Fear of death.

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recent science has, i think, definitively disrupted if not disproved dualist theories of mind.

given that recent science hasn't made one iota of progress in explaining subjective awareness i don't see how this can be possible. even if science made a walking talking turing test passing robot out of matchsticks tomorrow, it wouldn't disprove dualism. not that i'm a dualist, technically, as the link i posted upthread says dualism and materialism are both mistaken in supposing that science tells us matter is intrinsically non-phenomenal. in fact science says nothing whatsoever about the essential intrinsic nature of matter. whatever on earth that could be.

fwiw i don't think there is awareness after death, probably. but any fear of death i have stems from that uncertainty, not from the thought of my non-existence.

ledge, Friday, 13 July 2012 08:51 (eleven years ago) link

if there's one life has taught me it's that the world is like transformers: more than meets the eye

the late great, Friday, 13 July 2012 09:26 (eleven years ago) link

I'm an atheist and I pretty much bailed when it got to "maybe rocks have souls" because I mean yeesh.

things in physics don't die

Maybe we can get caek in here to talk about supernovae.

Marco YOLO (Phil D.), Friday, 13 July 2012 09:40 (eleven years ago) link

Yeah I initially thought I was being trolled at that point.

Evan, Friday, 13 July 2012 12:55 (eleven years ago) link

idk I'm an atheist but I'm down with some vague potsmoker animism

Team Safeword (Abbbottt), Friday, 13 July 2012 14:38 (eleven years ago) link

down with: William Blake, potsmoker animism, not trying to figure out the mystery of death because I am p sure it's impossible and trying just stresses me out, a lot, this was seriously a life-enriching decision for me

Team Safeword (Abbbottt), Friday, 13 July 2012 14:39 (eleven years ago) link

which is why my contributions to this thread have been singularly unhelpful

Team Safeword (Abbbottt), Friday, 13 July 2012 14:39 (eleven years ago) link

i know i should stop trying to figure out the mystery of life aka consciousness for similar reasons but it keeps on dragging me back.

ledge, Friday, 13 July 2012 15:10 (eleven years ago) link

despite certain spiritual proclivities, i'm an atheist at heart. the reality of the material properties that science measures seems much more undeniably real to me than the magic we conjure by means of applied belief, though the line between the two is sometimes vague.

i would like to see some conversation between the "great headway" amateurist describes contemporary neuroscience as having made and ledge's "recent science hasn't made one iota of progress in explaining subjective awareness".

contenderizer, Friday, 13 July 2012 15:16 (eleven years ago) link

There is belief in science too, a whole LOT of belief.

Emperor Cos Dashit (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 13 July 2012 15:18 (eleven years ago) link

i'm not sure what progress science is supposed to make on a question no one seems to be able to define, but re: consciousness, there's plenty of high and low-tech studies that have helped reveal as horseshit a lot of culturally ingrained ideas about the nature of consciousness. (most of these involve people with severe brain damage or railroad spikes shot through their brains so I dunno if we want to go about haphazardly cutting out bits of brains without a more concrete question in mind)

Philip Nunez, Friday, 13 July 2012 15:26 (eleven years ago) link

xp Not a belief, it's concentrated in stuff like determinism.

Andrew Farrell, Friday, 13 July 2012 15:29 (eleven years ago) link

sorry, not a lot of belief, there.

Andrew Farrell, Friday, 13 July 2012 15:29 (eleven years ago) link

I just came across this article by Strawson quite by chance, in which he argues, honestly and somewhat wittily, for *real* physicalism, whereby the physical phenomena are sufficient to explain experiential phenomena. Of course any regular physicalist will claim they can do that, but the usual strategy is either to dispense with the experiential entirely (e.g. Dennett) or to lean heavily on the notion of emergence. He dispenses with both of those (of course the first is barely worth considering), and concludes that in order to be a *real* physicalist one has to realise that the basic stuff of physics must have experiential properties. This is, he admits, panpsychism by another name. It's the clearest statement I've read yet of the position I've been groping towards myself.

