How is it possible to know that we feel emotion consciously?

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Discussion Overview

The discussion explores the nature of consciousness and its relationship to emotions, questioning how we can be aware of feeling emotions consciously. It encompasses philosophical perspectives on consciousness, the mind-body problem, and the implications of materialism versus idealism.

Discussion Character

  • Debate/contested
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Exploratory

Main Points Raised

  • Some participants assert that consciousness is distinct from the brain, suggesting it may be aphysical or exist in another universe, while others challenge this notion by questioning the existence of a "portal" for communication between the non-physical and physical realms.
  • One participant proposes three possibilities regarding the relationship between consciousness and the brain, ultimately setting aside the idea that consciousness is purely in the brain.
  • Another participant references Daniel Dennett's materialist perspective on consciousness, suggesting it provides a comprehensive explanation without invoking non-physical elements.
  • A younger participant questions the definition of "feeling" emotions, proposing that the term may be misused and suggesting it could be a linguistic flaw.
  • There is a discussion about the difference between feeling emotions and emotions affecting thoughts, with one participant emphasizing the subjective experience of emotions as distinct from their influence on thought patterns.
  • Some participants express skepticism about the initial premises of the discussion, suggesting that flawed premises may lead to flawed conclusions.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants do not reach consensus on the nature of consciousness or its relationship to emotions. Multiple competing views are presented, with some arguing for a materialist perspective and others advocating for non-physical interpretations.

Contextual Notes

The discussion includes unresolved assumptions about the definitions of consciousness and emotions, as well as the implications of various philosophical positions. The complexity of the topic leads to divergent viewpoints without clear resolution.

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Firstly, this belongs in General Philosophy because it deals with more than the nature of consciousness.

Now, we can all agree that we are aware of being conscious and that we FEEL emotions- they don't simply affect our behavior and psychology, but we FEEL them uniquely- this is consciousness. According to Science (and to my understanding this is essentially proven), thought occurs in the brain. Wheather or not it ALSO occurs in the "mind" (independent of the brain) and wheather or not this "mind" exists is irrelevant to our current topic- the only relevance of thought taking place in the brain is that it means that the brain performs all of our thought and controls the body.

Since we all can claim to FEEL emotion rather than simply have it influence our actions and thoughts, we must feel it in our consciousness. Consciousness is, by its very nature, not encodable in a computer program or a physical code (If anyone has a counterexample for this, feel welcome to share it). Therefore our consciousness is not in our brain- it is somewhere else, perhaps a "soul" (although where it IS is also irrelevant to our present conversation, the only relevance is that it is NOT in the brain). Since all thought takes place and all action originates in the brain (including speech), how can consciousness be separate from the brain? We can think about and communicate that we are conscious- so one of three things must be taking place:

1) The consciousness is somehow communicating with the brain.
2) The consciousness IS actually in the brain.
3) We are not really conscious.

Number three can be disregarded for the present- if anyone is interested in discussion on it there is a topic on the Metaphysics & Epistemology forum dealing with this.

Number two we have already set aside- although I am reasonably sure that we have not covered the issue well enough to be sure of its impossibility. Any ideas on this are VERY welcome.

Number one we shall look at in a bit more depth. First of all, the consciousness is either physical or aphysical. Aphysical is like the common notion of a soul- either truly aphysical or existing in another universe. Physical would be if consciousness is made up of an electromagnetic field or something we havn't yet discovered. If consciousness is physical, it must simply be affecting the brain according to the laws of physics. This seems rather unlikely.

If consciousness is aphysical it can exist in an alternate universe of some kind or be truly aphysical, not made of matter of any type anywhere. The only way another universe could communicate with the brain is through some odd sort of portal- EXCEEDINGLY unlikely, reaching nearly to the point of impossibility. Consciousness is most likely (if it exists and is outside the brain) truly aphysical then. This could either communicate with the brain by supernaturally MOVING the electrons, proteins, etc within the brain to fit its will, or through choosing the outcome of TRULY random things. The only truly random thing known (actually it is not KNOWN as the theory is only a theory, not a fact) is quantum uncertainty. Could consciousness be affecting the brain through "rigging" quantum physics?

All of these explanations seem very inplausable, unlikely, and simply absurd... Does anyone have any arguments for or against them, or have any other possibilities that have been overlooked?

