Brains create consciousness?

In summary, the topic of whether the brain creates consciousness or not is a complex and highly debated issue. While some may have religious convictions that deny the brain's role in consciousness, or misunderstandings about neuroscience and medicine that support it, the issue is not as simple as it seems. There are many different metaphysical options, including materialism, physicalism, idealism, panpsychism, and more. Panpsychism, for example, argues that the brain is not the sole source of consciousness and that even single-celled organisms may have a subjective experience. The role of non-neuronal cells in the body and environmental influences on consciousness also raise questions. Ultimately, there is still a need for a rigorous test to determine the
  • #71
Nismar,

I think you missed the point, which was that the line between us and the universe is not defined.
 
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  • #72
Pythagorean said:
Nismar,

I think you missed the point, which was that the line between us and the universe is not defined.

That isn't an argument for it being alive, any more than it is for us being inert, nor either being conscious. A lack of ability to draw precise definitions is wiggle room for mysticism, not a basis for serious thought in my view.
 
  • #73
nismaratwork said:
So, when a dog mistakes its reflection for another dog, it's proof of consciousness? When you clip the antennae of an insect, thus causing it confusion, it's conscious? Are you sure about that?
I don't think i understand your point here. You are asking me if dogs and insects that can see and have misconceptions would qualify as conscious beings according to my definition? They would. Anything that has an experience would qualify.
 
  • #74
pftest said:
I don't think i understand your point here. You are asking me if dogs and insects that can see and have misconceptions would qualify as conscious beings according to my definition? They would. Anything that has an experience would qualify.

To be fair, I ignored your definition in favor of what the word actually means. By your definition Watson is as conscious as an ant, just not in a way we recognize.

And the support to take the place of the miserable results google provided?
 
  • #75
nismaratwork said:
That isn't an argument for it being alive, any more than it is for us being inert, nor either being conscious. A lack of ability to draw precise definitions is wiggle room for mysticism, not a basis for serious thought in my view.

And that's exactly my point about the idea of "self". Have you watched the TED video I posted in the other thread?

The point is that we can "turn off" the part of our brain that gives us the feeling that we're individuals separate from the universe. This is one of the many finding of neuroethology that implies a role for the brain in consciousness.

There's much neuropsychology research in this (the spatial aspect: finding parts of the brain that give us a reference frame) as associated with dissociative disorders. Once you lose the reference frame, you experience what Jill Bolte Taylor did. The semantic concept of "I" begins to evaporate.

So the idea of "self" is just as mystic as the idea of being "one with the universe". Where do we go from there (not implying panpsychism must be true, but that it's only as faulty as the alternative, still-lingering idea of a "soul" that is required to justify the "self" as independent from the universe).
 
  • #76
Pythagorean said:
And that's exactly my point about the idea of "self". Have you watched the TED video I posted in the other thread?

The point is that we can "turn off" the part of our brain that gives us the feeling that we're individuals separate from the universe. This is one of the many finding of neuroethology that implies a role for the brain in consciousness.

There's much neuropsychology research in this (the spatial aspect: finding parts of the brain that give us a reference frame) as associated with dissociative disorders. Once you lose the reference frame, you experience what Jill Bolte Taylor did. The semantic concept of "I" begins to evaporate.

This is all very interesting fromt he POV of neurology, but others can still identify even the most dissociated individual as a discrete individual. The sense of being unique, or having a discrete self, or not, these are variable without the extremes of hemispherectomy. In my view, it's a side-show without any material insight except that taking chunks out of people's brains when they're not very young tends to end poorly.

People can lose the discrete sense of self through other means, but at no time to they experience a universal phenomenon of not BEING a self-contained "I", only their perception changes. For it to be something valid as more than the personal experience, I would expect others to be similarly aware of this loss of personhood. We're only aware of the changes in perception, and processing.

Pythagorean said:
So the idea of "self" is just as mystic as the idea of being "one with the universe". Where do we go from there (not implying panpsychism must be true, but that it's only as faulty as the alternative, still-lingering idea of a "soul" that is required to justify the "self" as independent from the universe).

I disagree; the sense of self appears to be an adaptation for a social animal of our type, period. It implies nothing greater, anymore than a pile of sand ceasing to be pile-like implies anything more than a limit to our descritive abilities.
 
  • #77
Pythagorean said:
Nismar,

I think you missed the point, which was that the line between us and the universe is not defined.

No, but as per #55, the point is that it gets defined. Life is defined by its ability to make that strong epistemic cut. That separation between nucleic code and protein, for example. The separation that creates that aspect of a complex system which is not subject to Newtonian determinism.
 
  • #78
dear Pythagorean and other participants,

i wonder if it would be useful to make a distinction between the property of existence and the property of reality. i don't mean actual existence and actual truth, but just the ideas of each.

it seems to me that we use the idea of a property of existence to refer to an either/or situation, a digital situation, such that we may say that a given thing either possesses this property or it doesn't, it either exists or it doesn't.

on the other hand, we may refer to various stages of reality. for example, most people would say that an hallucination is less real than a memory of something which really happened, which in turn is less real than, say, a car or a building.

so 'existence' is a digital property and 'reality' is an analog property. does this seem right so far?

bax
 
  • #79
So, when a dog mistakes its reflection for another dog, it's proof of consciousness? When you clip the antennae of an insect, thus causing it confusion, it's conscious? Are you sure about that?

