lifegazer said:
Rubbish. If you were the same size as a molecule of air, a 'gust of wind' could be equated to the movement of a molecule.
A gust of wind is just air molecules moving around, at any scale. Individually, they are moving all the time, but as they do not always move in concert, they do not always make wind. A single molecule cannot, by itself, say, move a newspaper down the street.
lifegazer said:
The comparison is nonsensical...
The fact is that the totality of the different experiences of human INDIVIDUALITY is a singular experience!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! [emphasis justified!!!!!!!!!!!!!]
No, it isn't. A "human" doesn't remember every bit of stimulii it "experiences." And even if an individual's memory were perfect, its perception is limited- it isn't aware of every event that impacts it. While there are "experiences" of "experiences," these are not qualitatively different from the original experiences.
"The fact is" that every "human" is inseperarable part of its environment, and it cannot be removed from some sort of context.
lifegazer said:
... Now, given the fact that you believe the brain to be a real entity composed of many parts - all oblivious to one another -
how do you explain the advent of a singular experience??????!!!
I do not believe this. First off, still have no idea whatsoever what you mean by "real." Second, the brain is not an "entity". Third, the parts, as I've said, are not "oblivious to one another"- they interact. Fourth, there is no "singular experience" to explain.
lifegazer said:
Hold on: this thread is addressed to those that believe that 'the [real] brain' is the seat of all experience. [Meaning that the 'bricks' DO have an experience]
... If you believe that 'experience' emanates from 'God' or 'nothing' or ~something~ hitherto undeclared, then you shouldn't even be attempting to negate my OP - since my OP has not addressed those concepts.
Nope, don't believe any of that either. "For one thing, "experiences" are not entities that can "emanate" from anything. They are events that occur between particles.
lifegazer said:
You're just parroting crap.
Tu quoque.
lifegazer said:
Experience is singular. Deal with it.
No it isn't. Just by "your" reading this post there are several "experiences" occuring that "you" aren't probably aware of.
lifegazer said:
... Having done so, think about how/why an entity composed of numerous parts - all oblivious to one another and all ACTING DIFFERENTLY - can have a singular experience. Then we'll be in the same field-of-play.
What field? Fairyland park? If you want to talk about an imaginary place, fine, but that's not the universe we have, or the one I'm talking about.
The parts are not "oblivious" to one another. They interact.
The parts do not all "act differently"- they all follow the same amazingly small set of "rules."
There are no "singular experiences" to have.
lifegazer said:
Indeed.
lifegazer said:
... Think of another mechanism: a 'car', for example:-
No parts of the car are aware of themselves (likewise, as I explained earlier, no parts of the brain can be aware of themselves - since this negates the possibility of singular experience).
Heh, and yet you don't see the error...
lifegazer said:
So, no parts of the car can experience themselves nor each other.
Hmm. Brake pedal pushed, slave cylinder compresses, hydraulic fluid transmits force of compression to master cylinder, master cylinder compressses, more hydraulic fluid transmitts that force to the calipers, the calipers move the brake pads, the brake pads contact the rotor, the friction converts the rotational momentum of the wheels into heat, and the tires rotate slower.
What was that you were saying about the parts of the car not being able to experience each other?
lifegazer said:
Yet, the majority of the people here believe that the separate parts of ~a car~ (better known as 'the brain') can experience 'Everything' as One.
No one said that. There is no "One."
lifegazer said:
This is profound. Really. Why? Because having realised that individual awareness cannot be achieved by entities either oblivious to one another or by entities with individual awarenesses of their own,
But nobody said that it could. I said many things very different from this. Up the grade, illiterate.
lifegazer said:
the conclusion is that individual awareness emanates from an entity that is absolutely singular in itself.
*Sigh* No. "Awareness" isn't a "thing" that can "emanate" from anything. Your conclusion is, as always, just your initial, persistant desire repeated ad nauseum.
Let me know if you have the intellectual courage to address what I've actually posted, will you?