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Materialism

Q-Source said:
I just wonder why those civilisations and those people who really know what's behind the door are not capable of explainging themselves coherently and objectively.

Understanding something is one thing. Explaining it to someone else is another thing entirely, especially if you have no common frame of reference. How could Captain Cook have ever understood aboriginal Dreamtime?

Why everything has to be obscure, hidden, secret, magical, mental and mystical...?

Why has that which has been hidden been hidden?

You have to find it to understand why it has been hidden. ;)

Have any technological advance and human's understanding been achieved through their frame of reference? Maybe you think that this is not what it matters, that's why you say that we're still wild animals.

I'm not sure I understand this question.

G.
 
Stimpson J. Cat said:
It would be both premature and extremely egotistical, to assume that just because we must describe reality in terms of our experiences, that reality is somehow ontologically dependent on our consciousness.

Dr. Stupid

Another way to look at it is "Our" consciousnesses are the highest expression of conciousness we perceive(via our bag-o-bones), but this is the top level. UCE et al are proposing the lowest level.

Human consciousness is not the key, it is a current end-point.
 
UndercoverElephant said:

Understanding something is one thing. Explaining it to someone else is another thing entirely, especially if you have no common frame of reference.

And here relies the main problem that Stimpson has pointed out.
If we cannot share the same frame of reference to interpret reality, then the "knowledge" that you have reached through your experiences is useless (except to you, of course).

Hey, maybe you are right. Maybe, everything around us is just a mental representation, an illusion in our minds that are part of a huge Metamind. I don't think that Stimpson is questioning your conclusion, he wonders what method we could use to arrive to the same conclusion and how we could verify that this is true.

I am sure that you are convinced for some reason.
 
Q-Source said:
And here relies the main problem that Stimpson has pointed out.
If we cannot share the same frame of reference to interpret reality, then the "knowledge" that you have reached through your experiences is useless (except to you, of course).

Frames of reference exist for at least some of these things. The problem might be described as The Inexpressibility of the Truth. What you can describe isn't it. Whatever you say something is, it isn't. The tao that can be expressed is not the eternal Tao. You have to build your own frame of reference from the inadequate descriptions others have provided of theirs.
 
Stimpson J. Cat said:
DavidSmith73,

When you experience redness you have direct knowledge that you are experiencing redness (whether you are hallucinating or looking at traffic lights!)

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In this case, you are talking about an experience. Sure, in some sense I "know" that I am having the experience,

Then, by definition, this is direct knowledge about redness. The important point is - you cannot describe it fully in any other terms. You have to experience the qualia itself to know what is really is. Direct knowledge and experience are synonymous under this definition.

You say mathematical descriptions cannot describe the ultimate reality of redness.

I agree, but under the philosophy I refer to, mathematical descriptions are made of different qualia than redness. This is why they cannot give us direct knowledge of redness - because they are different qualia. The ultimate "stuff", the reality of redness (or anything for that matter), is the experience they give which, as UCE has just pointed out, is inexpressible.
 
davidsmith73,

In this case, you are talking about an experience. Sure, in some sense I "know" that I am having the experience,
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Then, by definition, this is direct knowledge about redness. The important point is - you cannot describe it fully in any other terms. You have to experience the qualia itself to know what is really is. Direct knowledge and experience are synonymous under this definition.

Which was exactly my point. I was objecting to UCE's claim that he could have direct knowledge that his mysticism is true, because experiences alone are not sufficient to reach that conclusion. An interpretation of those experiences is necessary, and without some method for verifying that the interpretation is correct, it is unreliable.

You say mathematical descriptions cannot describe the ultimate reality of redness.

Actually, I did not say that. What I said is that we cannot construct a mathematical description for "ultimate reality" at all, because we have no access to the necessary information. Instead, our description of reality must be based on our observations of it.

I agree, but under the philosophy I refer to, mathematical descriptions are made of different qualia than redness. This is why they cannot give us direct knowledge of redness - because they are different qualia. The ultimate "stuff", the reality of redness (or anything for that matter), is the experience they give which, as UCE has just pointed out, is inexpressible.