You see this is kind of what I was getting at in that the term "consciousness" is just not well-defined. I would say an animal is most likely conscious. Though, I would agree and say that most likely is not a sufficient condition for concluding consciousness. But again, the word is so fuzzy it may very well be true if we believe bios and mind are identical to some extent. Again, though this seems to require a more concrete inferencing structure (i.e. scientific model) and more information.

That isn't an argument for it being alive, any more than it is for us being inert, nor either being conscious. A lack of ability to draw precise definitions is wiggle room for mysticism, not a basis for serious thought in my view.

Yet another aspect of its loosness, I don't know if he was arguing the universe is alive, but then what is consciousness without life? Again, it seems to not mean anything, or atleast nowhere near whatever it means now. If it doesn't simply mean "Everything has it's own POV" which could be quite quantum, then I don't see what it means. I don't see how we could apply the concept of "internal experience" to atoms. Unless, as said before we argue on the basis of it having to logically be the case because the emergence of life from non-life involves a contradiction, but I already voiced my concerns about making ontological conclusions from logical concerns.

Essentially, it could or could not be true, depending on how it is meant as such it is tautologous and not useful. We simply do not know enough to delineate at the present the lines between conscious and non-conscious. We don't know enough about our own brains, we don't know enough about the origins of life and cells. It may turn out the definition of "consciousness" or "life" could require some degree of internal complexity and some mix of control processes and, being that inorganic matter doesn't have this it can't be classified as alive. Until then arguing that the whole world could be conscious seems like sophistry...I mean how do you actually "believe" not just entertain the notion of, but believe that the keyboard you are using right now is "conscious" in the sense that we now mean it. The monitor, everything.

Then imprecision is contagious. Now we have a situation where electromagnetic fields are conscious. Space is conscious. It starts to seem like conscious either means something completely different, or it means nothing.

Quantum fields, where particles "live" on the order of microseconds or whatever the number is, yep they're conscious too. ... I don't know, I can't make sense of it.
 
  • #80
baxishta said:
dear Pythagorean and other participants,

i wonder if it would be useful to make a distinction between the property of existence and the property of reality. i don't mean actual existence and actual truth, but just the ideas of each.

it seems to me that we use the idea of a property of existence to refer to an either/or situation, a digital situation, such that we may say that a given thing either possesses this property or it doesn't, it either exists or it doesn't.

on the other hand, we may refer to various stages of reality. for example, most people would say that an hallucination is less real than a memory of something which really happened, which in turn is less real than, say, a car or a building.

so 'existence' is a digital property and 'reality' is an analog property. does this seem right so far?

bax

You mean: There is the internal experience, the internal disturbed experience, internal experience that is verified by external consensus (the car)?

@JDStupi: No doubt, it's not exactly a clear bright line, but science demands we don't leap to far ahead, or see ourselves as too unique or the epitome of conscious complexity. Still, for the universe to be alive, we would have to be a living part of the total system, along with every vacuum fluctation as you mentioned. If that IS the case, I doubt that we have the capacity to deteremine it, not to mention that recession velocities mean that the universe couldn't have thoughts that would ever fully permeate its... itself. There's a lot wrong with a "live fields/universe" concept... it's a leap too far in my view.

That however, does not clarify what it means to be conscious as a human, or a dog, or an ant. It SEEMS that we're sentient, dog's have their moments, and ants are basically genetic computers. I doubt that's the whole story in any of those cases, but it's certainly closer to convention.
 
  • #81
apeiron said:
No, but as per #55, the point is that it gets defined. Life is defined by its ability to make that strong epistemic cut. That separation between nucleic code and protein, for example. The separation that creates that aspect of a complex system which is not subject to Newtonian determinism.

So then by this view, where is the self in a slime mold? In the individual cells? Or in the slug they become? Do each of my individual cells have a sense of self, then?

nismaratwork said:
I disagree; the sense of self appears to be an adaptation for a social animal of our type, period. It implies nothing greater, anymore than a pile of sand ceasing to be pile-like implies anything more than a limit to our descritive abilities.

You say you disagree... but it seems to me that you exactly agree by the rest of your paragraph! To me, it seems that you previously wanted to give it a higher position than what you just said now.
 
  • #82
JDStupi said:
I agree with the first part and the second, so long as we are speaking about people. Once we extend the concept of "experience" beyond people, we don't know what it is like.

And this may be the case, because then you would say that the descriptions of the behaviors of the systems or what have you at various levels are extensionally equivalent to the word "consciousness". My problem is, as we know, extensional equivalence doesn't imply intensional equivalence, and the "connotations" of saying "Everything is conscious" is quite different from what most people would think that means. Simply saying "Everything is conscious" solves nothing.

Under your definition, it may be less problematic, but then it may simply be trivially true, insofar as everything must have its own POV on the universe, and if that is all that is said, then I agree. It's just the concept of "internal experience" being tied to how you or I experience, seems to lose its clarity the further from humanity we go. The only way we could extend the concept is with an abstract structure for inferencing similarities of what happens in conscious beings. This could be provided by apeiron's structures or other scientific models and then we would be able to speak about everything being "conscious", or not and in what way, but until then it doesn't seem very illuminating to say "everything is conscious". But who knows, maybe you weren't saying it was illuminating just that it was or could be and it took all of this to come to some understanding.

Funny, how we can argue so much and be not all that far off. We are just not seeing quite eye-to-eye insofar as the significance of the argument is concerned, but it doesn't seem our views are entirely incompatible or opposed. It seems we had to "show the fly the way out of the jar" and untie the "meanings" behind our speech. Even then we may not see quite eye-to-eye, but diversity is beautiful. So long as your thinking and I'm thinking and nobody is completely dogmatic (for we all have our unseen dogmas) then whatever, "Different Strokes".
Yes i certainly did not mean that simpler things than humans brains still have humanlike experiences. The human brain is very complex so maybe i should call it complex C, while the simplest form of consciousness should be called simple C.

