what verification can be included?
b.Why is this a confusion when i am confused that you are saying that when people disagree and have not explain really why the disagreement is already settled?

We all can make statements of the personal account of what we've experience.I can give you that.But you are not telling any physicalist insight on what is your overall viewpoint on what is your physical nature.Isn't the concept of physical nature is a objective concept that have a particular law or is this physical nature of yours only your own subjective experience?
 
Birdjaguar said:
The only explanation for your post (that would leave you with any dignity) is that you are new to OT. All of us who have engaged Gothmog in discussion know him to be one of the most thoughtful, knowledgeable and provocative scientists who post here.... Gothmog has the experience to add real depth to his thinking. You are squandering an opportunity to have a fascinating conversation and, instead, resorting to pointless rudeness. You would be better to ask intellignet questions and make inquiry about his responses. Your post is...dead wrong. And if you think that you are entitled to such an opinion, you are, but it is still wrong.

CartesianFart said:
I am starting to think this is not a persuit of the truth,but more like a childish political game with people teaming up with one another to give more weight and leverage over one to another.
Well, if you actually read my post, you'll see that I never agreed with any postion taken by Gothmog, nor did support any of his previous posts. I did point out rudeness on the part of Sidhe and said that posting in that way was misusing an opportunity to engage a very smart and thoughtful person in a discussion. There was no ganging up or factional behavior against some imagined "other side". I would not let a RL friend stand alone and be trashed, why should I act differently here? Do you feel I tarred you unecessarily with the same brush I used with Sidhe?
 
I'm answering this one first because it's troubling:
Cartesian Fart said:
I see alot of Cg and Gothmog making other references of other fellow posters in the OT.This is surely a demostration of politics.A person who follows true philosophy does not need support(making statements of other OT posters) to give more weight on arguments.Why can't you guys make a argument without referring someone else on your side.No individual persuit of truth in here.All it consist is to make alliances and deny other single point of views.
I don't recall doing this at all in this thread. Simply put, I can't even name anyone else in the whole forum who's "on my side" - there are some (a small minority) of religious posters who share my views, but none have shown up in this thread or expressed similar views on this specific topic. I'd even bet that some of them would disagree me on some of what I say.

Now, please, I'd rather not get dragged in to what appears to be an ugly conflict.

-------

Anyway, getting on with the actual discussion...
Ayatollah So said:
Let's focus on "the hard problem" by substituting "pain" or "the subjective smell of a rose" for "consciousness". I don't think materialism can explain why these qualia, rather than others or none, arise at the particular point where they do. But it can explain why it can't explain that. In fact, the inability to look at a brain and say "aha, it's completely transparent that such neural activity is painful," is exactly what you would expect if materialism is true.

A few generalities about neurology first. There are many overlapping neural groupings in the brain, where activity in some of the neurons in that grouping tends to activate others in that grouping, more than in the brain at large. Stimulating some of these groupings leads to particular sensations and stimulating others leads to other sensations, or memories or feelings or ... . Asking a subject to remember the smell of a rose, or a pain, often (always?) leads to activity in some (not all) of the same neural groupings that activate when actually smelling a rose, or feeling pain. And, if you pick two sensations, or a sensation and a concept, at random, the odds of those two things picking out highly similar neural groupings at a detailed level, are small.

According to the materialist thesis, roughly speaking, the subjective experience of rose smell IS activity of certain types of neurons in certain parts of the brain. And, remembering or contemplating that experience is also activity of neurons, partly overlapping with those same activities of neurons involved in the smelling of an actual rose.