If you believe that the "ultimate reality" is, in fact, the qualia, then there is no point in going any further. That is Solipsism. If, on the other hand, you accept that there is an objective reality, which our minds are a part of, and that our experiences are the interaction of our minds with other parts of the reality, then it is possible to make progress. That is scientific materialism.


Dr. Stupid
 
Stimpson J. Cat said:
davidsmith73,

Actually, I did not say that. What I said is that we cannot construct a mathematical description for "ultimate reality" at all, because we have no access to the necessary information. Instead, our description of reality must be based on our observations of it.

Can you explain why you cannot have access to the necessary information under a materialistic philosophy ?

If you are indeed advocating one realm then how do you account for the apparent separation between subjective experience and an objective reality. It seems that the very notion of "objective reality" is returning to a dualistic interpretaion of the physical and mental realms as is your use of the phrase "we (mental realm) have no access to the necessary information (physical realm)".


If you believe that the "ultimate reality" is, in fact, the qualia, then there is no point in going any further.

I'm not sure I agree. Saying that the redness of red is the "stuff" of reality gives a neat explanation as to why a mathematical description seems to make us unable to gain access to the "necessary information". We have already agreed that we cannot have knowledge about redness in any other terms other than experiencing redness (which is the direct knowledge). So it makes sense that a mathematical description of redness, which is not the actual reality it refers to (i.e, redness) cannot have access to the actual reality. This is because the mathematical description is composed of different qualia.

Its becoming more and more clear to me that the "necessary information" you refer to is our experience of redness. So we do have direct access to it (at least I know I have access to it). We just cant describe it completely in terms other than the direct knowledge of redness.



If, on the other hand, you accept that there is an objective reality, which our minds are a part of, and that our experiences are the interaction of our minds with other parts of the reality, then it is possible to make progress. That is scientific materialism.

I think you are making distinctions here when there aren't any. In the sense we have been talking about, "mind" and"experiences" are the same thing. I'll call them qualia. Since we are both advocating one realm, your use of the term "objective reality" is the same as mine.

So to re-phrase what you said:

If, on the other hand, you accept that there is one realm, which our qualia are a part of, and that our qualia are the interaction of our qualia with other parts of the reality (back to dualism again ?), then it is possible to make progress.

I don't know what to make of that !?
 
Quote:
If you are indeed advocating one realm then how do you account for the apparent separation between
subjective experience and an objective reality. It seems that the very notion of "objective reality" is
returning to a dualistic interpretaion of the physical and mental realms as is your use of the phrase "we
(mental realm) have no access to the necessary information (physical realm)".


The apparant separation between subjective and objective is not one of mental and physical, but of private and public. All are physical, but the public things we can point to and to some extent share the experience of. The difficulties we have in understanding each other's private experiences are purely because we do not have the publicly shared reference. From James to Wittgenstein to Skinner, you can see smarter people than me arguing that we learn about our own internal states by inference from what people tell us (we act in a particular way, our parents say "you must be angry", we infer that this state is anger). The problem is, while we can point to "red" and be relatively consistent, we may be told we look "angry" when in fact we are sad, or hungry, or perplexed, in addition to angry.

We are not born understanding red or understanding anger, or love, or hunger. We learn the labels for external things by shared agreement with a language community (the rules of the language game, I think Wittgenstein called it); we learn the labels for private events the same way, but much less accurately.
 
davidsmith73,

Actually, I did not say that. What I said is that we cannot construct a mathematical description for "ultimate reality" at all, because we have no access to the necessary information. Instead, our description of reality must be based on our observations of it.
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Can you explain why you cannot have access to the necessary information under a materialistic philosophy ?

The only source of information we have is our experiences. This means that one can always speculate that there is something more to reality than what we experience, or what we can deduce from our experiences. Such additional things are simply unknowable.

If you are indeed advocating one realm then how do you account for the apparent separation between subjective experience and an objective reality.

I don't. What separation are you talking about? Under materialism, our subjective experiences are a part of objective reality. Specifically, they are physical processes.

It seems that the very notion of "objective reality" is returning to a dualistic interpretaion of the physical and mental realms as is your use of the phrase "we (mental realm) have no access to the necessary information (physical realm)".

Not at all. Such dualism only pops in when you think of your mind as being something separate from objective reality, "on the outside looking in". This is simply not what materialism suggests. The human mind is one small part of objective reality, which is trying to understand its relationship to the rest of objective reality, based on the limited information that it acquires through its interactions with it.

