Mind-body problem-Chomsky/Nagel

  • Thread starter bohm2
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In summary, according to Chomsky, the mind-body problem can't be solved because there is no clear way to state it. The problem of the relation of mind to matter will remain unsolved.
  • #491
apeiron said:
But then, what do we find the researchers actually think? Whoops, they want to explain the data with Bayesian models (which you will remember from that UCL speech, Chomsky dismissed as producing "zero results" like all statistical learning approaches :rolleyes:)

I'm not a linguist to really judge this study but yes, I think they do see the value of both methods but the author is also supporting Chomsky's position versus Dunn's and Tomasello's stuff. This assumes that her conclusions are valid. For she writes:
Taken together, the results show that learners clearly make use of the input statistics in these artificial language learning experiments (as they have been shown to do in other such contexts). Learners can track the basic word order preferences in the training input, and they appear to be extremely sensitive to transitional probabilities equal to zero. However, prior structural biases not reflected in the input statistics also influence learning.The results further support a strong regularization bias, indicating that learners do not replicate the variability present in the input.
Statistical Learning Constrained by Syntactic Biases in an Artificial Langauge Learning Task
http://www.bcs.rochester.edu/people/jculbertson/papers/CulbertsonetalBUCLD36.pdf [Broken]

And in another recent study she writes:
The hypothesis that universal constraints on human language learning strongly shape the space of human grammars has taken many forms, which differ on a number of dimensions including the locus, scope, experience-dependence, and ultimate source of such biases (Christiansen & Devlin,1997; Chomsky, 1965; Croft, 2001; Hawkins, 2004; Kirby, 1999; Lightfoot, 1991; Lindblom, 1986; Newmeyer, 2005; Newport & Aslin, 2004; Talmy, 2000; Tesar & Smolensky, 1998). However, the general hypothesis that language universals arise from biases in learning stands in contrast to hypotheses that place the source of explanation outside the cognitive system (Bybee, 20092; Dunn, Greenhill, Levinson, & Gray, 20113; Evans & Levinson, 20094)...If Universal 18’s substantive bias against a particular type of non-harmonic language is in fact specific to the language system, then the empirical findings reported here constitute clear evidence against recent claims that no such biases exist within cognition (Bybee, 2009; Dunn et al., 2011; Evans & Levinson, 2009; Goldberg, 2006; Levinson & Evans, 2010)...

To be more specific, the existence of typologically-relevant cognitive biases, and in particular the substantive L4 bias, is the primary conclusion we draw from the experimental results. Importantly, the finding that such biases exist on the time scale of our experiment—that is, revealed by individual participants in the course of a single experimental session—is not consistent with theories according to which typological asymmetries are the result of factors external to cognition. This includes theories which explain recurrent patterns as resulting from accidental geographic or cultural factors (Bybee, 2009; Dunn et al., 2011; Levinson & Evans, 2010, p. 2743), and those which hypothesize that functional factors induce asymmetries through language change across generations only (Bader, 2011, p. 345; Blevins & Garrett, 2004, p. 118; Christiansen & Chater, 2008; Levinson & Evans, 2010, p. 2738).

Learning biases predict a word order universal
http://www.bcs.rochester.edu/people/jculbertson/papers/Culbertsonetal11.pdf [Broken]
 
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  • #492
bohm2 said:
I'm not a linguist to really judge this study but yes, I think they do see the value of both methods but the author is also supporting Chomsky's position versus Dunn's and Tomasello's stuff. This assumes that her conclusions are valid. For she writes:

But the paper makes the careful distinction between hard and soft "innate" constraints. So it is not really supporting Chomsky except in the most watered down version where everyone agrees that something is probably genetic/innate about language learning.

By formulating our theory of the bias as probabilistic we differ from most linguistic theories, which generally treat universals as the result of inviolable constraints specific to the linguistic system...