Overall, what opinions do you have on the topics brought up in this post?
 
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Sikz, there was quite a bit of discussion on this in the Archives (as can be seen from the thread with over 50 pages, which mainly dealt with Materialistic and Idealistic philosophies of the mind and consciousness), and I have presented something there which I will re-present here.

You mentioned that there would have to be a "portal" (I referred to it as an "intermediary", but "portal" works fine) between the non-physical and the physical, in order for consciousness to be non-physical and yet communicate with the brain. You are absolutely right, except there cannot logically be such a portal. It cannot exist, not even in principle. The reason this is is that for there to be an intermediary between the physical and the non-physical, this intermediary could neither be physical (since, if it were physical, it would be no more useful then the already physical brain in communicating with the non-physical) nor non-physical (since it would then be no more useful in communicating with the physical brain).

So, since we can logically rule out options 1 and 3 (btw, my congratulations on setting these out so clearly and intelligently), we must accept number 2.

Daniel Dennett is what is called a Materialist philosopher of the mind, and he has presented a model/theory for consciousness that I have yet to find fault with and that helps explain consciousness fully without ever leaving your option number 2. He does this in a book called Consciousness Explained, and I highly recommend this book for everyone; but particularly for you, Sikz, since you seem very interested in consciousness.
 
Smart people scare me...

I haven't quite reached my Formal Operation Thinking Stage Phasishness Thingimabobber.

I'm actually smart for my age; accelerated classes and junk, but I'm only 13; 9th grade.

Most people claim to "feel" emotion, but isn't feeling defined as having the ability to touch a specific object?

I think that people claim to "feel" emotion only because that is what they've heard before. It's another English language flaw. Yeah. Sure. Maybe that's it.

Whoa... There's a character limit... cool...
 
"Since we all can claim to FEEL emotion rather than simply have it influence our actions and thoughts..."-Sikz

What is the difference between feeling emotions and emotions affecting thought?
 
what about a lie detector?
 
Originally posted by jammieg
What is the difference between feeling emotions and emotions affecting thought?

If you feel an emotion, you subjectively experience it-- it has a definite 'feeling' about it, like anger, or joy. But for something to affect a thought in general does not require that one have direct conscious experience of it. Such an affect may be inferred by observing changes in thought patterns, but logical inference is not the same thing at all as direct conscious perception.
 
As Mentat pointed out, this discussion started with an illogical premise, so any conclusions will be almost certainly flawed.
 
Originally posted by Zero
As Mentat pointed out, this discussion started with an illogical premise, so any conclusions will be almost certainly flawed.

Except that this is a philosophy forum. And the point here is to actually explain and discuss why this is so. Not just claim it so.

Besides, I though sikz was more presenting the options than starting with a premise.
 
Originally posted by Mentat
You mentioned that there would have to be a "portal" (I referred to it as an "intermediary", but "portal" works fine) between the non-physical and the physical, in order for consciousness to be non-physical and yet communicate with the brain. You are absolutely right, except there cannot logically be such a portal. It cannot exist, not even in principle. The reason this is is that for there to be an intermediary between the physical and the non-physical, this intermediary could neither be physical (since, if it were physical, it would be no more useful then the already physical brain in communicating with the non-physical) nor non-physical (since it would then be no more useful in communicating with the physical brain).
We really should be careful about putting "labels" on things we don't understand, especially when it comes to consciousness and whether or not we have a soul. Whether it's physical or "non-physical" or, any other label we choose to ascribe, really has no bearing on the matter, if in fact the phenomenon exists. Perhaps we should approach it more from the standpoint of the phenomenon itself, and what it entails, rather than classify it in such a way that it doesn't bear any further consideration?
 
  • #10
As far as Mentat's thing about the logical impossibility of physical/non-physical interactions goes, I have posted a straightforward thought experiment showing how it is possible for something "physical" to interact with something "non-physical" here:

https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?s=&threadid=6793.
 
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  • #11
Also, couldn't there be some sort of "material" that interacts with BOTH, and thus that could act as the "portal"?
 
  • #12
Originally posted by Sikz
Also, couldn't there be some sort of "material" that interacts with BOTH, and thus that could act as the "portal"?

This is indeed the basic premise of the Matrix-esque thought experiment inspired by Chalmers; in this case, the thing that acts as an intermediary between "physical" and "non-physical" is the computers which generate the secondary "physical" reality in the minds of people hooked up to it. Please see the link above.
 