My argument currently is merely about whether C exists beyond brains, and not the practical value of such an idea.
 
  • #83
nismaratwork,

i'm sorry but i don't really understand how you're using those terms.

i'm just asking if it's reasonable to say that, when we wonder if something exists, we're usually picking between a 'yes' and a 'no'.

and that, when we wonder if something is real, we feel free to choose from more than two options.

bax
 
  • #84
Pythagorean said:
So then by this view, where is the self in a slime mold? In the individual cells? Or in the slug they become? Do each of my individual cells have a sense of self, then?

They don't become a slug, they are just acting in concert at great proximity. At no point does an individual cell contribute to a greater awareness, only greater physical abilities in response to environmental cues.



Pythagorean said:
You say you disagree... but it seems to me that you exactly agree by the rest of your paragraph! To me, it seems that you previously wanted to give it a higher position than what you just said now.

I'm sorry, I don't understand, truly I'm not being coy here. What do you mean?
 
  • #85
baxishta said:
nismaratwork,

i'm sorry but i don't really understand how you're using those terms.

i'm just asking if it's reasonable to say that, when we wonder if something exists, we're usually picking between a 'yes' and a 'no'.

and that, when we wonder if something is real, we feel free to choose from more than two options.

bax

This is something dynamicists do with digital models: turn them into discrete models. This his been especially productive in neuroethology and even genomics: now gene expression is no longer "on" or "off"; we now have a molecular network based on the interactions between mRNA and transcription factors. There is a fuzzily defined "on state" and "off state" but it's recognized as a qualitative, human classification system of the many infinite states from "on" to "off" in that dynamic network.
 
  • #86
baxishta said:
nismaratwork,

i'm sorry but i don't really understand how you're using those terms.

i'm just asking if it's reasonable to say that, when we wonder if something exists, we're usually picking between a 'yes' and a 'no'.

and that, when we wonder if something is real, we feel free to choose from more than two options.

bax

Think of it this way: all we know is what we experience within our brains, and our conclusions can be:

-Everything is in our heads (Solipsism)
-Everything we experience is in our heads, based on environmental stimuli, and internal actions.
-We experience distorted views of an external reality or figments of our minds, but they are not the norm, and are unique to the individual (hallucinations, paranoia, delusion, dreams etc). Often these are related to external stimuli, but they don't have to be.
-Our experience is personal and internal, but we believe what we see, and when others agree that we're looking at the same thing, we are confident that it has objective reality.
-Our experience is somehow diffuse, a shared experience, and we're each points in that field of consciousness (I do NOT believe this)
 
  • #87
Second option is "Ethology".

nismaratwork said:
They don't become a slug, they are just acting in concert at great proximity. At no point does an individual cell contribute to a greater awareness, only greater physical abilities in response to environmental cues.

That's fair, but the transition from a unicellular community of organisms to a single multicellular organism did still happen, no? The question is still relevant.

I'm sorry, I don't understand, truly I'm not being coy here. What do you mean?

You said:

People can lose the discrete sense of self through other means, but at no time to they experience a universal phenomenon of not BEING a self-contained "I", only their perception changes. For it to be something valid as more than the personal experience, I would expect others to be similarly aware of this loss of personhood. We're only aware of the changes in perception, and processing.

You seem to starting with the assumption that self is fundamental.

And others do experience the loss of personhood. Dissociative symptoms are the third most common symptoms among general public that do not have mental disorders, after anxiety and depression.

And of course, as you may have gathered by now, I have had several dissociative experiences myself.

People can lose the discrete sense of self through other means, but at no time to they experience a universal phenomenon of not BEING a self-contained "I"

By the way, two things here. To your first point above, I didn't mean to say hemispheric rivalry was the only source of dissociation; just wanted to provide a concrete example.

To the second point, how can you know what others experience. Do you not believe the people who claim to have this experience, to lose their sense of self? How can you have a definitive answer about what other people experience while not trusting their reporting? Do you base it only on your experience? How do you know you're not one of the people that is say, right brain dominant, and that your personal feelings about "self" are more integrated into your world model than other people and so your more reluctant to let go of it?
 
  • #88
nismaratwork said:
-Everything we experience is in our heads, based on environmental stimuli, and internal actions.
-We experience distorted views of an external reality or figments of our minds, but they are not the norm, and are unique to the individual (hallucinations, paranoia, delusion, dreams etc). Often these are related to external stimuli, but they don't have to be.
-Our experience is personal and internal, but we believe what we see, and when others agree that we're looking at the same thing, we are confident that it has objective reality.

actually, all three of these seem congruent with ethology.
 
  • #89
pftest said:
Well i must start by saying that I am not declaring consciousness to be an opposite of, or distinct from the material. I am not saying there is a dichotomy. It is the physicalists/materialists who hold that consciousness is unlike rocks, atoms, etc. In their view only brains possesses consciousness, and whatever consciousness is, it is completely absent in non-brains.

While i do not understand all of apeirons arguments (and i have not read them all either), i do think his ideas are compabtible with the view that there is a degree of consciousness in everything. This is based on a brief conversation (see here) i had with him maybe a year ago.

The problem with "consciousness" as has been so often said is that it conflates a whole lot of ideas. Like saying universe, it is a label so general that its meaning becomes vague in practice.