[As opposed in particular to]...even in Optimality Theory, typological asymmetries of the sort we discuss here are standardly explained by rigid, universal, inviolable requirements on the relative ranking of specified constraints (Prince & Smolensky, 1993/2004, chap. 9).

http://www.bcs.rochester.edu/people/jculbertson/papers/Culbertsonetal11.pdf [Broken]

The only question then is whether Bayesian/abductive reasoning is a language-specific adaptation in H sap. or the general story of brain architecture (just as with hierarchical processing structure or "recursion"). And you already know my answer.

Though, as Cuthbertson argues, that does not yet rule out that there might be specific genetic biases that are language-specific rather than cognition-general. I have no problem with that hypothesis because it is working at a suitably fine-grain level of analysis with a plausible neurodevelopmental mechanism. We would already expect cognitive learning biases to be both general and specific.

BTW Cuthbertson seems to have hooked up with Newport for further work. So the statistical learning approach is chugging along nicely now.

However, extensive work by Carla Hudson-Kam and Elissa Newport suggests that creole languages may not support a universal grammar, as has sometimes been supposed. In a series of experiments, Hudson-Kam and Newport looked at how children and adults learn artificial grammars. Notably, they found that children tend to ignore minor variations in the input when those variations are infrequent, and reproduce only the most frequent forms. In doing so, they tend to standardize the language that they hear around them. Hudson-Kam and Newport hypothesize that in a pidgin situation (and in the real life situation of a deaf child whose parents were disfluent signers), children are systematizing the language they hear based on the probability and frequency of forms, and not, as has been suggested on the basis of a universal grammar.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Universal_grammar
 
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  • #493
It may pay to go back to Newport's very diplomatic summary of the story so far...
http://www.bcs.rochester.edu/people/newport/pdf/Newport_%20LLD11.pdf [Broken]

Undoubtedly there are the radical proposals: positions arguing that nothing (of any kind) is innate, that languages have no universally shared principles or structures, and that language acquisition is just the learning of lexical and constructional forms. But this does not seem to me to be the dominant nonmodular view, and certainly not the most compelling or likely one.

Most nonmodularists, thanks to the profound importance of Chomsky’s work and its enormous impact on our field, believe that there are striking universal principles that constrain language structure and also that there are innate abilities of humans that are foundational for language acquisition and language processing. However, one can agree that there are innate abilities required for language and yet not be certain whether these abilities are specific to language. Though many nativists believe also in modularity, the question of innateness and that of modularity are in principle distinct (see Keil, 1990, for discussion).

In addition, few nonmodularists think that all of perception or cognition is homogeneous, characterized by the same principles of organization throughout. Rather, the question is where and how to divide the differing components of cognition/perception — and, in particular, whether language will turn out to be one of the components proper or rather is best described as the outcome of interactions among the other components and their constraints.

Certainly most cognitive psychologists believe that there is a difference in organizational principles between the visual and auditory systems, between iconic or echoic memory, short-term memory, and long-term memory, and between implicit learning and explicit problem solving. The nonmodularist’s question is whether language qualifies as one of those systems that handles information in its own way, or rather whether its characteristics are the outcome of squeezing information in, through, and out of the others.

A mild version of the nonmodularist view is that there may be some elements or principles specific to language—perhaps the basic primitives (e.g., features, syllables) at the base of the system—and perhaps some characteristics of the system that have become grammaticized or conventionalized within the life of the individual or the species. But the nonmodularist believes that relatively little of the structure of language falls into the specialized type of constraint, whereas many or most aspects of language derive from the interaction of other modules or systems of cognition/perception.

This paper by Newport then summarises evidence for cognition-general Bayesian reasoning - infant learning of speech and visual patterns...
http://www.bcs.rochester.edu/people/newport/pdf/Aslin-Newport_CDinpress.pdf [Broken]

What is clear, however, is that statistical learning is not simply a veridical reproduction of the stimulus input; learning is shaped by a number of perceptual and memory constraints, at least some of which may apply not only to languages but also to nonlinguistic patterns.
 
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  • #494
What I find interesting about language acquistion/language evolution in connection with the Hard Problem is how it illustrates a general shift in science towards developmental systems thinking. Things don't exist. Things have to emerge.

