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Materialism

OK, then, I'm going to ramble a little.

This comment by Danish caught my eye:

I was just responding to a comment by UCE, regarding all the outstanding questions which the evil materialism/science hadn't answered.

It struck me that many defenders of materialism here take this blanket view of those who maintain that materialism is false, namely that a consequence of that position is the belief that science is "wrong" or that materialism is "evil." I think this is a strawman.

On balance, and after reflecting on the arguments, thought experiments and facts concerning phenomenal consciousness, in some small detail, I've concluded that materialism is false. Others disagree with this conclusion, for a variety of reasons. I don't think that all those who hold materialistic positions are deluded or that all their arguments are absurd or that they are all in favor of a materialistic position out of some sort of ulterior motive, either nefarious or pathetic.

That being said, I do find some materialistic positions to be, well, a stretch, like eliminative materialism. And, what's more, I do find many here to be fairly unfamiliar with the geography of the issue, as it were, while still acting as if non-materialistic positions were facially absurd or wrong headed. Often times I'll see absolute certainty as to the falsity of dualism seemingly based on such, frankly, half-arsed objections as "that's an argument from ignorance" or, and this a frequent one, "you're assuming your conclusion." These positions have the unfortunate quality of being both smug and meretricious.

So, while finding the whole "you think materialism is evil" charge to be a strawman, I also think it's ironic, in that it would seem that the opposite is true: Many defenders of materialism think a belief in the falsity of materialism is evil, or perhaps (and maybe worse) obviously stupid, and that proponents of the falsity of materialism are acting out of some other motive than wanting to explain the world. Combined with this attitude is the implication that allowing the falsity of materialism is but one step removed from asking John Edwards to contact your loved ones on "the other side."

And that's frustrating.

Whcih brings me to this comment by Loki:

When we try to explore "(b)" you say "direct access" is the way in which *I* see the shadow. Yet this access in no way changes or adds to the physical brain processes. This seems to say that a person's "*I*" (the totality, and that which does the "accessing" in direct access) is at least partially non-physical. Haven't we just introduced a 'soul' (for want of a better word)?

Well, no.

The implication, however, seems to me something akin to this: A property dualist position introduces a feature that can be compared to a "soul;" we know "souls" are bunk, or at least religious baggage; therfore, property dualism is bunk, or at least carries religious baggage.

To which I can only reply, to the extent that the baggage is there, you've brought it with you.

That being said, you can, of course, make an analogy between "souls" and phenomenal consciousness. For example, I think it can be argued that having phenomenal consiousness defines a "person" for the purposes of moral and ethical argument, like having a "soul" does. At the same time, nothing about phenomenal consciousness necessarily implies that one's phenomenal consciousness survives one's death, so the analogy breaks down.

In the end, while I guess the analogy between "souls" and phenomenal consciousness could be the basis for an exploration of folk ethics, most often it seems a polemical instrument.

Now, let me address the "coincidence" issue.

Do I think physical and phenomenal properties are coincidental? In the sense of happening at the same time, yes. Do I think they are coincidental in the stronger sense of the word, namely happening together "by chance?" From the point of view of the physical, yes. At the same time, I believe that there must be some reason for the coincidence, in the first sense, it just isn't a reason that can be explained with recourse to the physical.

Finally, let me address the idea that, because our brains don't have access to phenomenal consciousness, there's no point talking about phenomenal consciousness. All that the lack of our brain's access to phenomenal consciousnes implies is that, in some sense, the eliminativist position is tenable. For me, everything about you could be explained without reference to phenomenal consciousness. But for you, it can't be.

So, if we want to take phenomenal consciousness into account as a feature of the world, and because materialism is false, we make some foundational assumptions, and start developing a theory of the world that contains, and explains, phenomenal consciousness as an independent fundamental feature.

At the very far extreme, one could argue that the brain's lack of access renders our foundational assumptions suspect, and to avoid that, we must adopt a mysterian position. This, however, doesn't invalidate any of the arguments about the falsity of materialism.

And, what's more, I don't think it's necessary. We make other foundational assumptions in science. If we have to make some with regard to phenomenal consciousness as an irreducible, so be it.