All terms, to be clear, must be dichotomously defined. The simplest way to achieve a dichotomy is as a negation. So if we have conscious, then its complementary condition must be...un-conscious. Or non-conscious. But very plainly, a simple negation does not actually say anything new. You are still left none the wiser about the meaning of the orginal term. You have created no context. You have suppressed no other meanings.

It is like saying a cat is a cat and anything that is not a cat is not a cat because it possesses the property of non-catness. Both true and trivial.

So you cannot use a term like consciousness in serious scientific or metaphysical conversation unless you have a formally complementary term that creates the matching context which can give your utterances meaning.

I can for example state "discrete" as a word with clear and unambiguous meaning because I have the complementary term "continuous". The same with atom~void, local~global, vague~crisp, and many other metaphysically valid terms.

But unless you (or anyone else) can spell out the formally complementary notion to conscious, then there just isn't a philosophical or scientific conversation going on.

There are many complementary pairings that do have enough validity to get useful conversations going.

We can distinguish between attention and habit. Or between ideas and impressions. Or anticipations and surprises. Or self and other. All quite straightforward and uncontroversial psychological dichotomies where we know what we are talking about because we have the neuroscientific models and the experimental evidence. "Consciousness" is no mystery when framed in those kinds of discussions.

Again, stepping back to a general systems perspective on complex systems, we have good dichotomies like Pattee's epistemic cut - the crisp divide into rate dependent dynamics and rate independent information. Or the global constraints and local construction of hierarchy theory.

Even mind and matter is a dichotomy. Or subjective and objective. They are of course not great as dichotomies because the notion of matter turns out to be poorly defined. And so does the notion of objective. If one end of a dichotomy is weak or vague, then so is the other.

But consciousness is a spectacularly ill-defined term as people use it without any kind of partner concept at all. This is why pan-psychism is so easily believed, why souls or spirits seem so plausible. With no crisp boundaries to prevent us, we can spread a word like consciousness as far as we like. A bad term covers all cases because it carries no proper sense of what it is not.

Metaphysics depends on robust dichotomies, ones that carve up the terrain of possibility into precisely complementary alternatives.

Consciousness is a word defined by "what it is like to be", which is what makes it so useless (except for perpetuating mysteries). To be any use, it would have to be clearly defined in terms of what it is not.
 
  • #90
Yea, I agree. The concept only is meaningful if it is completely re-defined, but if it is then we need a word for what we now call consciousness. So why engage? Yea, haha what are the conclusions of special and general relativity and for the universe's thoughts?...And Bell's inequalities, haha..God is the Absolute Idea which is the Universal Consciousness pervading all of space and time, haha and you bet your bottom dollar that'll find it's way on some crazy website or New Age publication. And you can also bet that they'll all be Bohmians too, in order to avoid God not being able to determine himself, since he can do everything. That solves Free will too, since we are actually God we are determined by God...Black Holes are where god craps out universes...Woohooo, we have officially solved many philosophical problems

...It's entertaining . Haha, excuse me for my poor Cosmic Joke. But yea, I think that we shouldn't take huge leaps in the hopes of solving the problem. Conceptual clarification is a good thing, conceptual abuse is not.
 
  • #91
Pythagorean said:
Second option is "Ethology".



That's fair, but the transition from a unicellular community of organisms to a single multicellular organism did still happen, no? The question is still relevant.

That's very much a matter of perspective, and I'd say you simply have a close colony acting in concert; to say that it becomes a multicellular organism is to equate a school of fish with a giant fish because of proximity and synchronized behavior.



You said:



You seem to starting with the assumption that self is fundamental.[/quote]

No, it's not fundamental, it clearly develops over time and is subject to alteration or loss without destruction of sentience and consciousness. It is however, fundamentally COMMON among humans, and even dissociative events due to drugs, trauma, or mental illness are not uncommon. Note that none of the change in internal perception of self would confuse another human from identifying you as a distinct and separate (if odd in terms of behavior) consciousness. No melding or sharing occurs, despite perceptions to the contrary, do you see what I mean?

Pythagorean said:
And others do experience the loss of personhood. Dissociative symptoms are the third most common symptoms among general public that do not have mental disorders, after anxiety and depression.

Anxiety, Trauma (anxiety in spades), depression (with co-morbid anxiety), and of course powerful psychedelics can cause dissociative experiences, or "ego death". This is to the conscious sense of self as epilepsy is to the conscious control of the body.

Pythagorean said:
And of course, as you may have gathered by now, I have had several dissociative experiences myself.

I hadn't, but it really has no bearing on the discussion. I don't think more or less of you for it, and I wouldn't pry for details in a public forum of course. Still, it does give you insight into the internal experience that relatively few share, and are still able to communicate.


Pythagorean said:
By the way, two things here. To your first point above, I didn't mean to say hemispheric rivalry was the only source of dissociation; just wanted to provide a concrete example.

Gotcha, agreed.

Pythagorean said:
To the second point, how can you know what others experience. Do you not believe the people who claim to have this experience, to lose their sense of self? How can you have a definitive answer about what other people experience while not trusting their reporting? Do you base it only on your experience? How do you know you're not one of the people that is say, right brain dominant, and that your personal feelings about "self" are more integrated into your world model than other people and so your more reluctant to let go of it?

I believe that the loss of self, and joining with something MORE including others around them is not believable except as a valid internal experience. The event seems to provide no information that would not be present, merely a new perspective that COULD be found through other means. In short, if you feel at one with the universe, and the universe (including the people around you) don't experience you as being one with anything, I stick with the empirical angle.