It is what people called the process philosophy view a century earlier. And it requires a holistic view of causality, such as Aristotle's "four causes", where top-down constraints are part of what is the ontically "real".

So Chomsky vs the Behaviourists represented some weird broken view of causality.

The Behaviourists wanted to argue for simple-minded reductionism - the construction of the mind from atomistic "learning" events. The blank slate view. Although, as was then argued, Behaviourists did invoke contextual/situational factors - so holism was in there at the back of things, as it must be. And then even though Behaviourism seemed to be very much focused on individual learning - adaptation on the timescale of the developing organism - it did still accept also species-level learning, adaptation on the genetic timescale.

So Behaviourism - once reined back from the cartoon version of Watson in particular - does not seem so objectional from the systems view. It just did not have an actual model of emergent mental organisation.

Chomsky on the other hand does seem to come at all this from a strange and anti-science position. His focus is on the top-down constraints aspect of a developmental systems perspective. But he does this from a dualist/rationalist/Platonist standpoint which denies many crucial things.

So Chomsky fails to see that this is an interactionist story - the bottom-up in interaction with the top-down. He thus wants to explain everything in terms of Platonic principles and exclude anything to do with the other side of the story.

He doesn't see it as a developmental story either. So his strong Universal Grammar principles have to "exist" somewhere prior to their emergence in human communication. They can't be seen to have a naturalistic evolutionary or developmental story, such as one where small and subtle biases (ie: informational constraints) early in growth can strongly shape the final outcome. Thus when forced to give some evolutionary account of how human grammar emerged, Chomsky makes ridiculous statements about "hopeful monsters".

Chomsky ends up tangled in knots, even though he is "right" in that a systems view stresses the importance of global constraints in the development of any kind of organisation. And semiotics in particular gives a theory of how living systems construct such constraints.

The link with the Hard Problem is that this also is a false dilemma that arises out of a cartoon reductionist view of causality. And it is resolved by taking a full systems view of causality where downwards causation is taken to be ontic, and all real objects are understood to be developmentally emergent.
 
  • #495
I thought this was an interesting and pretty neat and easy to understand piece on this topic (I wish I knew who wrote it?), arguing for "mind" as an intrinsic property of matter:
The core of Strawson’s argument is that since the mental cannot possibly emerge from anything non-mental, and because we know that some macroscopic modifications of the world are intrinsically mental, the intrinsic nature of the basic constituents of the material world has to be mental as well. But now it seems that Strawson is confusing here the possibility of the emergence of mind from scientifically described properties like mass, charge, or spin, with the possibility of the emergence of mind from the intrinsic properties that correspond to these scientific properties. It is indeed the case that mind cannot emerge from scientifically described extrinsic properties like mass, charge, and spin, but do we know that mind could not emerge from the intrinsic properties that underlie these scientifically observable properties? It might be argued that since we know absolutely nothing about the intrinsic nature of mass, charge, and spin, we simply cannot tell whether they could be something non-mental and still constitute mentality when organised properly. It might well be that mentality is like liquidity: the intrinsic nature of mass, charge and spin might not be mental itself, just like individual H2O-molecules are not liquid themselves, but could nevertheless constitute mentality when organised properly, just like H2O-molecules can constitute liquidity when organised properly (this would be a variation of neutral monism). In short, the problem is that we just do not know enough about the intrinsic nature of the fundamental level of reality that we could say almost anything about it.

Finally, despite there is no ontological difference between the micro and macro levels of reality either on the intrinsic or extrinsic level, there is still vast difference in complexity. The difference in complexity between human mentality and mentality on the fundamental level is in one-to-one correspondence to the scientific difference in complexity between the brain and the basic particles. Thus, even if the intrinsic nature of electrons and other fundamental particles is in fact mental, this does not mean that it should be anything like human mentality—rather, we can only say that the ontological category their intrinsic nature belongs to is the same as the one our phenomenal realm belongs to. This category in the most general sense is perhaps best titled ‘ideal’.
Mind as an Intrinsic Property of Matter
http://users.utu.fi/jusjyl/MIPM.pdf [Broken]
 