Ultimately, the whole "if dualism is true, we don't know what we're talking about" line seems to me to be more often motivated by a desire to reach the conclusion, "so dualism is false," than to be concerned with the question of the basis for foundational assuptions.
 
Win,

To which I can only reply, to the extent that the baggage is there, you've brought it with you.
Guilty as charged! The use of the term "soul" was intended to serve two purposes.

One of these (as you point out) was to add a little "baggage" to the discussion. The sole purpose of this bagdage is to add a little "spice" to the conversation. To the degree that this sidetracks the topic, and "lowers" the tone, I'm sorry. Sometimes my need to 'brighten' (euphemistically speaking) the conversation gets the better of me. Sorry!

The other, however, was quite on topic - that "soul" is often thought of as "aware" and "thinking". I wanted to convey this aspect of your position, because it still seems to me that the thing doing the direct accessing must be doing some perceiving, and some thinking. Hence the choice of term.

Anyway, I'll try to stay more focused! Now, where did my shadow go....
 
Loki:

Anyway, I'll try to stay more focused! Now, where did my shadow go....

If I came across as annoyed with you, I'm sorry. Generally speaking, you're pretty reasonable. ;)

To address your point, I think the "soul" analogy also breaks down when attempting to look at phenomenal cosciousness as an "entity" that "is aware" and "has perceptions," like a "soul." In my view, phenomenal consciousness is the collection of phenomenal properties. While it's possible to ascribe those properties to *you,* such that you can be said to "have" them, I don't think that there's a disembodied "you," as it were, to which phenomenal consciousness is projected.
 
Win said:
Do I think physical and phenomenal properties are coincidental? In the sense of happening at the same time, yes. Do I think they are coincidental in the stronger sense of the word, namely happening together "by chance?" From the point of view of the physical, yes. At the same time, I believe that there must be some reason for the coincidence, in the first sense, it just isn't a reason that can be explained with recourse to the physical.
I'm not sure I quite understand what you're saying here, but I don't see how it explains our ability to discuss phenomenal consciousness. How does the brain obtain the knowledge it needs to carry on this conversation?

And, what's more, I don't think it's necessary. We make other foundational assumptions in science. If we have to make some with regard to phenomenal consciousness as an irreducible, so be it.
I think phenomenal consciousness is a quite different sort of foundational assumption than those currently made by science. In fact, it seems to contradict some of the existing assumptions.

Ultimately, the whole "if dualism is true, we don't know what we're talking about" line seems to me to be more often motivated by a desire to reach the conclusion, "so dualism is false," than to be concerned with the question of the basis for foundational assuptions.
I don't know squat about the basis for foundational assumptions. I just want to know how we're having this conversation without any feedback from phenomenal consciousness to the brain.

~~ Paul
 
Win said:
OK, then, I'm going to ramble a little.

This comment by Danish caught my eye:



It struck me that many defenders of materialism here take this blanket view of those who maintain that materialism is false, namely that a consequence of that position is the belief that science is "wrong" or that materialism is "evil." I think this is a strawman.

On balance, and after reflecting on the arguments, thought experiments and facts concerning phenomenal consciousness, in some small detail, I've concluded that materialism is false. Others disagree with this conclusion, for a variety of reasons. I don't think that all those who hold materialistic positions are deluded or that all their arguments are absurd or that they are all in favor of a materialistic position out of some sort of ulterior motive, either nefarious or pathetic.

That being said, I do find some materialistic positions to be, well, a stretch, like eliminative materialism. And, what's more, I do find many here to be fairly unfamiliar with the geography of the issue, as it were, while still acting as if non-materialistic positions were facially absurd or wrong headed. Often times I'll see absolute certainty as to the falsity of dualism seemingly based on such, frankly, half-arsed objections as "that's an argument from ignorance" or, and this a frequent one, "you're assuming your conclusion." These positions have the unfortunate quality of being both smug and meretricious.

So, while finding the whole "you think materialism is evil" charge to be a strawman, I also think it's ironic, in that it would seem that the opposite is true: Many defenders of materialism think a belief in the falsity of materialism is evil, or perhaps (and maybe worse) obviously stupid, and that proponents of the falsity of materialism are acting out of some other motive than wanting to explain the world. Combined with this attitude is the implication that allowing the falsity of materialism is but one step removed from asking John Edwards to contact your loved ones on "the other side."