http://faculty.unlv.edu/beiseckd/Courses/PHIL-352/Dave%20-%20Consciousness%20PDFs/Strawson%20-%20Realistic%20Monism%20and%20Replies/Strawson%20-%20Realistic%20Monism%20Why%20Physicalism%20Entails%20Panpsychism.pdf

ledge, Friday, 13 July 2012 16:03 (eleven years ago) link

There is belief in science too, a whole LOT of belief.

well, there's belief in everything. science, afaic, is a method, a process, a tool. i believe (ahem) that the scientific method, carefully applied, is a self-validating tool - i believe that it proves its own utility.

at a sufficient level of remove, this belief is, of course, like all beliefs, "just a belief". but that godlike level of remove encourages parallel fatuities like "anything is possible" and "nothing really means anything," so it's best to spend as little time there as possible. in the pragmatic here and now, there are obvious differences between the slow search for information via the scientific method and the willy-nilly manufacturing of capital-T Truth by other means.

contenderizer, Friday, 13 July 2012 16:12 (eleven years ago) link

The only point on consciousness I find particularly interesting in this context is that spiritual believers seem to resist that it is a product of the mind, and isn't produced when the mind is inactive. Any uncertainty of how consciousness works is at least framed within that basic concept.

Evan, Friday, 13 July 2012 16:18 (eleven years ago) link

Like if you thought of a store as a brain, and it was constantly adjusting prices, moving around inventory, restocking areas, cleaning, bustling employees that make store related actions, and then assumed once that store was out of business that all of that specific store's inner functions kept happening for eternity afterwards or just without purpose, why would you think that?

Evan, Friday, 13 July 2012 16:26 (eleven years ago) link

You may have no understanding of the inner functions, but you frame it all with the idea that they stop when the store stops.

Evan, Friday, 13 July 2012 16:27 (eleven years ago) link

The scientific method is a self-validating tool because it never arrives at an exact answer, things can always been changed, new paradigm shifts can occur, old beliefs can be tossed out in favor of new and more accurate results. Science deals with approximations that change over time, so there is no risk ever in being proven wrong. Because proving things wrong is part of the process! There is often no capital-T truth for all time declared.

People don't give religion this leeway. They say it is wrong because it should be the capital-T truth and the flaws in doctrine are all examples why the whole thing is irrelevant. But how else are you supposed to explore the indescribable but through approximation and metaphor?

Emperor Cos Dashit (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 13 July 2012 16:32 (eleven years ago) link

No when the store stops they all get new jobs at different stores.

Emperor Cos Dashit (Adam Bruneau), Friday, 13 July 2012 16:33 (eleven years ago) link

i would like to see some conversation between the "great headway" amateurist describes contemporary neuroscience as having made and ledge's "recent science hasn't made one iota of progress in explaining subjective awareness

I think we're just talking about different things. Amateurist is (correct me if I'm wrong) talking about the neural correlates of consciousness, what goes on in the brain when we are aware and experiencing. And sure great strides have been made there, although there's still a long way to go. But exactly how awareness, private personal subjective experiential awareness, arises out of all that, well that's still as great a mystery as it ever was.

ledge, Friday, 13 July 2012 16:40 (eleven years ago) link

i'm probably being thick here, but i don't understand why people consider consciousness to be such a terrible "problem". we are aware as certain other forms of life seem to be aware. while we don't understand the origin point of this kind of awareness in the evolution of cognitive capacity (the means by which a biological input-output mechanism might acquire consciousness), it does seem likely that our awareness is the product of cognitive complexity. the limitations of our knowledge here parallel our inability to fully understand and/or replicate the point at which the components of an electrochemical soup might acquire the quality of self-sustaining life. despite this, i think we can say with some confidence that life exists in the material world and that it did emerge from non-life. similarly, despite the fact that we can't fully define or describe consciousness, it seems to me that we have every reason to think that it is a material process residing in the material world, like life and like everything else.

contenderizer, Friday, 13 July 2012 16:44 (eleven years ago) link

Adam: The employees in the store are only relevant in the analogy in regard to their inner store functions. Plus, all of those functions in the store attribute to the consciousness, so it can only be maintained when the parts are together.