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  • #496
bohm2 said:
I thought this was an interesting and pretty neat and easy to understand piece on this topic (I wish I knew who wrote it?), arguing for "mind" as an intrinsic property of matter:

Here is your guy - http://users.utu.fi/jusjyl/ [Broken]

Welcome to Jussi Jylkkä's website
I am a postdoc researcher working mainly on issues in philosophy of mind, philosophy of language, and metaphysics. My current research focuses on the mind-body problem from a transcendental perspective. Other research interests include history of philosophy, Asian philosophy (zen), experimental philosophy and metaphilosophy.

Interesting to look at his extrinsic vs intrinsic property argument in the light of a systems approach.

The systems/pansemiotic view would suggest every "element of reality" indeed would have further "intrinsic" degrees of freedom.

Every locale has unlimited degrees of freedom (is vague) until some constraints are imposed top-down to limit the degrees in strong fashion, so creating an element of reality with some now definite, or extrinsic, properties.

But constraint is not absolute, and so further degrees of freedom remain, but in unexpressed fashion.

So taking his example of H20, we could say an unexpressed degree of freedom of a water molecule is its ability to collaborate in the broader organisation that we call liquidity. This "property" lurks intrinsically until it gets the chance to emerge and be expressed as a collective extrinsic property.

The same would be true of mentality. If you really want to insist on defining subjective experience as a property of a material object, you could in some sense say the necessary degrees of freedom exist at the level of the neuron, or the molecule, or the particle, or the quantum field. However far you want to drill down. If something emerges, you can claim there must have been the local degrees of freedom waiting to be harnessed. And give them the label of intrinsic (as opposed to latent, or potential, or whatever).

But it is an unnecessarily clunky story IMO. It becomes just a way of avoiding talking about formal causes and reducing your descriptions to "nothing but hidden properties of matter". It takes you further away from useful models for the sake of preserving a reductionist ontology.
 
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  • #497
There is this recent paper discussing a possible solution to the "combination problem" of panpsychism. One of the major criticisms of panpsychism is that panpsychism must also resort to some form of emergentism and this has led even more "panpsychist-friendly" philosophers (e.g. Goff?) to be critical of panpsychism:
between panpsychist emergentism and physicalist emergentism, the physicalist version is preferable for reasons of ontological economy
Coleman, who favours panpsychism, in this paper below tries to argue that some of the assumptions of critics like Goff may be mistaken. I'm not sure I buy or understand his argument of phenomenally-qualified but subjectless ultimates:
Crucially, the relationship presently envisaged between the phenomenal character of the phenomenally-qualitied ultimates composing him and that of Goff’s o-consciousness ('o' for organism) is quite different. On the present view, the phenomenal characters of the ultimates composing Goff’s brain jointly constitute the phenomenal character of his o-conscious phenomenal field, they do not spawn it as a separate entity. This feature enables us to overcome an objection lurking in Goff’s account concerning the unity of o experience: “The existence of a subject having a unified experience of feeling cold and tired and smelling roast beef does not seem to be a priori entailed by the existence of a subject that feels cold, a subject that feels tired, and a subject that smells roast beef”...In our model the phenomenal elements of cold, tiredness and the smell of roast beef come together closely enough to form a phenomenal unity: they are experienced together as overlapping features of the same phenomenal field. This is thanks to the pooling of the intrinsic natures of the phenomenally-qualitied ultimates, possible due to their subjectless nature.
Mental Chemistry: Combination for Panpsychists
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1746-8361.2012.01293.x/pdf

I have trouble understanding the meaning of subjectless qualia/phenomenology or even how such subjectless ultimates can lead to a "unified" subject/organism without some type of emergentism?
 