Now contrast the understanding of the neurology of a particular brain area. On the materialist thesis, this understanding also involves activities (or maybe just the ready potential for activities) of parts of the brain, but probably very different parts. Looking at an MRI of brain activity activates very different neurons than does remembering the smell of a rose, even if the brain being MRI'd is involved in smelling a rose, or remembering. Therefore, of course you don't make the intuitive connection between what you see on the MRI and the subjective smell of a rose. Why should anyone expect that looking at this brain activity magically causes you to undergo this activity? That is exactly what would have to happen in order to have an intuitively satisfying grasp of why this particular brain activity leads to that particular sensation.
Not at all. To have a satisifying grasp of why neural activity leads to sensation would not be acheived by this fantastical idea of feeling that sensation by looking at it on a picture. If such a thing were possible (which you seem to understand it is not) that would bring us no closer to understanding why electrical happenings in the brain lead to sensation.
OK, but then on this reading of "controlled" it's not true that

Genes exist on the T-level. And if we ask, where is "you" in all this, there you are, very prominent on the T-level, doing lots of controlling.
I brought up genes as nothing more than an example of how I was using the word 'controlled'. I don't see why you related it to the actual discussion at hand.
WillJ said:
Maybe I'll concede that my idea of free will isn't the same thing as most people's idea, but I still maintain that my idea is what makes free will a good thing.
Of course, and I allow you to do that. I just disagree. ;)
You are free to do something if you could do it if you wanted to. (And you are free to not do something if you could refrain from doing it, if you so wished.)
This statement sounds very agreeable. The problem with this, is that, when speaking about free will internally - I've referred to your definition as a "political" one for this reason: it matters only with external forces, like guns and jails - your definition is a bit fatuous. Disregarding external factors, I am always "free" to do what I want. Hooray! But what I want is just as much of an external factor, according to materialism, as a pair of handcuffs. You may say that what you want is determined by 'you', but when you use the word 'you' in this case you include something which isn't usually included in normal thinking: genes, stimuli, the laws of physics. Simply put, your desires are entirely imposed on you. You are always overcome by desire, all the time. (I intentionally use a phrase here that is often used in real life, because we use it sparingly in real life - but, according to materialism, we should use it all the damn time.) So, this definition of free will is internally (I have to use that word, even though I think the difference between external and internal is unclear) always consistent, but only because it sets up the parameters to easily.

To relate this to a point I made a long while ago in this thread: According to materialism (in my opinion at least), the difference between myself and the rest of the universe is nonexistent, or at least unclear. And, according to materialism, your definition of free will is successful because it includes factors which appear internal, but are just as external as anything else. My genes are just as imposed on me as any chains, and I am locked inside of my electrically-controlled impulses just as much as I am a jail cell. The difference is that one set is inside my body, so I call it "me" - but it's just as far from my control as everything else in the universe.
What's the difference?
When a program generates a random string of numbers, you wouldn't say that the program chose 3, and then 7, and then 2, and then 5, etc. Those are uncaused by any sense or design, and unpredictable. But, when you say that a person's actions are "random," they are obviously unpredictable, but they are still (according to the theory of the soul) still controlled by design.
Edit: I'm assuming that by "unpredictable," you mean even with infinite knowledge. Just being unpredictable to us humans obviously doesn't imply randomness, as the weather and the economy repeatedly tell us.
This is opening up a can of worms we can't deal with now. One assault on free will at a time, please!
Seems to me like you're saying that your will causes itself, which doesn't make any sense. It's simply randomness, plain and simple.
Not that the will causes itself, but that the will causes its decisions.
You're right, materialist thinkers don't know of a first cause. But I don't see how your idea of free will invokes God as a first cause. Whatever the case, that's all beside the point.
I'm sorry for the confusion, let me explain. Considering just the subset of one individual, the chain of causes stops with the individual. But with materialism, it stretches beyond it, to the beginning of the universe, and we're left with the old problem of materialism not proposing any first cause, or any alternative explanation. (How the individual "first cause" relates to God as the real first cause is a difficult question, but as I said earlier, a different one.)
All that I ask for is that my actions are a result of me reacting to the outside world, hopefully making somewhat rational decisions.
But they're not the result of you at all! Unless you include things which are just as "outside" as the outside world is...
We still bear responsibility for our actions. We still make our decisions. Like I said earlier, the atoms in your brain might be making your decisions, but that's just because they make you. And when they (you) make bad decisions, we reserve the right to punish you.
But that sounds so unfair! How can you put a person into solitary confinement for decades, how can you impose that brutal punishment on their consciousness - for it is indeed the consciousness that suffers - when it is wholly out of their control! The person had only the illusion of control when they committed the crime, and in return they are given the all-too-real suffering.
With my idea of free will, this is the case. With yours, it is also the case, although you then go on to add your soul-like will, which adds nothing to the equation (besides randomness).
No, it explains the very strongly-felt impression of control.
Gothmog said:
I would call that something of a revelation.