Evan, Friday, 13 July 2012 16:45 (eleven years ago) link

[to my own xp]

^ not that any of this is certain, mind. it's simply the most reasonable default position, given what we seem to know.

contenderizer, Friday, 13 July 2012 16:47 (eleven years ago) link

No when the store stops they all get new jobs at different stores.

― Emperor Cos Dashit (Adam Bruneau), Friday, July 13, 2012 12:33 PM (12 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

And the only real way you could link this to the analogy is if you say the energy within a living brain is separately redistributed back into the universe.

Evan, Friday, 13 July 2012 16:50 (eleven years ago) link

The scientific method is a self-validating tool because it never arrives at an exact answer, things can always been changed, new paradigm shifts can occur, old beliefs can be tossed out in favor of new and more accurate results. Science deals with approximations that change over time, so there is no risk ever in being proven wrong. Because proving things wrong is part of the process! There is often no capital-T truth for all time declared.

People don't give religion this leeway. They say it is wrong because it should be the capital-T truth and the flaws in doctrine are all examples why the whole thing is irrelevant. But how else are you supposed to explore the indescribable but through approximation and metaphor?

― Emperor Cos Dashit (Adam Bruneau), Friday, July 13, 2012 9:32 AM (14 minutes ago)

sure, i accept that. i wasn't faulting religion, simply making the case that science is a method of investigation more than a body of doctrine, though it's grounded in certain precepts. i meant to oppose a nihilism that equates all forms of belief with one another.

contenderizer, Friday, 13 July 2012 16:52 (eleven years ago) link

contenderizer you've been brilliantly eloquent this whole time.

Evan, Friday, 13 July 2012 16:52 (eleven years ago) link

i think we can say with some confidence that life exists in the material world and that it did emerge from non-life. similarly, despite the fact that we can't fully define or describe consciousness, it seems to me that we have every reason to think that it is a material process residing in the material world, like life and like everything else

but conscious experience is utterly unlike anything else in the natural world! It is a completely different kind. One can see how life can emerge from or be reducible to purely physical properties, assuming the usual definitions of growth, reproduction, adaptation, stimuli response, etc. I'm genuinely flabbergasted that anyone can blithely say the same of consciousness. How does experience reduce to physical properties?

ledge, Friday, 13 July 2012 16:55 (eleven years ago) link

what are you talking about when you say conscious experience? You can obliterate parts of experience that people used to think were indivisible by slicing the brain in half.

Philip Nunez, Friday, 13 July 2012 17:15 (eleven years ago) link

People don't give religion this leeway. They say it is wrong because it should be the capital-T truth and the flaws in doctrine are all examples why the whole thing is irrelevant.

I . . . think many religions claim for themselves to be the capital-T Truth?

Marco YOLO (Phil D.), Friday, 13 July 2012 17:18 (eleven years ago) link

xp I'm talking about subjective, phenomenal, personal, private, aware experience. Need I say any more? We all know what conscious experience *is like*, even if we can't necessarily describe it or deconstruct it into more amenable components. I wouldn't know what a split-brain patient feels without becoming one myself - and there's the problem! Of what purely physical object or process would you ever say "I couldn't possibly know what that is without becoming it myself"?

ledge, Friday, 13 July 2012 17:23 (eleven years ago) link

i know what a linguistically modulated experience is like. other than that it's just a stream of incoherence that i can't say is privileged over whatever I'd imagine an ant experiences. (or even a rock)

Philip Nunez, Friday, 13 July 2012 17:31 (eleven years ago) link

(in fact this is what is disturbing about the reports from split-brain patients -- that so much of what we would like to think of as an integral, coherent consciousness is mostly autonomic muck)

Philip Nunez, Friday, 13 July 2012 17:33 (eleven years ago) link

but conscious experience is utterly unlike anything else in the natural world! It is a completely different kind.

