Consul wrote: ↑May 29th, 2020, 12:16 pm
Gertie wrote: ↑May 29th, 2020, 7:14 amThat's an awful lot to reply to!
I read the first 3 quotes, and they're stating different opinions, which I do understand exist.
Could you highlight the points and quotes you think I need to reply to, and why? Or perhaps summarise your continuing objections to my view, supplemented with one or two quotes, and/or say why you think your view is better in a similar way?
I do appreciate the time, knowledge and background info you bring to these discussions. But I'd like to try to stay focussed on the views and reasoning which you and I favour on the issue of Subject and Self, to try to keep the exchange manageable - at my end at least!
Okay. The three central questions:
1. Do experiences depend on experiencers/subjects of experience?
(My answer is yes.)
2. Are experiencers/subjects of experience different from their experiences (by being nonexperiences)?
(My answer is yes.)
3. What kind of entities are experiencers/subjects of experience (or "selves", "egos")?
(My answer is that natural subjects are animals: I am a human animal, so my existence, persistence, and identity conditions are those of human animals.)
The self-consciousness of corporeal, organismal "selves" comes in different degrees or levels of evolutionary development. Phenomenally conscious bodies or organisms are more or less cognitively, intellectually or perceptually conscious of themselves, of their physical states and their mental ones.
Thanks Consul
My summary position position is -
What makes me worth calling a Me, is all about my experiential states. The underlying explanation for how that ties in with our materialist model of the world is an open question.
TLDR version -
I'm suggesting we start by examining what we mean by terms like Subject and Self. What constitutes such a thing.
And I'm suggesting it is essentially experiential. The properties which constitute being a Me, rather than just another object 'out there', lie in the way experience manifests.
In humans experiential content and the ways it manifests results in a Sense of being a discrete, unified, first person pov moving through space and time correlated to a specific body acting in an 'external' world. These properties enable us to have a mental model of our Self which we are aware of, can introspect, and give traits and agency to in the context of our overall model of the world, how it works and how we fit in.
This is what being a Self, a Subject, a Me, means (for humans). And I'm suggesting treating that as our foundational starting point for thinking about Selves and Subjects. (Rather than trying to use as foundational our current materialist model of the how the world works, and materialist based ways of thinking and associated causality ingrained in the grammatical structures we think in. Subject --> verb --> Object. Then seeing how that sense of self might fit in).
Then once we agree what we're talking about, we can explore the explanation for how that Sense of Self arises. From idealism to reductive materialism, and all the isms in between. That's an open question.
So whether it makes sense to talk of Experiencers as something different from the experiencing, will depend on the (as yet unknown) mind-body relationship. There is a fact of the matter explanation for the correlation we observe between some substrates/physical processes and associated experiential states, but we don't know what it is. If/when we do, we can know whether the questions and answers you give here are getting to the heart of that relationship, or a mis-framing of what's really going on.
So it might or might not be appropriate to use a dualistic framing of Substrate/Experiencer and Experiencing. You believe the evidence points to that being a reality based appropriate type of framing, and you could be right. I happen to think we're probably missing some more fundamental understanding of how the world works, which might make that type of framing inappropriate.
Never-the-less, this experiential Sense of Self is real, and has properties which are inherently experiential, and those are what I've tried to encapsulate in my sorta definition.