If you believe that the "ultimate reality" is, in fact, the qualia, then there is no point in going any further.
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I'm not sure I agree. Saying that the redness of red is the "stuff" of reality gives a neat explanation as to why a mathematical description seems to make us unable to gain access to the "necessary information".

I don't follow you. Saying that the experience is the "stuff" of reality leads absolutely nowhere. It tells us absolutely nothing. If you want a logical description of reality, then you need to assume that there is a reality there to begin with, and that it is possible for you to acquire information about it. If we assume that our experiences are all there is, then we can go no further, because verification becomes impossible.

We have already agreed that we cannot have knowledge about redness in any other terms other than experiencing redness (which is the direct knowledge). So it makes sense that a mathematical description of redness, which is not the actual reality it refers to (i.e, redness) cannot have access to the actual reality.

I don't know what you mean. What does it mean to say that the description has access to the actual reality?

Mathematics is a language for describing logical relationships between things. Science uses this language to describe the logical relationships between the components of objective reality that we experience, and does so in terms of those experiences.

This is because the mathematical description is composed of different qualia.

Huh? Mathematical descriptions are not composed of qualia. Mathematical descriptions describe reality in terms of qualia.

Its becoming more and more clear to me that the "necessary information" you refer to is our experience of redness. So we do have direct access to it (at least I know I have access to it). We just cant describe it completely in terms other than the direct knowledge of redness.

That is not what I am referring to. When I say that we do not have access to the necessary information to describe "ultimate reality", I am talking about the information that we would need to describe the hypothetical aspects of it which are not observable. I do not believe that my experiences are the ultimate reality, remember?

If, on the other hand, you accept that there is an objective reality, which our minds are a part of, and that our experiences are the interaction of our minds with other parts of the reality, then it is possible to make progress. That is scientific materialism.
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I think you are making distinctions here when there aren't any. In the sense we have been talking about, "mind" and"experiences" are the same thing. I'll call them qualia. Since we are both advocating one realm, your use of the term "objective reality" is the same as mine.

I think that it is absolutely necessary to make a distinction between experiences and mind. As I have already said, experiences are an interaction between your mind, and other things.

This is, in my opinion, one of the conceptual barriers that idealists and dualists cannot seem to get around. Experiences are not "things", they are processes. It is meaningless to talk about an experience as though it were some ontologically independent thing. It has no existence independent of the process of being experienced.

So to re-phrase what you said:

If, on the other hand, you accept that there is one realm, which our qualia are a part of, and that our qualia are the interaction of our qualia with other parts of the reality (back to dualism again ?), then it is possible to make progress.

There is no dualism here. Just one part of objective reality (your mind), interacting with other parts of objective reality. The experience is the interaction. Things only become confused when you refuse to distinguish between the experience (a process), and the thing doing the experiencing (an object).

In other words, the qualia are the interaction itself. They are not one of the "things" taking part in the interaction.

Dr. Stupid
 
davidsmith73 said:
So it makes sense that a mathematical description of redness, which is not the actual reality it refers to (i.e, redness) cannot have access to the actual reality. This is because the mathematical description is composed of different qualia.

I'm not sure I'd say the mathematical description is made of 'different qualia', although I think I know what you mean. I'd say it was just 'made' of information. If you include abstract mathematical ideas in a mind within the term 'qualia' then I'd agree.
 
Q :

This is just the "Schroedingers cat" situation taken to its ultimate conclusion - an entire Universe in an 'uncollapsed' state until somewhere in the ocean of possibilities arises the first structure capable of collapsing the wave-function - the first conscious physical creature. It is MWI only until the arrival of consciousness. After that it isn't MWI any more. But it provides an interesting new perspective on evolution and abiogenesis because it does not matter how incredibly improbable it was for life to get started, so long as it is not impossible it will happen. Under this scheme life had an infinite number of chances to get going and evolution had an infinite number of chances of producing consciousness, but both life and consciousness were always inevitable.

:)

G.
 
Mercutio said:
Quote:


The apparant separation between subjective and objective is not one of mental and physical, but of private and public. All are physical, but the public things we can point to and to some extent share the experience of. The difficulties we have in understanding each other's private experiences are purely because we do not have the publicly shared reference.