i'm not sure that this is true. to the conscious mind, consciousness seems special, but this seeming is not necessarily proof of anything but how things seem. or rather that things seem. i think it's likely that awareness of the sort we experience is not something that simply IS or IS-NOT, but rather is something that accretes gradually as certain types of intelligence develop or evolve. i wonder how large a role self-awareness plays in the development of consciousness - not merely to know things, but to know what one knows and how one came to know it, to know not only the world, but oneself in it. it doesn't seem unreasonable to think that something like conscious self-awareness might develop in bits and pieces out of such knowings, out of recursive layers of self-knowledge.

i guess we have to ask at this point whether "awareness" is anything but a kind of information processing. it might be, but i don't see any compelling reason to suppose so. its quality of "seeming" seems unique and possibly non-physical to us, but i expect that this kind of awareness is really just information processing. in fact, the insistence that consciousness must be a thing of a super-special sort strikes me as odd.

contenderizer, Friday, 13 July 2012 17:40 (eleven years ago) link

i guess i mean that a mechanism (biological or otherwise) that experiences the first faint, super-primitive glimmerings of conscious awareness does not necessarily contain any special kind of energy or matter that a similar but non-conscious machine would lack.

the presence of awareness does not require the introduction of a new "stuff of awareness" or "energy of awareness" into the system. rather, "awareness" is simply a way of describing a particular arrangement of what's already there.

contenderizer, Friday, 13 July 2012 17:50 (eleven years ago) link

xp

Adult human consciousness is super-special only in terms of its extreme complexity. The obvious difference between adult human consciousness and infant consciousness suggests the degree to which what we experience within our conscious mind is extremely contingent on post-natal experience and cannot in any way be separated from it. This grounds consciousness decisively in the material world, imo. It can seem to emerge somehow out of the nebulous mists of selfhood because of all we forget and all we ignore.

Aimless, Friday, 13 July 2012 17:57 (eleven years ago) link

I have no problem with a gradual accretion of awareness, but there has to be stuff to accrete and I just don't see how matter (as we normally consider it) can be that stuff, for me the conceptual gap between the physical and the mental is just too great. They are just different logical kinds. That you don't share that view, well I guess nothing remains but to gaze uncomprehendingly through the glass at each other. xp.

ledge, Friday, 13 July 2012 18:02 (eleven years ago) link

we get into trouble, i think, when we treat our own, fantastically complex and multilayered adult awareness as the default example of what "awareness" is. this is like treating a jet fighter as the default example of "mode of transportation". how could such a thing just come to exist? what precedent for it is there elsewhere in the natural world? neither thing just came to exist. both are the product of millennia of development and refinement. both echo ancestors so primitive we could hardly recognize the one in the other.

and aimless otm. even in humans, conscious awareness seems to develop more than simply exist. though, of course, it's impossible to say for certain...

contenderizer, Friday, 13 July 2012 18:04 (eleven years ago) link

I don't think that is the problem! No serious student of philosophy of mind would assume human consciousness just winked into existence.

ledge, Friday, 13 July 2012 18:08 (eleven years ago) link

I have no problem with a gradual accretion of awareness, but there has to be stuff to accrete and I just don't see how matter (as we normally consider it) can be that stuff, for me the conceptual gap between the physical and the mental is just too great.

i view the stuff in question as information, or rather as information-processing systems/patterns/whatever. information isn't really "matter" per se, but it is encoded materially, and it's in the action and interaction of the material involved that the processing takes place.

contenderizer, Friday, 13 July 2012 18:11 (eleven years ago) link

And I agree that consciousness is "grounded" in the brain, I don't subscribe to free-floating mental phenomena. But mental events are not identical with or reducible to physical ones, and calling them emergent doesn't get you any further. But I'm just repeating myself now.

xp, that seems to be begging the question, or putting the cart before the horse, or something. To call something 'information' assumes a thinking, aware subject, not vice versa.

ledge, Friday, 13 July 2012 18:13 (eleven years ago) link

I don't think that is the problem! No serious student of philosophy of mind would assume human consciousness just winked into existence.

i wonder. when reduced to its minimal essence, what is awareness? what is the least thing that might qualify? could awareness lack a sense of self, a sense even of will? probably. could it lack language, emotion and memory? perhaps. since we can't really know any awareness but our own, we can only speculate about other sorts. it's possible that plants and even computers are aware in ways we can't perceive. and it doesn't require that we bring any new stuff to our existing conceptions of these things. at least not so far as i can see. to process is to be at least theoretically capable of awareness.

contenderizer, Friday, 13 July 2012 18:18 (eleven years ago) link

To call something 'information' assumes a thinking, aware subject, not vice versa.