If you (to quote a friend of mine who ate 'shrooms) are on a journey, but nobody else is involved and you come back with no more than when you left, it was an inwardly directed event, not an expansive one; it only felt like becoming diffuse and a part of something larger.

To your last point, I do indeed have a strong sense of self, but I've had the misfortune of being in a traumatic experience or two, and experienced brief if profound dissociation. I can't say that I found it to be anything meaningful except as a coping mechanism during a period of acute danger. By brief, I mean a few seconds by the way, I've never taken a hallucinogen.

Still, I'm not relying on personal experience or anecdote, so my own brain is really not much of an issue here (thankfully) and a good thing too, just ask some here how meager it is.
 
  • #92
Pythagorean said:
actually, all three of these seem congruent with ethology.

I'm only familiar with Ethology in passing, via Darwin, so I'll take your word for it.
 
  • #93
nismaratwork said:
That's very much a matter of perspective, and I'd say you simply have a close colony acting in concert; to say that it becomes a multicellular organism is to equate a school of fish with a giant fish because of proximity and synchronized behavior.

The idea of group minds and swarm intelligence is pretty respectable in science. Bodies are built on communication (apoptosis, etc).

So I have no problem seeing an ant colony as a form of "consciousness" - once that word is properly defined as a global state of intentionality that shapes the local actions of its parts.
 
  • #94
apeiron said:
The idea of group minds and swarm intelligence is pretty respectable in science. Bodies are built on communication (apoptosis, etc).

So I have no problem seeing an ant colony as a form of "consciousness" - once that word is properly defined as a global state of intentionality that shapes the local actions of its parts.

I agree, but then I'd have to constrain my example to Bulldog or Bullet Ants, instead of social ants. It's not that I'm against the notion of emergent systems behaviour, but any definition of "conscious" is unlikely to include a group-entity that cannot reflect on its totality.

A human can ponder the process of apoptosis (programmed cell death for the non-bio people) as it happens, as a part of us. An ant colony's behavior is a sum of its parts, but without any reflective or experiential capacity.
 
  • #95
To your last point, I do indeed have a strong sense of self, but I've had the misfortune of being in a traumatic experience or two, and experienced brief if profound dissociation. I can't say that I found it to be anything meaningful except as a coping mechanism during a period of acute danger. By brief, I mean a few seconds by the way, I've never taken a hallucinogen.

I haven't followed yours and Pythagorean's discussion enough to make any comments on it really. However I noticed this and I do wish to point out that not all Dissociative experiences are created equal. It also may not be a proper analogy to say "ego death" is to conscious experience what epilepsy is to bodily control. That is a highly negative connotation, and I'm quite certain it is not good. Many who report the experience of ego death can report it to be extremely peaceful and eye-opening and, though evidently mystical/spiritual experiences are still viewed skeptically in our society 100 years after William James, it wouldn't be wise to discount a whole type of experience because our Western minds don't like it. Dismissing different states of consciousness on the basis of it " just screwing up your brain" is to me philosophically naive. (Provided of course it is not like "Robo-tripping" or Dramamine which are used as deliriants and are actually doing no more than screwing up your brain, in the sense of damaging it.) A different state of consciousness can be valuable insofar as any different way of viewing things and gaining perspective is useful.


*edit* but in any case, I don't want this side-tracking your interesting discussions on group/individual consciousness and ethology
 
  • #96
JDStupi said:
I haven't followed yours and Pythagorean's discussion enough to make any comments on it really. However I noticed this and I do wish to point out that not all Dissociative experiences are created equal. It also may not be a proper analogy to say "ego death" is to conscious experience what epilepsy is to bodily control. That is a highly negative connotation, and I'm quite certain it is not good. Many who report the experience of ego death can report it to be extremely peaceful and eye-opening and, though evidently mystical/spiritual experiences are still viewed skeptically in our society 100 years after William James, it wouldn't be wise to discount a whole type of experience because our Western minds don't like it. Dismissing different states of consciousness on the basis of it " just screwing up your brain" is to me philosophically naive. (Provided of course it is not like "Robo-tripping" or Dramamine which are used as deliriants and are actually doing no more than screwing up your brain, in the sense of damaging it.) A different state of consciousness can be valuable insofar as any different way of viewing things and gaining perspective is useful.

I'm not in any way judging individual experiences, and I'm well aware of cholinergic toxidrome. To assign any value, positive or negative is only useful in asessing the lasting effects. If they're positive, it was a positive experience, if not, then not. That's a pretty lousy criteria by any scientific standard, East, West, North, South, or Fleem. (Fleem is JUST between North and Gorp, the eighth direction) :wink:
 
  • #97
nismaratwork said:
That's very much a matter of perspective, and I'd say you simply have a close colony acting in concert; to say that it becomes a multicellular organism is to equate a school of fish with a giant fish because of proximity and synchronized behavior.

Yes, but I moved past the slug to something like, say, a human, prior to it becoming a "multi-cellular" organism. Do you think there was a discrete jump from from the single organisms to the collective organism or do you think there was a smooth transition?

Let's talk your way about your brain: it's a multicellulalr organ equatable to a school of fish because of proximity and synchronized behavior. This neuron triggers that neuron, some vesicle release, this neuron goes, saying to fire up this endocrine system, which sets off this population of cells. It's just a bunch of single-cells transfering matter and energy (with information embedded in it) just like the slime mold is. To inject your own personal feelings into the brain isn't scientific.
No, it's not fundamental, it clearly develops over time and is subject to alteration or loss without destruction of sentience and consciousness. It is however, fundamentally COMMON among humans, and even dissociative events due to drugs, trauma, or mental illness are not uncommon. Note that none of the change in internal perception of self would confuse another human from identifying you as a distinct and separate (if odd in terms of behavior) consciousness. No melding or sharing occurs, despite perceptions to the contrary, do you see what I mean?