Yes, but this is not telling us anything about the nature of the private experience. You are just stating that my "redness" cannot be experienced by anyone else but me (according to a materialitic view anyway).


We are not born understanding red or understanding anger, or love, or hunger. We learn the labels for external things by shared agreement with a language community (the rules of the language game, I think Wittgenstein called it); we learn the labels for private events the same way, but much less accurately.

this is not the issue. Learning a label for red is purely that. This tells us nothing about the nature of the qualia the label refers to.
Maybe I'm missing the relevance of this. Can you explain further ?
 
UndercoverElephant said:
Q :

This is just the "Schroedingers cat" situation taken to its ultimate conclusion - an entire Universe in an 'uncollapsed' state until somewhere in the ocean of possibilities arises the first structure capable of collapsing the wave-function - the first conscious physical creature. It is MWI only until the arrival of consciousness. After that it isn't MWI any more. But it provides an interesting new perspective on evolution and abiogenesis because it does not matter how incredibly improbable it was for life to get started, so long as it is not impossible it will happen. Under this scheme life had an infinite number of chances to get going and evolution had an infinite number of chances of producing consciousness, but both life and consciousness were always inevitable.

But where did the first conscious physical creature come from?

Your link says nothing about the answer to this question. However, it jumps to assert that:

The bottom line of the participatory anthropic principle is that minds can exist independently of matter, and they create their actual environments from the potentialities around them.

Q
 
Q

But where did the first conscious physical creature come from?

Imagine the Universe prior to the arrival of the first conscious creature as just an infinite set of potential Universal histories ala MWI, all existing in superposition within the Metamind. Somewhere in all these parallel histories will be the timeline where abiogenesis occurs and where a conscious creature has 'evolved'. From our POV we just see the history belonging to that timeline as 'our history'. In effect every possible history existed in parallel until one of those histories produced a physical body capable of supporting consciousness. At least this is the best way to describe it in terms of quantum physics and evolution. From the POV of consciousness one might describe it differently.
 
Stimpson J. Cat said:


The only source of information we have is our experiences. This means that one can always speculate that there is something more to reality than what we experience, or what we can deduce from our experiences. Such additional things are simply unknowable.

this problem only occurs if you adopt your particular philosophy. If you accept that our experience of red is the true nature of red then this problem disappears. In other words there is no something else to speculate about.


I don't. What separation are you talking about? Under materialism, our subjective experiences are a part of objective reality. Specifically, they are physical processes.

Your problem is that you cannot fully define objective reality (eg, redness). Indeed, under my proposed philosophy I cannot define, i.e, give a true description of, the reality of redness. The difference is that I have access to the reality through qualia which are undefinable, i.e., cannot be fully described. Do you not find it compelling that the nature of reality that you say we can never have the necessary informaiton to describe fully, is exactly the characteristic that qualia hold ?

It seems that materialism is in a state of denial.


I don't follow you. Saying that the experience is the "stuff" of reality leads absolutely nowhere. It tells us absolutely nothing. If you want a logical description of reality, then you need to assume that there is a reality there to begin with,

I have assumed that there is a reality. It is our qualia. One realm. Why can't logical descriptions then follow ?


and that it is possible for you to acquire information about it. If we assume that our experiences are all there is, then we can go no further, because verification becomes impossible.

Verification of what ?


I don't know what you mean. What does it mean to say that the description has access to the actual reality?

The description does not have access to the actual reality. A description of redness in terms of a mathematical contruct that we call electromagnetic waves or a description of a pattern of neural activity or whatever description you choose, is not the reality, which is exactly what you are saying too. The difference is that you say the actual reality is not attainable. I say that the redness is the actual reality. Under both our philosophies, the actual reality is not describable so ther is no conflict with regards to how far mathematics can describe reality.


Mathematics is a language for describing logical relationships between things. Science uses this language to describe the logical relationships between the components of objective reality that we experience, and does so in terms of those experiences.

Whic is exactly how I define it. Science uses mathematics for describing the logical relationships between the components of reality that we experience - the qualia - and does so in terms of those experiences - other qualia !