I would be interested for you to follow up on that last part.
How IYO does the free will theory answer the question of the First Cause?
It's a bit hard, because once you probe this question you see it's (another) age-old religious problem.

My point about the first cause, which I clarified to WillJ, is that the individual will is the "first cause" of its small, self-contained system, and God the true First Cause of the entire universe. Whereas with materialism, the distinction between the universe and the individual is nonexistent, and we must deal with the very real problem of the lack of a first cause immediately. Obviously, one might consider there to be a conflict between these two. Still, I don't think that religious problem is unsolvable, and so I don't think we should rule out this idea as contradictory too hastily. (In terminology I recently learned, I'd rather not "push" into this problem, for I'm afraid it will take us far too long to "pop" back out.)
 
Hey cgannon.I didn't make that 2nd quote.And yes, you are right about that you didn't use other posters as a leverage.I actually went back and found out not a single one of your post referring to other posters.Sorry dude.
 
No problem. And sorry about the quote, I corrected it. (For some reason you and Ayatollah So are very closely linked in my mind. I think you're both filed next to each other under "philosophically-minded posters.")
 
Birdjaguar said:
Well, if you actually read my post, you'll see that I never agreed with any postion taken by Gothmog, nor did support any of his previous posts. I did point out rudeness on the part of Sidhe and said that posting in that way was misusing an opportunity to engage a very smart and thoughtful person in a discussion. There was no ganging up or factional behavior against some imagined "other side". I would not let a RL friend stand alone and be trashed, why should I act differently here? Do you feel I tarred you unecessarily with the same brush I used with Sidhe?

And that's why I disagreed, he has demonstrated neither being smart or thoughtful in this thread, OK if you tell me he is then I'll reserve judgement. All I was pointing out was your bias. Analyse his posts, don't refer to past history, thanks(have no idea what you're talking about unless you link it). OK in past history he has made good arguments atm I see no evidence of it? Got it? You see my position? I judge you on defending him on what I See of him on this thread. And that's all I see. As for CG I never meant any of my comments to be a criticism of him, I was talking more about PunkBass.

As I said before, Gothmog is making little impact on this thread, if he usually does then he needs to rethink his strategy. Only point I was making.
 
Sidhe said:
Bir Jaguar when we want your opinion we'll ask Gothmog to give it to you.:lol:
There's nothing more I can say,
Sidhe's wit has now won the day;
Your post, a barbed and sharpened stick
Has pierced me through right to the quick
With your forty posts every day,
Who can doubt what you say;
I must be wrong and you be right
Just by the force of your posting might
And not by your wisdom, or great insight. :p

EDIT: Xpost with Sidhe above. ;)
 
Erm, I refer the honourable gentleman to the answer I gave some moments ago.
 
Sidhe said:
Erm, I refer the honourable gentleman to the answer I gave some moments ago.
Point noted, hence my edit above. Shall we move on?
 
CartesianFart said:
Maybe this insight by Thomas Nagel can sum up of what i was trying to convey this sickness:
we either get a reappearance of separate subjective events as the effects through which mental reference to physical events is secured

Nagel is just making the mistake which I corrected in post #410 :p

That is, he assumes that a separate conception of subjective events implies that the events themselves are separate.
 
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