Sy Borg wrote: ↑June 12th, 2021, 7:08 pm
Not long ago, wondering what came before the Big bang was considered a question of questionable coherence. Things change, especially in frontier areas of science.
Yes, it was "not long ago" we didn't have any observations on the first moments of Big Bang so we didn't have any epistemic foundations on projecting the implications of the laws of physics in our metaphysics. This changed with our technological advances in our observations.
Not long ago, we assumed the idea of chemical transmutation of metals was possible...now we know that we need to act at a subatomic level with immense quantities of power to alter metals.
So, as you can see, things can go both ways. Your arguments is more of a fallacious cherry picking than a real reason to start taking the "hard problem" of Chalmers seriously, plus we are dealing with ''why" questions when nature and science doesn't do "whys" without any demonstration that "why" is real
That said I will point out that the concept of "a brute or raw experience" is identified in Philosophy of Mind as a "Cataleptic Impression".
Cataleptic Impression is nothing more than a stimuli picked up by our sensory system and carried in our brain by our nervous system. There the brain tries to produce a narrative based on previous experiences and the best empirically verified interpretation (this is why we don't leave babies on their own, because they don't have their own narrative of this wold yet and that can be really dangerous for them).
We can experience such moments of raw experience where we stare at something, possibly from a different angle and be baffled and unable to process what we are really seeing. This is because the narrative of that image hasn't been installed by any previous experiences.Spiritual experiences are also a type of raw experience, which can be caused by all sort of physical environmental and organic stimuli. Since the narrative isn't there, we rush to reason by projecting our biased narrative on those experiences.
So in the case of the "brutal raw experience", we can agree for its value as a question, but in your insistence on equating "why" questions about a mind property with our questions about the moments before the big bang, I will disagree and direct you to the above reasons.
Still, once you are looking at human consciousness, you are already quite a long way from the source. It's akin to being on the ISS, trying to observe honey badgers on the Earth.
And how would you know that? In science we observe the necessary and sufficient mechanisms responsible for enabling this state, we identify the mechanism responsible for its content and how we can alter it and affect it. Science disagrees with your statement and since it is far more systematic and methodological way to know things why should we ever consider any of these philosophical objections?
Hw can you demonstrate the truth value of your claim?
Yes, we need to track back from the neuron
-Again, why and what is your evidence? And if we quit on neuron....what is there to observe investigate and test.....Philosophical ideas?How can we even construct an epistemology without direct Strong Correlations, verification through accurate predictions and application to all the above in reall life technical applications.
I would, as discussed, look back into microbial sensory organelles. Yes, it's a long way from the extreme complexity of human brains and minds. Many claim that consciousness is indivisible, like a river is indivisible, but consciousness is composed of interconnected reflexes in roughly the same way as water is composed of connected molecules.
-You are distracted by the label. Just because we label a process it doesn't mean it is an "indivisible entity". Its a process which enables organisms with brains to be aroused by stimuli and process them based on their previous interpretations of those stimuli. When you are awake, snapping my fingers will be more than enough to make your brain direct your attention to me. Then the connections of your brain provide the necessary info (stored by previous experiences of similar phenomena) for the content of your current conscious experience.
None of the concepts of "indivisibility, or rivers or waters or connected molecules offer anything of value in the conversation. Studying the mechanisms enabling the arousal of the specific area (ARASystem) and how the other areas of our brain store the interpretations of previous experiences and provide it when is needed is the way to do it. Sorry but your lines above is a classic example of woo and deepities.
One might argue that a water molecule does not have the properties of water; that a molecule is not "wet", just as reflexes don't have self-awareness. That's emergence, where a connected group develops qualities that its individuals do not, eg. Humanity builds skyscrapers and space stations, which individual humans cannot.
That is the whole idea behind emergence. You can look individual water molecules under a powerful microscope and you will never see, the property of surface tension, the proper of two explosive molecules to have fire extinguishing properties , or why water expands when frozen, or why it can exist in all 3 states etc etc.
All weird properties of water emerge from its structure ....not by the properties found in its individual molecules.
So, while there are clear differences between reflexes and consciousness, there are fundamental similarities. There is nothing in nature closer to consciousness than reflexes. I do not believe in "biological machines" exist, that sensing is actually felt by relatively tiny and subtle life forms in much the same way as Brownian motion is unimportant to beings of our size but significant to microbes.
-I am not sure you that you use a proper definition of consciousness. Consciousness is the brain state that allow us to be aware of a reflex after it happens. There was a great study where doctors were stimulating the part of the brain that jerked their patients' arm. Doctors asked every individual why they did that and ALL provided a narrative on why it was their "choice" to...."point to the nurse".
Biological "machines" and mechanisms exist in all organisms. Plants are a great example of that. Our reflexes and our Autonomic nervous system are too.
So, if organisms are sensing and responding to their environment to obtain food and to avoid threats, then they would seem to be experiencing some simple sense of being alive, just that the mechanisms behind it are still to be explored.
-Correct, the unconscious self awareness is a driving force for every living organism with a brain stem.
Or panpsychism might be correct, that consciousness exists in ever greater subtlety and simplicity, the further down one drills. Or materialism might be correct and the situation is closer to the conceptions you prefer. It would be nice if research was not so much about human brains but, if I am the one paying for research grants, I'd also wanting projects that make a difference in medicine rather than blue skies work.
That is a fallacious statement. Consciousness is not something in existence. Its a biological process that produces a property which allows organisms to be aware, record aspects of their environment and by utilizing other areas and properties of the brain to inform their future experiences caused by known stimuli.
So Panpsychism is nothing more than a poisoning the well fallacy based on an irrational and unfounded existential claim (consciousness being a substance in nature).
Materialism is also an indefensible worldview. We don't need to accept a burden of an absolute claim! We can only focus on what we currently know and what we can investigate!(Methodological naturalism).
-"It would be nice if research was not so much about human brains but, if I am the one paying for research grants, I'd also wanting projects that make a difference in medicine rather than blue skies work."
-We can not research something which its existence, as a substance or indivisible entity, isn't verified!. We also can not study mechanisms that do not display Strong Correlations with the phenomenon in question.
This is supernaturalism, we currently don't have a method to investigate the "possibility" of mind properties in addition to nature.
We have been assuming those principles for centuries. Only after the scientific revolution and by replacing those principles with those of methodological naturalism we managed to advance our understanding and epistemology.
Essentially you are demanding from science to go back to an epistemically failed set of principles...back in the dark ages of knowledge.