Huh? Mathematical descriptions are not composed of qualia. Mathematical descriptions describe reality in terms of qualia.

Since I am defining reality to be our qualia then they must be composed of qualia. They are just a different form of qualia than qualia we associate with our sensory experiences such as redness. In other words, they would be the"feeling"or "meaning" (you see how difficult it is to fully describe them) of addition, subtraction or any other mathematical description. It seems odd to say this but I believe it to be a consistent philosophy.


When I say that we do not have access to the necessary information to describe "ultimate reality", I am talking about the information that we would need to describe the hypothetical aspects of it which are not observable. I do not believe that my experiences are the ultimate reality, remember?

Which is why you run into this problem. I realise that the above is what you are refering to, but this problem occurs because you hypothesise that there is something more to reality than our experiences. So, since we can't experience it, it follows that we can never have direct knowledge about it. However, if you start with the idea that qualia is the nature of reality then this problem does not arise. Qualia are the direct knowledge that you refer to.



I think that it is absolutely necessary to make a distinction between experiences and mind. As I have already said, experiences are an interaction between your mind, and other things.

Could you explain this further ?


This is, in my opinion, one of the conceptual barriers that idealists and dualists cannot seem to get around. Experiences are not "things", they are processes. It is meaningless to talk about an experience as though it were some ontologically independent thing. It has no existence independent of the process of being experienced.


I can't give you a description of qualia. I can only induce you to bring your attention to a certain aspect of qualia (redness) and hope that you experience it for yourself. They are indescribable "outside" of their own existence so any descriptive term is going to have problems.


There is no dualism here. Just one part of objective reality (your mind), interacting with other parts of objective reality. The experience is the interaction. Things only become confused when you refuse to distinguish between the experience (a process), and the thing doing the experiencing (an object).
In other words, the qualia are the interaction itself. They are not one of the "things" taking part in the interaction.

Perhaps I should be adding a qualifier. I would differentiate between an experience (qualia) and to experience something - the process, which is a description and not the reality it refers to.
 
davidsmith73,

The only source of information we have is our experiences. This means that one can always speculate that there is something more to reality than what we experience, or what we can deduce from our experiences. Such additional things are simply unknowable.
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this problem only occurs if you adopt your particular philosophy. If you accept that our experience of red is the true nature of red then this problem disappears. In other words there is no something else to speculate about.

Yes, I already acknowledged that. Unfortunately, such a solipsistic philosophy is completely useless. If there is nothing more to reality than our experiences, then there is no way to construct a reliable method for understanding reality.

I don't. What separation are you talking about? Under materialism, our subjective experiences are a part of objective reality. Specifically, they are physical processes.
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Your problem is that you cannot fully define objective reality (eg, redness).

I can fully define objective reality. I just cannot give a complete description of it. There is a difference.

Indeed, under my proposed philosophy I cannot define, i.e, give a true description of, the reality of redness. The difference is that I have access to the reality through qualia which are undefinable, i.e., cannot be fully described.

Do you have access to reality through the qualia, or are the qualia reality?

Do you not find it compelling that the nature of reality that you say we can never have the necessary informaiton to describe fully, is exactly the characteristic that qualia hold ?

No, because that is not the case. Under my paradigm, the qualia should be possible, at least in principle, to fully understand. It is the hypothetical stuff that does no contribute to our experiences, and which is therefore not represented by qualia, which cannot be understood. This is precisely why I take the logical positivistic view that such hypothetical things cannot be meaningfully said to exist.

It seems that materialism is in a state of denial.

That is because you are grossly misinterpreting what materialism is.

I don't follow you. Saying that the experience is the "stuff" of reality leads absolutely nowhere. It tells us absolutely nothing. If you want a logical description of reality, then you need to assume that there is a reality there to begin with,
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I have assumed that there is a reality. It is our qualia. One realm. Why can't logical descriptions then follow ?

Because we know that subjective bias exists. If reality is logical and consistent, then our direct experiences cannot be an accurate representation of it, because our experiences simply are not logical and consistent. We must either assume that our experiences are an imperfect representation of reality, or that reality itself cannot be understood at all.