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  • #498
I thought this was an interersting dissertation (just abstract) that this guy is doing. He seems to be arguing against treating consciousness as genuine emergent phenomena suggesting that information at the micro-level leads to consciousness at the macro-level:

Naturalized Panpsychism
A central problem in the mind-body debate is the generation problem: how consciousness occurs in a universe understood as primarily non-conscious...I argue that the generation problem stems from a non-critical presupposition about the nature of reality, namely, that the mental is an exception in the universe, a non-fundamental property. I call this presupposition mental specialism...I argue that consciousness emerges from proto-consciousness, the fundamental property that is disposed to give rise to consciousness. Proto-consciousness is not an arbitrarily posited property; following an important contemporary approach in neuroscience (the integrated information account), I understand proto-consciousness as information. The thesis that consciousness emerges from proto-consciousness elicits a fatal problem with panpsychic theories, the combination problem. This problem is how to account for higher order conscious properties emerging from proto-conscious properties. I solve the combination problem by adopting Giuolio Tononi’e Integrated Information theory of Consciousness and demonstrating emerging higher order conscious properties just is a system integrating information. Thus information is the fundamental property that, when integrated in a system such as a human being, is consciousness. Proto-consciousness is thus a natural property and the formulated panpsychic theory based upon information is a naturalized panpsychism.
http://www.marquette.edu/grad/documents/Cookson.pdf

For an overview of Tononi's model and an interesting quote:
There are also some points of contact between the notion of integrated information and the approach advocated by relational quantum mechanics (Rovelli, 1996). The relational approach claims that system states exist only in relation to an observer, where an observer is another system (or a part of the same system). By contrast, the IIT says that a system can observe itself, though it can only do so by “measuring” its previous state. More generally, for the IIT, only complexes, and not arbitrary collections of elements, are real observers, whereas physics is usually indifferent to whether information is integrated or not. Other interesting issues concern the relation between the conservation of information and the apparent increase in integrated information, and the finiteness of information (even in terms of qubits, the amount of information available to a physical system is finite). More generally, it seems useful to consider some of the paradoxes of information in physics from the intrinsic perspective, that is, as integrated information, where the observer is one and the same as the observed.

Consciousness as Integrated Information: a Provisional Manifesto
http://www.biolbull.org/content/215/3/216.full.pdf
 
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  • #499
bohm2 said:
I think Nagel is actually agreeing with you that no matter how far a future science/physics changes, qualia will forever remain subjective. Chomsky, on the other hand, in one paper-“Linguistics and Cognitive Science: Problems and Mysteries” (p. 39) questions Nagel's premise arguing that:

“this argument presupposes some fixed notion of the ‘objective world’ which excludes subjective experience, but it is hard to see why we should pay any more attention to that notion, whatever it may be, than to one that excludes action at a distance or other exotic ideas that were regarded as unintelligible or ridiculous at earlier periods, even by outstanding scientists.”

Elsewhere on that page he argues that there is nothing unique about the mind-body problem:

But from this we do not conclude that there was then (or now) a body-body problem, or a color-body problem, or a life-body problem, or a gas-body problem. Rather, there were just problems, arising from the limits of our understanding

I’m not sure what to make of this? I think Nagel’s position is clear. Nagel is simply arguing that the mind-body problem is different than all these other problems because unlike the others, subjectivity/qualia cannot be reduced to any “material” entity regardless of future revisions of our “physical” theories. Whether Chomsky is arguing that some type of “micropsychism”, is possible I’m not sure but I doubt it? Maybe Chomsky means that we should treat the mental just as "real" as other stuff in science even though unification may be beyond our cognitive limits (I'm thinking McGinn's cognitive closure stuff here)?

Panpsychism is a very interesting position even though it's not taken seriously by many. I really find the "intrinsic" argument as set ou by Russel, Eddington and now Strawson very interesting. One difficulty with panpsychism is that it also "faces a severe problem of understanding how more complex mental states emerge from the mental features of the fundamental features." An interesting paper on this topic is this one by Seager:

http://www.scar.utoronto.ca/~seager/panagg.pdf [Broken]

One panpsychist physicist is Bohm. In his papers, he argues that his interpretation suggests a proto-mental aspect of matter. He has been called a panprotopsychist. When you look at the guiding wave properties and how it affects the "particle" (trajectory) in Bohm's ontological interpretation of QM, you can't help but notice the analogy between pilot wave/particle and mind/brain. In fact, Bohm argues just that (see quote below). Some interesting properties of Bohm's guiding wave:

1. The quantum potential energy does not behave like an additional energy of classical type. It has no external source, but is some form of internal energy, split off from the kinetic energy. Furthermore, if we look at traditional quantum mechanical problems and examine the quantum potential energy in mathematical detail, we find that it contains information about the experimental environment in which the particle finds itself, hence its possible role as an information potential.