And that's frustrating.



Yes, I'm in absolute entire agreement with you here. And people wonder why I'm sometimes occasionally rude! :eek:
 
Rusty_the_boy_robot said:



If I can modify your brain to elicit different emotions from you (prozac does this to millions every day), if I can modify your brain to eliminate or even change your memories, if I can modify your brain to render you un-consciouss, then what seems more likely? That consciousness is not produced by the brain or that it is?


Lets say I were to give a radio set to my friend Bob who has never encountered one and who does not know about electromagnetism. I then set him the task of coming up with a theory about how the output of the radio is produced. Some time later I check how he is getting on and he looks perplexed. Bob says, "well, I removed this funny looking bit from all the other bits inside and the speaker made no sound. When I put that bit back the music returned". I asked him "what do you conlclude from this". He replied, "Its obvious that the special arrangement of bits produces the output of the radio. The music is therefore a product of this arrangement".

Bob is right on the one hand. The arrangement of matter does produce the music. However, as much as Bob's conclusion seems to follow a logical argument, the source of the music has been overlooked. Bob does not know anything about radio waves so it would be wrong for him to conclude that when he takes the radio apart completely, the source of the music has been destroyed.

This is how I feel our understanding of consciousness stands at the moment. I am in no way comparing the brain to some kind of radio receiver. I am saying that just because we can manipulate consciousness and describe those manipulations in local physical terms does not mean that the local components are the source of the phenomenon per se. They could just as well be regarded as allowing a particular form of consciousness to manifest.
 
davidsmith73 said:


This is how I feel our understanding of consciousness stands at the moment. I am in no way comparing the brain to some kind of radio receiver. I am saying that just because we can manipulate consciousness and describe those manipulations in local physical terms does not mean that the local components are the source of the phenomenon per se. They could just as well be regarded as allowing a particular form of consciousness to manifest.

Hello friend! Your analogy speaks to me. As we all know, in themselves they prove nothing, but this one certainly points out how consciousness as a mere epiphenomenon of nature could well be mistaken.

There are a few of us here that have absolutely no problem with healthy skepticism of scientistic explanations of consciousness, but there are plenty of members in the materialist congregation for whom this is going to make no difference - they're true believers.

Have fun!
 
Win posted :

And, what's more, I do find many here to be fairly unfamiliar with the geography of the issue, as it were, while still acting as if non-materialistic positions were facially absurd or wrong headed.

This has been a problem for me ever since I first stated that I believed materialism was false - and at the time I was still part of the admin team at www.infidels.org. It seemed to me that there were a lot of people whose main line of defence from what I was arguing was organised and intensive ridicule - as if enough people piling into a thread with posts which just dismiss non-materialistic positions as absurd, pointless and backwards would somehow count as a rebuttal. When I refused to allow this to deflect me the level of abuse reached the point where I had no choice but to attack back in the same manner, attack being the most effective form of defence. The result of that was that I was banned from www.infidels.org and came here. There was no moderation here, which was a good thing, but precisely the same scenario played out - large numbers of people who appeared to have little or no knowledge of philosophy simply filled up my threads with ridicule and abuse and treated me as if nothing I said had any merit. The sad truth is that scientifically-minded people have come to view materialism as the only metaphysical position that a rational person can take. So when faced with someone who makes a claim that materialism is logically impossible to defend it is assumed that the position must be wrong, and that the person holding it must be an idiot. Even now, 18 months later, there seems to be a 'believability gap'. By that I mean that even after the materialists have been forced to look at the logical problem itself they still can't quite bring themselves to believe that it is a real problem - after all how could so many highly intelligent and rational people believe something to be true if it is actually logically impossible?. Finally, when it begins to dawn that it might be true that materialism has been logically falsified then the accusations start flying that people are attacking materialism 'because they think it is evil'.