Consider that all of the various methods for eliminating subjective bias, and thereby extracting reliable information from our experiences, are fundamentally based on the assumption of reality being something that we experience, rather than the experience itself.

and that it is possible for you to acquire information about it. If we assume that our experiences are all there is, then we can go no further, because verification becomes impossible.
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Verification of what ?

Verification that the information we have extracted from the experience is accurate. Remember that the experience itself doesn't tell us anything useful. It must be interpreted, regardless of your philosophical position.

I don't know what you mean. What does it mean to say that the description has access to the actual reality?
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The description does not have access to the actual reality. A description of redness in terms of a mathematical contruct that we call electromagnetic waves or a description of a pattern of neural activity or whatever description you choose, is not the reality, which is exactly what you are saying too. The difference is that you say the actual reality is not attainable. I say that the redness is the actual reality. Under both our philosophies, the actual reality is not describable so ther is no conflict with regards to how far mathematics can describe reality.

The difference is that under your philosophy, the reality cannot be mathematically described at all, where as under mine, it can be described in terms of the experience, and that description can be as complete as is possible given the information available.

Without 100% of the information, a complete description is not possible. Under materialism, we are able to get some information, and construct the best description we can with the information available. If we assume that the experience itself is all there is, then we have no method for extracting any reliable information at all!

Mathematics is a language for describing logical relationships between things. Science uses this language to describe the logical relationships between the components of objective reality that we experience, and does so in terms of those experiences.
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Whic is exactly how I define it. Science uses mathematics for describing the logical relationships between the components of reality that we experience - the qualia - and does so in terms of those experiences - other qualia !

This is wrong, for two important reasons.

1) Qualia have been defined to be the experience. One of the axioms of science is that our experiences are not the reality itself. This means that science describes the reality we experience in terms of qualia, but the reality we experience is not qualia.

2) Science can only describe reality in terms of our experiences by extracting reliable information from those experiences, and this can only be done by assuming that the experience is an interaction with reality, and not the reality itself. Thus the above axiom is a necessary one for science to function.

Huh? Mathematical descriptions are not composed of qualia. Mathematical descriptions describe reality in terms of qualia.
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Since I am defining reality to be our qualia then they must be composed of qualia.

You can define reality to be qualia if you want, but that it solipsism, and the scientific method is not compatible with such a position. No mathematical description of reality is possible under your philosophy, because no method exists for extracting reliable information about reality.

They are just a different form of qualia than qualia we associate with our sensory experiences such as redness. In other words, they would be the"feeling"or "meaning" (you see how difficult it is to fully describe them) of addition, subtraction or any other mathematical description. It seems odd to say this but I believe it to be a consistent philosophy.

I don't know whether it is consistent or not, because you cannot fully define it. That means it is incoherent. But in any event, it is incompatible with science, and thus of absolutely no use.

When I say that we do not have access to the necessary information to describe "ultimate reality", I am talking about the information that we would need to describe the hypothetical aspects of it which are not observable. I do not believe that my experiences are the ultimate reality, remember?
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Which is why you run into this problem. I realise that the above is what you are refering to, but this problem occurs because you hypothesise that there is something more to reality than our experiences. So, since we can't experience it, it follows that we can never have direct knowledge about it.

I don't see it as a problem, but rather as a fundamental epistemological limitation. Obviously I can only have knowledge of that which I have information. At least my philosophy gives me access to reliable information. Yours does not.

However, if you start with the idea that qualia is the nature of reality then this problem does not arise. Qualia are the direct knowledge that you refer to.

But under your paradigm, the knowledge is unreliable. There is no method for extracting reliable information about reality from your experiences. Your "knowledge" is nothing more than your subjective interpretation of your experiences, which is demonstrably unreliable.

I think that it is absolutely necessary to make a distinction between experiences and mind. As I have already said, experiences are an interaction between your mind, and other things.
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Could you explain this further ?

It's simple. Your mind is a part of reality. Your mind interacts with other parts of reality, as well as with itself. Some of these interactions are what we think of as "experiences". By eliminating subjective bias, through a variety of methods employed by the scientific method, we are able to extract information both about those other parts of reality, and about our mind itself, from those experiences. That is what science is, a method for extracting reliable information from our experiences. The method is based on the assumption that reality is something that our mind interacts with, and is a part of, and that our experiences are those interactions.

