JamesOfSeattle wrote: ↑July 7th, 2018, 4:43 pm
anonymous66 wrote: ↑July 7th, 2018, 4:10 pmAnd furthermore, I believe it is the case that anyone who does accept mental states is by definition, not a physicalist.
Mental states have mental properties. If mental properties are real, then physicalism is false.
Well that explains it. If you’re defining consciousness as something that cannot have a physical explanation, then there’s nothing I can say. You can define it to mean anything you want. All I can say is that when I talk about consciousness, I am talking about how I experience a red ball, or the thought that I will go walk to the store, and all the things I’m talking about have a physical explanation.
So all is physical, and mental states are not an illusion? Your brain really is doing its physical stuff, and you have a non-physical mind that is thinking and emoting, and intending and feeling?
From my point of view, I have a physical body that includes my brain. And I have a mind that perceives and dreams and imagines and plans and reasons. The 2 interact. Physical states can cause mental states: When I cut my body, I experience a mental state-pain. And mental states can cause physical states: My mental state of desire to go to the store causes my physical body to go to the store. My mental state of embarrassment causes my physical body to blush.
As far as a definition of consciousness? I see no reason to disagree with how the term is used by the Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy:
2. Concepts of Consciousness
The words “conscious” and “consciousness” are umbrella terms that cover a wide variety of mental phenomena. Both are used with a diversity of meanings, and the adjective “conscious” is heterogeneous in its range, being applied both to whole organisms—creature consciousness—and to particular mental states and processes—state consciousness (Rosenthal 1986, Gennaro 1995, Carruthers 2000).