2. In the case of the quantum wave, the amplitude also appears in the denominator. Therefore, increasing the magnitude of the amplitude does not necessarily increase the quantum potential energy. A small amplitude can produce a large quantum effect. The key to the quantum potential energy lies in the second spatial derivative, indicating that the shape or form of the wave is more important than its magnitude.

3. For this reason, a small change in the form of the wave function can produce large effects in the development of the system. The quantum potential produces a law of force that does not necessarily fall off with distance. Therefore, the quantum potential can produce large effects between systems that are separated by large distances. This feature removes one of the difficulties in understanding the non-locality that arises between particles in entangled states, such as those in the EPR-paradox

4. In Bohmian mechanics the wave function acts upon the positions of the particles but, evolving as it does autonomously via Schrödinger's equation, it is not acted upon by the particles...The guiding wave, in the general case, propagates not in ordinary three-space but in a multidimensional-configuration space and is the origin of the notorious ‘nonlocality’ of quantum mechanics.

5. Unlike ordinary force fields such as gravity, which affects all particles within its range, the pilot wave must act only one particle: each particle has a private pilot wave all its own that “senses” the location of every other particle of the universe. Although it extends everywhere and is itself affected by every particle in the universe, the pilot wave affects no other particle bit its own.

Bohm and Hiley have coined the expression “active information” for this sort of influence and suggest that the quantum potential is a source of this kind of information.

"There are many analogies to the notion of active information in our general experience. Thus, consider a ship on automatic pilot guided by radar waves. The ship is not pushed and pulled mechanically by these waves. Rather, the form of the waves is picked up, and with the aid of the whole system, this gives a corresponding shape and form to the movement of the ship under its own power. Similarly, the form of radio waves as broadcast from a station can carry the form of music or speech. The energy of the sound that we hear comes from the relatively unformed energy in the power plug, but its form comes from the activity of the form of the radio wave; a similar process occurs with a computer which is guiding machinery. The 'information' is in the program, but its activity gives shape and form to the movement of the machinery. Likewise, in a living cell, current theories say that the form of the DNA molecule acts to give shape and form to the synthesis of proteins (by being transferred to molecules of RNA).

Our proposal is then to extend this notion of active information to matter at the quantum level. The information in the quantum level is potentially active everywhere, but actually active only where the particle is (as, for example, the radio wave is active where the receiver is). Such a notion suggests, however, that the electron may be much more complex than we thought (having a structure of a complexity that is perhaps comparable, for example, to that of a simple guidance mechanism such as an automatic pilot). This suggestion goes against the whole tradition of physics over the past few centuries which is committed to the assumption that as we analyze matter into smaller and smaller parts, their behaviour grows simpler and simpler. Yet, assumptions of this kind need not always be correct. Thus, for example, large crowds of human beings can often exhibit a much simpler behaviour than that of the individuals who make it up."


http://www.tcm.phy.cam.ac.uk/~mdt26/local_papers/bohm_hiley_kaloyerou_1986.pdf
http://www.geestkunde.net/uittreksels/db-relationmindmatter.html [Broken]
http://www.mindmatter.de/resources/pdf/hileywww.pdf
http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/qm-bohm/

So, I was lurking on this forum, and reading Bohm's interpretation in regard to the Mind-Body problem brought up some interesting questions for me. Keep in mind, I'm more of a science enthusiast than a scientist, my understanding is simple. So please forgive me and let me know if I've made ridiculous logical jumps, it's entirely probable.