This is, in my opinion, one of the conceptual barriers that idealists and dualists cannot seem to get around. Experiences are not "things", they are processes. It is meaningless to talk about an experience as though it were some ontologically independent thing. It has no existence independent of the process of being experienced.
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I can't give you a description of qualia. I can only induce you to bring your attention to a certain aspect of qualia (redness) and hope that you experience it for yourself. They are indescribable "outside" of their own existence so any descriptive term is going to have problems.

I disagree. I think that what you have described is a practical problem, having to do with everybody's brain being different, rather than a metaphysical one.

There is no dualism here. Just one part of objective reality (your mind), interacting with other parts of objective reality. The experience is the interaction. Things only become confused when you refuse to distinguish between the experience (a process), and the thing doing the experiencing (an object).
In other words, the qualia are the interaction itself. They are not one of the "things" taking part in the interaction.
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Perhaps I should be adding a qualifier. I would differentiate between an experience (qualia) and to experience something - the process, which is a description and not the reality it refers to.

As I said, that is the problem. I do not think that the experience exists as a "thing" at all. There is only the process. It is the belief that the experience is actually some "thing" that leads to dualism, and all the various problems entailed by it. Materialism suffers from no such problems. It simply requires you to get of the intuitive notion of your experiences being some "thing", rather that simply the process of your brain doing what it does.

Dr. Stupid
 
Stimpson :

Yes, I already acknowledged that. Unfortunately, such a solipsistic philosophy is completely useless. If there is nothing more to reality than our experiences, then there is no way to construct a reliable method for understanding reality.

How long are you going to go on pushing the lie that idealism is the same thing as solipsism? You must have been told fifty times why it isn't. Solipsism involves the denial that other humans are conscious in the way you are. Nobody here is proposing that, and you know perfectly well that nobody here is proposing it. :(

As for 'a reliable method of understanding reality' - science is the reliable method for understanding reality. You can still posit materialism as a working tool in order to explain the behaviour of what we perceive as an external world. Nothing has changed except that you have to acknowledge that materialism is just a useful working assumption and not absolute truth. In other words, nothing has changed apart from materialism and science must relinquish their claims to be able to fully explain all of reality. Interestingly enough, in an article in this weeks New Scientist entitled "The Mind of God - Hawkings Epiphany", Mr Hawking has explained precisely this - That a TOE may be forever unacheivable and that science must accept that religion and philosophy may have to take precedence over science in some areas of thought. Even more interestingly it was the existence of Infinity, rather than the problem of consciousness, that led him to make this statement.



quote:
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It seems that materialism is in a state of denial.
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That is because you are grossly misinterpreting what materialism is.

Is he?

Actually I see a man who has seen materialism for precisely what it is : institutionalised denial of truths which lead to conclusions considered unacceptable by the materialists.




2) Science can only describe reality in terms of our experiences by extracting reliable information from those experiences, and this can only be done by assuming that the experience is an interaction with reality, and not the reality itself. Thus the above axiom is a necessary one for science to function.


*****It makes no difference to science whether the physical Universe self-exists as matter or exists as information in the realm of Mind. All that matters is that it behaves in an objective manner and is shared.*****
 
UndercoverElephant said:
Stimpson:
How long are you going to go on pushing the lie that idealism is the same thing as solipsism? You must have been told fifty times why it isn't. Solipsism involves the denial that other humans are conscious in the way you are. Nobody here is proposing that, and you know perfectly well that nobody here is proposing it.

But, you told me that when we realised that reality is composed of synchronicities, then "solipsism becomes true". In fact, the Metamind resembles solipsism, but I could be wrong in my interpretation.



Interestingly enough, in an article in this weeks New Scientist entitled "The Mind of God - Hawkings Epiphany", Mr Hawking has explained precisely this - That a TOE may be forever unacheivable and that science must accept that religion and philosophy may have to take precedence over science in some areas of thought. Even more interestingly it was the existence of Infinity, rather than the problem of consciousness, that led him to make this statement.

Ummm..... I don't want to be nasty but Mr Hawking did not make any reference or implied that religion and philosophy could substitute Science's role in some areas of thought. He just said that black holes information has a limit and this eliminates the possibility that a theory of everything could use an infinite density of information.


Q
 

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