I don't think materialism is evil. I don't think materialists are evil, or stupid. I just think it must be wrong and I think it is important that people are made aware of why it must be wrong. 400 years ago Giordano Bruno was burned at the stake for upsetting the status quo by speaking the truth. The scientific establishment doesn't burn people at the stake - but it can break someones career - and any young scientist who takes a metaphysical position like mine would risk having their career instantly terminated. I think we need a new reformation - a reformation of science. I think that the scientific establishment, instead of defending materialism like the Pope defended the Bible from Bruno, needs to accept that materialism was actually falsified 100 years ago and needs to look again at the absurdities produced by 'materialistic quantum physics', needs to look again at what is implied by Bells theorem and non-locality, needs to accept that a materialistic theory of consciousness is a non-starter. If instead all that happens is that materialism is defended as if it were a religion, even though it is wrong, then science risks making the same mistakes as the religious hegemony it was originally instrumental in bringing down. 400 years ago Giordano Bruno was burned at the stake by the Inquisition. There can be no "New Inquisition".

http://www.kbuxton.com/discordia/new_inquisition.html

...and before anyone attacks Robert Anton Wilson for being another 'just another woo-woo' perhaps they'd like to consider what he is doing next to Randi, Shermer and Dawkins on a list of freethinkers, described as the sanest person on the planet :

http://www.nobeliefs.com/freethinkers.htm

freethinker n. One who has rejected authority and dogma, especially in his religious thinking, in favor of rational inquiry and speculation.
 
DavidSmith said:
This is how I feel our understanding of consciousness stands at the moment. I am in no way comparing the brain to some kind of radio receiver. I am saying that just because we can manipulate consciousness and describe those manipulations in local physical terms does not mean that the local components are the source of the phenomenon per se. They could just as well be regarded as allowing a particular form of consciousness to manifest.
Well, perhaps. But the more manipulative abilities we gain, and the more we understand how those abilities work, the less likely it is that there is some external source. To continue your analogy, if Bob spends more time with the radio, making little changes, probing here, metering there, he is eventually going to understand that there is an external signal and how it interacts with the equipment. If we do the same thing with the brain, yet never find the external signal, then perhaps there isn't one.

Imaginist said:
There are a few of us here that have absolutely no problem with healthy skepticism of scientistic explanations of consciousness, but there are plenty of members in the materialist congregation for whom this is going to make no difference - they're true believers.
The problem is that there is no scientific explanation yet, so we have no reason to reject it. You're begin skeptical of a 5%-complete explanation. That's fine, because skepticism is swell, but let's talk again in 200 years.

~~ Paul
 
Stimpson J. Cat said:
davidsmith73,

I do not deny the possibility that you could construct a different logically framework from which the scientific method would be logically valid. When you come up with one, let me know. At that point we can discuss the relative merits of it versus physicalism.

As it is, none of the various forms of idealism or dualism that I have ever heard of can manage this.

You have changed the argument slightly here. I am saying that under my philosophy, the scientific method would not have the same assumptions (objective and subject would no longer be mutually exclusive) so it would be different from its current form. So I am constructing a different framework of reality and therefore science would have different assumptions.


David: The justification behind the methods would be the same. Specifically, that observation and theory agree. What the theory relates to and the reasons for its limitation in fully describing what it refers to would have changed.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Stimpy: It is not that simple. The very claim that the theory and observation agree can only be made within a logical framework that makes some basic assumptions about both the nature of reality and observation.

Erm, I have made assumptions about the nature of reality and observation. Can you be more specific about these assumptions ?
I am assuming that a mathematical description does not reflect an objective reality separate from our experience. It merely embodies a description of qualia that have a degree of stability. If the description is a good one then its descriptive predictions about other qualia (observations made under different conditions) will roughly agree.


You do not understand why it allows us to draw any conclusions at all from our observations. The assumption of objectivity is one of those reasons. Without that assumption, we cannot logically conclude anything from our observations.

What we could do is draw conclusions as though the assumption of objectivity were true, even though we don't believe it is, but that would not be logical.


No. You have again displayed the inability to view reality from outside your materialistic perspective. Without the assumption of objective reality, we cannot conclude anything about an objective reality. This is logical. If we drop this assumption then our mathematical descriptions become just that - descriptions of our qualia. And of course, these descriptions are qualia themselves since they reside within the confines of our experience (under my philosophy).



A heuristic algorithm is one that seems to work, but you don't really understand why.


How ironic that you have paraphrased materialism. :D


David: Your observations do not behave exactly as though the assumptions of objective reality were true.

