MRC_Hans
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2002
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So answer it
(The observing self)
It is a function of the brain.
Hans
So answer it
Solipsism says Everything is You.
Materialism says There Isn't a You.
If your mind accepts a selfless reality, either as the logical extension of materialism, or as the result of subjective analysis, then it will change.
What's your position? If you could push a button and be painlessly dematerialized, and an identical copy in that moment created, would you be OK with it? Do you accept that if nothing material is lost then nothing is lost?
Entity? No one's saying the body, or the brain, doesn't exist.
As I said to you before, Myriad, it's red pill, blue pill. You have to look for yourself for this one.
If your mind accepts a selfless reality, either as the logical extension of materialism, or as the result of subjective analysis, then it will change. The core program that it's been running from early childhood, running for so long it's unaware that it's just a program, is realized for what it is. It can still run the program, play the game. There's not a problem there. But a deeper awareness is present also.
What's your position? If you could push a button and be painlessly dematerialized, and an identical copy in that moment created, would you be OK with it?
Do you accept that if nothing material is lost then nothing is lost?
Of course, but you have to be careful with phrasings and definitions here because it's easily misinterpreted.
Your argument basically boils down to...something you call 'you'...somehow (you don't explain how) has the capacity to understand that something called 'you' does not exist.
Leaving aside the obvious absurdity of such an observation...what is it that exists if 'you' do not?
Knowing who you actually are.
As opposed to going through life merely responding to the cues of what is, essentially, a parasitic memeplex.
Red pill... Blue pill ?
Still not essential or a devastator of the scientific methodNo, I agree. It does it anyway.
But this actually has little to do with what I'm saying here, which is... you can become aware of the process which is making it seem like there's someone writing this, someone observing this, someone experiencing this... and that awareness changes things.
Strict materialism is one way to deduce that we must exist in a selfless reality, however ridiculous such a proposition might, on the surface, sound.
But, as Parfit's Transporter demonstrates, there are actually precious few strict materialists around. Materialism is a philosophy which has a lot of "fair-weather friends!"
So, subjective observation is a useful back-up
Sure, let's say that under materialism my sense of self is a simulation run by a brain. A meta-object, not physically there and perhaps not even completely reducible to the neurological activity from which it emanates. An artefact of observation, like a rainbow.
How does that remove the "Observer" from the observation?
(The observing self)
It is a function of the brain.
Hans
The Matrix philosophy leads only to... The Matrix sequels. (See the bottom row of the same xkcd strip.) No place worth going to.
After all your talk of parasitic memes, you're trying to spread some "deeper awareness" meme. Why?
It doesn't matter whether I'm okay with it or not, and there's no need to push a button. It's what happens every moment of every day. Where is the me who was here a few seconds ago writing that previous paragraph? I don't see any sign of him, do you? Gone, gone, gone, and only those words and this imperfect copy (perhaps better, perhaps worse) to carry on.
Of course, but you have to be careful with phrasings and definitions here because it's easily misinterpreted. People will say that you can burn a painting or kill a person and claim "nothing material is lost," because all the atoms still exist. That's fallacious. Patterns, narratives, processes, organisms; the meaning of the words on the page and not just the ink; are also material.
This sounds like Pascal's Wager.Will you push the button or not? Do you believe there is something that is lost when you push?
Yes. Care to home in a little, get a bit more specific?
Ehr, it is your worldview that is under discussion here, not mine.
Totally agree. Monica Belluci arguably aside.
I used the phrase to indicate that this place you have to see for yourself, you can't model it.
Do you want to know reality? Or do you want continue believing there really is someone observing?
So, you are OK with pushing the button... or not?
Spoken like a true skeptic.
Apologies. Didn't realise it would upset you.
It's valid but not necessary. And much confusion arises when the brain starts to believe it's real. I'm not suggesting that we replace it with the third person, or some similar device. I'm saying it's important to appreciate the limitations of the device.
I'm saying it's usually not useful to start a theory from an axiom which can be falsified. Of course there are situations where it's valid, but imo consciousness research is not one of them. There's enough confusion as it is. And if you should believe that this is still a valid approach here, then at least the author of the paper should explain why he or she is saying "let x equal y" or whatever somewhere in his introduction.
... not "inconsistent use of language," rather language having developed for a purpose, the nature of which you now want to investigate, and language itself having certain problematic ways of tying concepts together.
For example, in our normal usage of English, the term "observation" invariably suggests that there must be an "observer." Yet this is actually not true. It's simply that the brain creates a subject here as an aid to communication.
Great, Hans. i knew you wouldn't let me down. Spoken like a true skeptic.
Great, Hans. i knew you wouldn't let me down. Spoken like a true skeptic.