I agree with you by that specific way you state it, yes. Sharing of experiences occurs from having the same (i.e. very similar) external and internal forces. More likely with kin, more likely to lead to cooperation.

Collective consciousness means all the knowledge you learn in school that you practice and enforce and live by but that you really have no personal experience with. Society has transmitted information to you so that you can indirectly experience something that your ancestors already experienced. So information gets carried with you that could be completely false and have nothing to do with your experiences or the real world at all. So a big part of you and who you are, your self, your consciousness, is determined by the information imparted on you by society. You're head has been filled up before you got a chance to fill it up yourself with a lot of the same information that is filling up other people's heads of your generation and nation.

Inside of you, there's another associate network that saves you the trouble of your ancestor's experiences on a less conscious level: the genetic network.


Still, I'm not relying on personal experience or anecdote...

But you are from my perspective... you're relying on your sense of self: your whole collection of personal experiences and anecdotes. Just like the panpsychists, the libertarians are relying on unfalsifiable assumptions.

Would you agree that your views are libertarian?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_nature#Free_will_and_determinism
 
  • #98
Pythagorean said:
Yes, but I moved past the slug to something like, say, a human, prior to it becoming a "multi-cellular" organism. Do you think there was a discrete jump from from the single organisms to the collective organism or do you think there was a smooth transition?

Let's talk your way about your brain: it's a multicellulalr organ equatable to a school of fish because of proximity and synchronized behavior. This neuron triggers that neuron, some vesicle release, this neuron goes, saying to fire up this endocrine system, which sets off this population of cells. It's just a bunch of single-cells transfering matter and energy (with information embedded in it) just like the slime mold is. To inject your own personal feelings into the brain isn't scientific.

At no point can my brain operate as a "mini-brain" through separation of neurons, but rather it acts always as a cohesive system. Dysfunction in one area leads to global dysfunction, whereas in a school of fish that's just a dead fish. As we grow our brains increase in terms of complexity, but their nature is unchanging in the sense that it is operable only in the context of the whole organism.

Slime-molds join, then seperate, unchanged and still functioning; this is more to do with people giving one another a boost by hand over an obstacle than a melding of selves.


Pythagorean said:
I agree with you by that specific way you state it, yes. Sharing of experiences occurs from having the same (i.e. very similar) external and internal forces. More likely with kin, more likely to lead to cooperation.

Collective consciousness means all the knowledge you learn in school that you practice and enforce and live by but that you really have no personal experience with. Society has transmitted information to you so that you can indirectly experience something that your ancestors already experienced. So information gets carried with you that could be completely false and have nothing to do with your experiences or the real world at all. So a big part of you and who you are, your self, your consciousness, is determined by the information imparted on you by society. You're head has been filled up before you got a chance to fill it up yourself with a lot of the same information that is filling up other people's heads of your generation and nation.

Inside of you, there's another associate network that saves you the trouble of your ancestor's experiences on a less conscious level: the genetic network.

True, but there is ample proof that such knowledge is highly conditional, subject to enormous change and interpretation including alteration upon successive recall and retelling. Even in a vacuum there should be an evolution of self, even if it's a terribly warped (by societal norms) sense of self. The genetic network imparts no knowledge without context, only instinct and reaction; hormones and neurotransmitter goads in other words.


Pythagorean said:
But you are from my perspective... you're relying on your sense of self: your whole collection of personal experiences and anecdotes. Just like the panpsychists, the libertarians are relying on unfalsifiable assumptions.

Would you agree that your views are libertarian?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Human_nature#Free_will_and_determinism
[/quote]

No, I'm most certainly not any version of Libertarian; generally I'm a pragmatic authoritarian hypocrite with a Genghis Khan-ish bent. :wink:

Still, I'm not accepting my own personal experience as the norm, or even the collective as truth; I do recognize that in a world of all theories being wrong, our reality is largely verified by group experience. Beyond that we have tools to probe reality beyond the capacity of naked humanity.
 
  • #99
nismaratwork said:
I agree, but then I'd have to constrain my example to Bulldog or Bullet Ants, instead of social ants. It's not that I'm against the notion of emergent systems behaviour, but any definition of "conscious" is unlikely to include a group-entity that cannot reflect on its totality.

A human can ponder the process of apoptosis (programmed cell death for the non-bio people) as it happens, as a part of us. An ant colony's behavior is a sum of its parts, but without any reflective or experiential capacity.

But in fact by breaking things apart in proper fashion, they become measurable. This is why good metaphysics underpins good science.

So if we are modelling "consciousness" as the degree of top down constraint - the ability of the ant colony mind to control the ant colony's parts - then we can now measure that degree of "mindfulness".

And as you say, already you can see different degrees at work in different ant species. This proves the case rather than undermines it.

Biofeedback experiments for instance measure the degree of mindful control humans can exert over their own bodies. If the right feedback (local~global) interation is set up, then the answer is surprisingly great.

But to accept this and then lapse back to a reductionist "the whole is the sum of its parts" rhetoric is unacceptable. It has just been demonstrated that it isn't.

Which is where a proper theory of the epistemic cut between local and global scales of causality in complex adaptive systems becomes essential. Again, it is framing your understanding in operational constructs - crisp dichotomies that in turn can be crisply measured.