Could it at all be possible that this "Mind Wave" is the quantum consideration of your observations? Because couldn't one infer that sapience is just increased/altered potential quantum energy due to the unique shape of our brain?
 
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  • #500
Anachronaut said:
So, I was lurking on this forum, and reading Bohm's interpretation in regard to the Mind-Body problem brought up some interesting questions for me...Could it at all be possible that this "Mind Wave" is the quantum consideration of your observations?
I don't understand how Bohm gets from "quantum potential" to "information potential" to a "mental pole/wave"? Why can't there just be a transfer of energy from the wave field to the quantum particle during a measurement process as argued by Peter Riggs:
The Active Information Hypothesis opens up a whole host of questions and issues that are extremely problematic. Consider first the difficulties encountered with particle structure. Quantum particles would require complex internal structures with which the ‘active information’ is processed in order that the particle be directed through space...

Instead, Rigg using a "Bohmian" perspective argues:
The quantum potential is the potential energy function of the wave field. It gives the amount of the wave field’s potential energy that is available to quantum particles. The well-established principle of energy conservation holds in classically-free quantum systems. This is achieved by energy exchanges between the quantum particles and wave field. The quantum potential facilitates these exchanges and provides an explanation of quantum phenomena such as tunnelling from a potential well.
Reflections on the deBroglie–Bohm Quantum Potential
http://www.tcm.phy.cam.ac.uk/~mdt26/local_papers/riggs_2008.pdf

Maybe there are physical reasons why Rigg's model will not work and why Bohm/Hiley thought it necessary to advance their "active information" model?
 
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  • #501
Locked pending a reality check. Thread unlikely to be re-opened.
 
<h2>1. What is the mind-body problem?</h2><p>The mind-body problem is a philosophical dilemma that seeks to understand the relationship between the mind and the body. It questions whether the mind and body are two distinct entities or if they are somehow connected.</p><h2>2. Who is Noam Chomsky and what is his view on the mind-body problem?</h2><p>Noam Chomsky is a linguist and philosopher who is known for his theory of generative grammar. Chomsky believes that the mind and body are separate entities and that the mind is responsible for language acquisition and processing.</p><h2>3. What is Thomas Nagel's perspective on the mind-body problem?</h2><p>Thomas Nagel is a philosopher who believes in a dualistic approach to the mind-body problem. He argues that the mind and body are fundamentally different, and that consciousness cannot be reduced to physical processes.</p><h2>4. How do Chomsky and Nagel's views differ?</h2><p>Chomsky and Nagel have different perspectives on the mind-body problem. Chomsky believes in a more materialistic approach, where the mind is a product of the physical brain. Nagel, on the other hand, argues for a dualistic view where the mind and body are separate entities.</p><h2>5. What are some potential implications of the mind-body problem?</h2><p>The mind-body problem has significant implications for fields such as psychology, neuroscience, and philosophy. It can also have implications for our understanding of consciousness, free will, and the nature of reality.</p>

1. What is the mind-body problem?

The mind-body problem is a philosophical dilemma that seeks to understand the relationship between the mind and the body. It questions whether the mind and body are two distinct entities or if they are somehow connected.

2. Who is Noam Chomsky and what is his view on the mind-body problem?

Noam Chomsky is a linguist and philosopher who is known for his theory of generative grammar. Chomsky believes that the mind and body are separate entities and that the mind is responsible for language acquisition and processing.

3. What is Thomas Nagel's perspective on the mind-body problem?

Thomas Nagel is a philosopher who believes in a dualistic approach to the mind-body problem. He argues that the mind and body are fundamentally different, and that consciousness cannot be reduced to physical processes.

4. How do Chomsky and Nagel's views differ?

Chomsky and Nagel have different perspectives on the mind-body problem. Chomsky believes in a more materialistic approach, where the mind is a product of the physical brain. Nagel, on the other hand, argues for a dualistic view where the mind and body are separate entities.

5. What are some potential implications of the mind-body problem?

The mind-body problem has significant implications for fields such as psychology, neuroscience, and philosophy. It can also have implications for our understanding of consciousness, free will, and the nature of reality.

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