Stimpy: Of course they do.
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

David: They clearly do not. Give me an example of an observation that behaved exactly as though the assumptions of objective reality were true. Every observation contains a degree of inexactness to these mathematical relationships.

Stimpy: All of them. I never said anything about observations behaving exactly as though our mathematical theories were 100% accurate.


Assumptions of objective reality - it is logical and consistent

For an observation to exactly adhere to these assumptions it must be exactly logical and consistent. Show me how every observationion is exactly logical and consistent (whatever that means :rolleyes:)



It is really easy to take scientific knowledge that we already have, and say "that is consistent with my philosophy". The question is, could you start with you philosophy, and without making any additional assumptions conclude those scientific facts?


Yes. All I have to do is to change the meaning of what a theory relates to.
 
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:
DavidSmith said:
Well, perhaps. But the more manipulative abilities we gain, and the more we understand how those abilities work, the less likely it is that there is some external source. To continue your analogy, if Bob spends more time with the radio, making little changes, probing here, metering there, he is eventually going to understand that there is an external signal and how it interacts with the equipment. If we do the same thing with the brain, yet never find the external signal, then perhaps there isn't one.


Or perhaps we might suggest we are applying the wrong method to search for the "signal". Consciousness per se may not be describable in mathematical terms. We may need to re-assess our assumptions about the nature of matter vs qualia, which is what I, UCE and a few others have been suggesting in this thread.
 
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:
The problem is that there is no scientific explanation yet, so we have no reason to reject it. You're begin skeptical of a 5%-complete explanation. That's fine, because skepticism is swell, but let's talk again in 200 years.

~~ Paul

Agreed. It's a date!

In the meantime, let's investigate all the possibilities and not simply dismiss the evidence that doesn't fit our preconceptions, or ignore the arguments that threaten our own pet theories. (Paul, I'm not saying that you as an individual are doing that.)
 
DavidSmith said:
Or perhaps we might suggest we are applying the wrong method to search for the "signal". Consciousness per se may not be describable in mathematical terms. We may need to re-assess our assumptions about the nature of matter vs qualia, which is what I, UCE and a few others have been suggesting in this thread.
That may be a compelling thing to suggest in a few hundred years, if we're still having trouble explaining consciousness using only the brain. Of course, my prediction is that some people will always say we don't understand consciousness, no matter how much progress we make, because they will insist that the "me-ness" of consciousness isn't explained by the neuroscience. The special place that consciousness has in the brain of the investigator will always be a reason to suggest that it is so special that it can't be physical.

Imaginist said:
In the meantime, let's investigate all the possibilities and not simply dismiss the evidence that doesn't fit our preconceptions, or ignore the arguments that threaten our own pet theories.
Agreed! What was that evidence again? :p

~~ Paul
 
UcE, we're talking about consciousness. I forget the evidence that should convince me that materialism is impossible. But, by all means, as Imaginist says, let's investigate all the possibilities.

If you can show that information is transmitted faster than the speed of light, you've got my attention.

~~ Paul
 
Bill:

Does the phrase "argument from ignorance" ring a "Bell"?

Does "you clearly don't bother to read posts that might cause you to realize that you're an ignoramus" ring a bell?
 
Win said:
Does "you clearly don't bother to read posts that might cause you to realize that you're an ignoramus" ring a bell?
Win,

Of course. You know me. Just a bouncer at a local strip club. But to this bouncer mind of mine, it seems Paul asked for evidence of materialism being false, and UcE brought up quantum entanglement and Stimpy's answer that it is still a mystery.

Sorry, I can't actually follow the logic here. Sorry, I don't have time to actually read the posts. I have to attend to the ladies and make sure they're all safe. I'll just drop in and make a random, utterly impertinent comment from time to time, uninformed by the content of the posts. Of course.

Cheers,
 
Bill:

Sorry, I can't actually follow the logic here. Sorry, I don't have time to actually read the posts. I have to attend to the ladies and make sure they're all safe. I'll just drop in and make a random, utterly impertinent comment from time to time, uninformed by the content of the posts. Of course.

As is your nature.

Nevertheless, you're inability to grasp the logic of the positions should have no bearing on your tendency to be smug.

Recognise your limitations.
 

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