A sunflower can respond to sunlight by turning toward the sun. The sunlight provides the plant with the information about which direction to turn. I presume you accept this as proof that sunflowers are both thinking and aware. It makes reasonable sense to me to extend these definitions to cover this case, but I am not sure this is how you meant it.

Aimless, Friday, 13 July 2012 18:23 (eleven years ago) link

To call something 'information' assumes a thinking, aware subject, not vice versa.

i am not sure that this is true. imagine a simple organism that can sense light and move towards it through a fluid medium. it's constructed to remain in the warmer, oxygen and life-rich top layers of the ocean. though it is not "aware" in any conscious sense (i invented it, so i get to decide), it is able to gather information about its environment and respond accordingly. the information it gathers is pretty much limited to "where's the light at", but that's sufficient for its purposes.

in that creature is a switchboard that coordinates light-sensing and the actions by which it moves in the direction of the light it's sensed. this switchboard isn't really a "brain" yet, and doesn't need to think or feel. it just does a certain thing under a certain condition, on or off. over time, as the creature evolves and becomes more complex, it acquires new senses and new behavior routines that are triggered under this or that condition. it takes in and processes a lot more information about its surroundings, but still doesn't need or have awareness ... up to a point.

at some point maybe it does begin to become aware, but this is long after it has begun to process information (evolutionarily speaking).

contenderizer, Friday, 13 July 2012 18:28 (eleven years ago) link

I disagree, I think that to call it information - light = 'good', dark = 'bad', say - and not just mechanical stimulus response, requires a kind of awareness, a capacity to ascribe meaning, albeit at the simplest possible level imaginable. And yes I would be happy to ascribe that kind of awareness to that creature.

ledge, Friday, 13 July 2012 18:31 (eleven years ago) link

Ultimately information requires a conscious observer to ascribe meaning, otherwise it's all just mechanical patterns of dancing particles. Saying that your proto creature is not aware just pushes the problem higher up the chain - the problem of where this magical meaning-ascribing entity comes from.

ledge, Friday, 13 July 2012 18:36 (eleven years ago) link

if this amoeba can negotiate a maze to get to food, i'd say it was aware in a minimal but meaningful sense. it had to have constructed an internal mental model of the maze. (i.e. not just stimulus response)

Philip Nunez, Friday, 13 July 2012 18:40 (eleven years ago) link

well, we could say that the creature is or isn't "aware" in a conscious sense. you seem to be sticking the smallest unit of awareness to a primitive emotion or desire ("light = 'good', dark = 'bad', say"), which seems reasonable, if not the only reasonable way we might break it down.

my point was that viewed from outside, the creature is gathering "information" about its environment whether or not it is aware. i do not think that information gathering of this sort requires awareness. it only requires an environment, a mechanism by which some aspect of that environment can be measured, a biological "goal", and a responsive action that is environment-dependent and seeks to satisfy the goal. whether or not the creature is aware, its relationship to its environment and its biological goal remains the same, so i think it's appropriate to use the phrase "information gathering" in either case.

i guess i'm using a three-tiered system to talk about cognition: non-congnition, non-conscious information processing, and conscious information processing. rocks seem to be non-cognitive, simple organisms and computers seem to be non-conscious information processing systems (though we can't say for sure what is or isn't conscious in some way), and complex organisms process information in a conscious fashion. you're using a two-tiered system in which there's no cognition and conscious cognition, and information only belongs to the latter.

contenderizer, Friday, 13 July 2012 18:47 (eleven years ago) link

The intermediate step toward more complex consciousness is the development of a memory mechanism. That's where computers reside.

Aimless, Friday, 13 July 2012 18:50 (eleven years ago) link

i'd argue that's the final step.

Philip Nunez, Friday, 13 July 2012 18:55 (eleven years ago) link


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