Reductionism isn't the way to banish unclear thinking here. Forcing people to adhere to terms with exact meanings (because those meaning have been formed as limits of a dichotomy) is the way to move forward scientifically. It creates a clear picture of what must be measured out in the world.
 
  • #100
nismaratwork said:
At no point can my brain operate as a "mini-brain" through separation of neurons, but rather it acts always as a cohesive system. Dysfunction in one area leads to global dysfunction, whereas in a school of fish that's just a dead fish. As we grow our brains increase in terms of complexity, but their nature is unchanging in the sense that it is operable only in the context of the whole organism.

Are you aware of cell differentiation in such cell colonies? A school of fish don't really exhibit differentiation, so yeah... a fish dying in the school wouldn't do much globally. But when there's a more intricate coupling between the members (as is the case in cell colonies) and differentiation occurs, then the functional role of the differentiated cells can become significant enough to where removal of those cells WILL lead to global dysfunction.
Even in a vacuum there should be an evolution of self, even if it's a terribly warped (by societal norms) sense of self.

I would challenge that! This is a falsifiable question. From the implications of experiments that deprive sensory organs at birth, it seems intuitive to me that if you completely cut off all perception (yet somehow keep the organism nutritionally supplemented) it will not develop much of a consciousness at all.

It is through primitive reflexes as a newborn and perceptive feedback through development that self-consciousness seems to come about. Take away the perceptive feedback and you have a purely instinctual animal. So far, their sense of self is yet to be detected (as opposed to higher mammals... and particularly social animals)

But this, I think, would be a good question to see if anyone has tried to answer experimentally. We should wager a non-monetary bet on it ;)
 
  • #101
apeiron said:
But in fact by breaking things apart in proper fashion, they become measurable. This is why good metaphysics underpins good science.

Good metaphysics?... Hmmm... I always thought of it as the cotton padding that makes the current state of affairs a comfortable seat until we're forced to change by reality.

apeiron said:
So if we are modelling "consciousness" as the degree of top down constraint - the ability of the ant colony mind to control the ant colony's parts - then we can now measure that degree of "mindfulness".

There is no control, only group behaviour there, and the lack of mindfulness is demonstrable. Ants can and will eat themselves out of house and home (so to speak), and their behaviour form a rigid and unchanging set that are dependant on their specific environment.

apeiron said:
And as you say, already you can see different degrees at work in different ant species. This proves the case rather than undermines it.

I'm confused here.

apeiron said:
Biofeedback experiments for instance measure the degree of mindful control humans can exert over their own bodies. If the right feedback (local~global) interation is set up, then the answer is surprisingly great.

In some systems yes, but try to stop the system as a whole through feedback, or try to exceed normal tolerances...

apeiron said:
But to accept this and then lapse back to a reductionist "the whole is the sum of its parts" rhetoric is unacceptable. It has just been demonstrated that it isn't.

Still not sure about that, I think you may be ignoring the larger system as being part of the parts in summation. Still, the rhetoric is useless, no argument there.

apeiron said:
Which is where a proper theory of the epistemic cut between local and global scales of causality in complex adaptive systems becomes essential. Again, it is framing your understanding in operational constructs - crisp dichotomies that in turn can be crisply measured.

Yep, I love those, pity I only see them in science and not in philosophy. Phil is just to personal and ad hoc in my view, to dependant on the state of science for any sense of validity. In short, it's a fine smörgåsbord of secular religions and ideologies.

apeiron said:
Reductionism isn't the way to banish unclear thinking here. Forcing people to adhere to terms with exact meanings (because those meaning have been formed as limits of a dichotomy) is the way to move forward scientifically. It creates a clear picture of what must be measured out in the world.

The universe seems to have a beef with clear thinking, and reductionism to some extent always seems to be the spur of progress in science, with philosophy trailing behind.
 
  • #102
Pythagorean said:
Are you aware of cell differentiation in such cell colonies? A school of fish don't really exhibit differentiation, so yeah... a fish dying in the school wouldn't do much globally. But when there's a more intricate coupling between the members (as is the case in cell colonies) and differentiation occurs, then the functional role of the differentiated cells can become significant enough to where removal of those cells WILL lead to global dysfunction.




I would challenge that! This is a falsifiable question. From the implications of experiments that deprive sensory organs at birth, it seems intuitive to me that if you completely cut off all perception (yet somehow keep the organism nutritionally supplemented) it will not develop much of a consciousness at all.

It is through primitive reflexes as a newborn and perceptive feedback through development that self-consciousness seems to come about. Take away the perceptive feedback and you have a purely instinctual animal. So far, their sense of self is yet to be detected (as opposed to higher mammals... and particularly social animals)

But this, I think, would be a good question to see if anyone has tried to answer experimentally. We should wager a non-monetary bet on it ;)

Bet taken, but I doubt we'll ever know... the closest would be the "closet-girl" phenomenon, and it's a far cry from sensory deprivation.

Maybe Hellen Keller would be one example, but she did have touch...
 
  • #103
nismaratwork said:
Bet taken, but I doubt we'll ever know... the closest would be the "closet-girl" phenomenon, and it's a far cry from sensory deprivation.

Maybe Hellen Keller would be one example, but she did have touch...

Keller had all her senses to the age of two.

There is a ton of research bearing on this question. For instance, sensory deprivation experiments show how the sense of self and structured awareness generally falls apart with a lack of a world to interact with and structure your experience.
 
  • #104
apeiron said:
Keller had all her senses to the age of two.

