Atla wrote: ↑March 5th, 2022, 8:03 am
GrayArea wrote: ↑March 5th, 2022, 7:47 am
Atla wrote: ↑March 3rd, 2022, 4:27 pm
SteveKlinko wrote: ↑March 3rd, 2022, 3:58 pm
It is completely Sensible to say that Neural Activity causes the Conscious Experience. If it does not, then the proper Explanation will show why the Inter Mind is misguided. But there is no proper Explanation, so we should stick with what we know and what is Sensible. We should especially not make assumptions like that Neural Activity doesn't cause Conscious Experience. From a Systems Engineering and Signal Processing process flow point of view your Assumption is misguided. The Conscious Experience most certainly does seem like a further stage after the Neural Processing. It is just not Sensible to say they are the same thing.
It's not completely sensible, it's profoundly insane. And you won't be able to show otherwise.
I think that Neural Activity causes the Conscious Experience, but also...vice versa. They're simply interconnected.
It may sound off-putting at first, but hear me out.
First of all, my assumption is that you agree that the only way the materials that compose our physical body—such as our neuron cells—can move and be active is because each of its components communicate in their own language which is laws of physics which activates one another.
So moving on, the basic idea that I want to propose is that if our standard definition of Conscious Experience is pretty much what controls this whole movement/activation of materials while also being aware of it, then it should theoretically be equal to the dialectic system of language, which laws of physics operate on. As in, the very reason why the laws of physics can be used as a language.
Other than that instance...Conscious Experience, to me, is pointless to bring up when it comes to discussing consciousness, because its role has already been fulfilled through us being what we are.
I see no reason to think that the movement of all things in the universe isn't a given. (Whether or not everything is genuinely moving or only apparently moving, is beside the point here.)
We derive the laws of physics from what is given. Everything is already moving by itself, no additional activation or control seems to be needed.
The movement of all things in the universe is a given, only because what makes them happen is a given. In this case, the laws of physics. Yes, we derive the laws of physics from what is given, but that can also mean that we simply discover the fact that what is given to us(events) is controlled by the laws of physics. Patterns of events or what makes them happen, so to speak.
Adding on, there is no additional activation or controlling of reality when it comes to consciousness. Perhaps I may have been a bit confusing with my wording here, but what I tried to convey in my previous response was that Conscious Experience is simply a "part" of the communication between the consequences of the laws of physics which govern the Neural Experience.
That when I said [Additional] "activation", I meant it as a part of the consequences of the laws of physics, where neuron cells would be activated through electrochemical reactions which follow the laws of physics, causing it to send signals to each other. Not "something required to activate/control" the laws of physics.
Moving on, here you said that:
"And if with neural activity and conscious experience we've described the same thing twice, as the case seems to be, then that one thing can't be two things that are interconnected."
Yes, it is possible for that one unified idea of consciousness to be two things that are interconnected (Neural Experience and Conscious Experience), because it was already solidified to be a description for both of them. As in, because it was already defined as both of those two things that are interconnected.
The only role of Conscious Experience here is allowing us to talk about what creates Conscious Experience, not to be used as one of the key ideas regarding that topic. The key lies in the Neural Experience, which we perceive through Conscious Experience.
We perceive gray and argue about whether it's black or white.