There is a ton of research bearing on this question. For instance, sensory deprivation experiments show how the sense of self and structured awareness generally falls apart with a lack of a world to interact with and structure your experience.

Yes... and though traumatized and damaged, it can be re-established in many cases.
 
  • #105
nismaratwork said:
Good metaphysics?... Hmmm... I always thought of it as the cotton padding that makes the current state of affairs a comfortable seat until we're forced to change by reality.

The best modern philosophy is done by scientists. You probably just been reading the wrong books. :rolleyes:

nismaratwork said:
There is no control, only group behaviour there, and the lack of mindfulness is demonstrable. Ants can and will eat themselves out of house and home (so to speak), and their behaviour form a rigid and unchanging set that are dependant on their specific environment.

What, all of a sudden you haven't heard of peak oil? C'mon.

You need to study the ant colony literature perhaps to see that there really is a collective "state of mind" that can be measured.

Just because its quicker, here is a cut and paste of a bit I wrote for a Reader's Digest publication some years back...

Individually, an ant is a rather dumb creature. But collectively, do they form a group mind? After all, an ant nest is almost one organism genetically, a single queen living with as many as a million daughters. And all those eyes and jaws are linked like brain cells in a network of interactions that can respond to the world with sharp intelligence.

Watch a trail of ants and they are forever bumping into each other, pausing to touch antennae. In every brief meeting they are exchanging information about what they are doing. Their tiny brains then apply some simple rules. If an ant finds it is rarely meeting another employed in the same task – or alternatively, too many others doing the same task – then it will switch to a different behaviour. So from nest maintenance to foraging, or patrolling to rubbish detail . In this way, ants spread themselves out across their territory, doing what needs to be done as if the colony were conscious as a whole.

Deborah Gordon of Stanford University, who studies Harvester ants in the Arizona desert, has even found that colonies develop more intelligence as they mature. A colony sticks to the same sized territory as it grows in number, so creating a web of interactions that becomes ever denser and smarter.

When Gordon set problems by blocking foraging trails or messing up the nest site with toothpicks, she found that mature colonies were quicker and more reliable in their response. Younger colonies were erratic in their behaviour as if they had not quite learned what to do. The older colonies had also discovered how to get along with their neighbours. If foraging trails happened to cross one day, next day the ants would head in the opposite direction. But adolescent colonies always returned looking for a fight.

So it is unlikely that a glow of awareness emanates from that trail of ants coming in your back door. But there is a collective intelligence at work. Each ant may be as dumb as an isolated brain cell. But the trail, like our brain, at some level “knows” the world.

nismaratwork said:
Yep, I love those, pity I only see them in science and not in philosophy. Phil is just to personal and ad hoc in my view, to dependant on the state of science for any sense of validity. In short, it's a fine smörgåsbord of secular religions and ideologies..

Again, c'mon. What else was greek philosophy about than establishing the basic dichotomies of nature.

And again, the best modern philosophers are scientists first.

nismaratwork said:
The universe seems to have a beef with clear thinking, and reductionism to some extent always seems to be the spur of progress in science, with philosophy trailing behind.

Reductionism works all the way up to the limits. But then fails radically in modelling the limits. So when it comes to the creation of universes, the nature of minds, the genesis of life, and the other most interesting questions, reductionism let's you down dramatically. And let's in all the crank mysterians because suddenly it seems "science can't answer".
 
<h2>1. How does the brain create consciousness?</h2><p>The exact mechanism by which the brain creates consciousness is still not fully understood. However, it is believed that consciousness arises from the complex interactions between neurons and their connections in the brain.</p><h2>2. Can consciousness be explained solely by brain activity?</h2><p>There is ongoing debate among scientists about whether consciousness can be fully explained by brain activity. Some argue that there may be other factors at play, such as quantum processes or non-physical phenomena.</p><h2>3. Is consciousness the same as intelligence?</h2><p>No, consciousness and intelligence are two separate concepts. While consciousness refers to the subjective experience of being aware, intelligence is the ability to acquire knowledge and skills and apply them in various situations.</p><h2>4. Can consciousness be measured or quantified?</h2><p>Currently, there is no definitive way to measure or quantify consciousness. However, some scientists use brain imaging techniques and behavioral studies to study the neural correlates of consciousness.</p><h2>5. Can consciousness exist without a brain?</h2><p>There is no evidence to suggest that consciousness can exist without a brain. The brain is necessary for the complex neural processes that give rise to consciousness. However, some theories propose the idea of consciousness being a fundamental property of the universe, independent of the brain.</p>

1. How does the brain create consciousness?

The exact mechanism by which the brain creates consciousness is still not fully understood. However, it is believed that consciousness arises from the complex interactions between neurons and their connections in the brain.

2. Can consciousness be explained solely by brain activity?

There is ongoing debate among scientists about whether consciousness can be fully explained by brain activity. Some argue that there may be other factors at play, such as quantum processes or non-physical phenomena.

3. Is consciousness the same as intelligence?

No, consciousness and intelligence are two separate concepts. While consciousness refers to the subjective experience of being aware, intelligence is the ability to acquire knowledge and skills and apply them in various situations.

4. Can consciousness be measured or quantified?

Currently, there is no definitive way to measure or quantify consciousness. However, some scientists use brain imaging techniques and behavioral studies to study the neural correlates of consciousness.

5. Can consciousness exist without a brain?

There is no evidence to suggest that consciousness can exist without a brain. The brain is necessary for the complex neural processes that give rise to consciousness. However, some theories propose the idea of consciousness being a fundamental property of the universe, independent of the brain.

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