  • #13
Ah, yes I read the thought expirement before I made my previous post, I just didn't see that the expirement rendered the post repetitive...
 
  • #14
Originally posted by gcn_zelda
Smart people scare me...

I haven't quite reached my Formal Operation Thinking Stage Phasishness Thingimabobber.

I'm actually smart for my age; accelerated classes and junk, but I'm only 13; 9th grade.

Most people claim to "feel" emotion, but isn't feeling defined as having the ability to touch a specific object?

I think that people claim to "feel" emotion only because that is what they've heard before. It's another English language flaw. Yeah. Sure. Maybe that's it.

Whoa... There's a character limit... cool...

Welcome to the PFs, gcn_zelda! :smile:

I am just a couple of years older than you (15)...it's kind of nice (for me, at least) to find other young people here.

Anyway, as to your point about "feeling", there are more than one definition of that word, but even without this being the case, every "emotion" that one feels can be explained Materialistically...as a product of physical interactions in their bodies which would thus be literally "felt".
 
  • #15
Originally posted by Iacchus32
We really should be careful about putting "labels" on things we don't understand, especially when it comes to consciousness and whether or not we have a soul. Whether it's physical or "non-physical" or, any other label we choose to ascribe, really has no bearing on the matter, if in fact the phenomenon exists. Perhaps we should approach it more from the standpoint of the phenomenon itself, and what it entails, rather than classify it in such a way that it doesn't bear any further consideration?

Believe me, this was my initial, secondary, and subsequent approach for quite some time, but I have run into the logical impossibility of a non-physical "thing" interacting with a physical "thing" too many times, and no one (so far) has been able to explain it away.
 
  • #16
Originally posted by hypnagogue
As far as Mentat's thing about the logical impossibility of physical/non-physical interactions goes, I have posted a straightforward thought experiment showing how it is possible for something "physical" to interact with something "non-physical" here:

https://www.physicsforums.com/showthread.php?s=&threadid=6793.

My good buddy, hypnagogue, with a new counter! I will be going to that thread immediately...

[edit]to change a word
 
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  • #17
Originally posted by Mentat
Anyway, as to your point about "feeling", there are more than one definition of that word, but even without this being the case, every "emotion" that one feels can be explained Materialistically...as a product of physical interactions in their bodies which would thus be literally "felt".

I would like to qualify this by saying that we can drum up any number of correlations between physical changes in the body and emotion, but we don't necessarily understand how we consciously feel these things. That is, we can identify 'causes' but as of yet we cannot explain the underlying agency of these causes to produce conscious perceptions.
 
  • #18
Originally posted by hypnagogue
I would like to qualify this by saying that we can drum up any number of correlations between physical changes in the body and emotion, but we don't necessarily understand how we consciously feel these things. That is, we can identify 'causes' but as of yet we cannot explain the underlying agency of these causes to produce conscious perceptions.

You forget the intentional stance, good buddy. I made sure to mention in my post that the Materialistic viewpoint is that "feeling" is not a product of physical interactions, but the physical interactions themselves. Looking for "something more" is merely a human tendency, it is not a logical or scientific necessity.
 
  • #19
Originally posted by Fliption
Except that this is a philosophy forum. And the point here is to actually explain and discuss why this is so. Not just claim it so.

Besides, I though sikz was more presenting the options than starting with a premise.

Fliption, I believe Zero was referring to Sikz having separated "mind" from "brain" off-hand, when he (Zero) referred to the "flawed premise". Anyway, I don't just "claim" that this is wrong, I have presented logical barriers to it's being right (on other threads which you participated in), and no one has been able to combat them yet. That doesn't mean that I'm "right" either, but "right" doesn't exist in logic or philosophy and thus is not a concern of mine. If my argument holds as "valid", against all other arguments, that's enough for me.
 
  • #20
Originally posted by Mentat
You forget the intentional stance, good buddy. I made sure to mention in my post that the Materialistic viewpoint is that "feeling" is not a product of physical interactions, but the physical interactions themselves. Looking for "something more" is merely a human tendency, it is not a logical or scientific necessity.

Hm, we always seem to run up against the same walls. :smile: Saying that the physical interactions themselves are the feeling does still not explain why this is so. There is not even really a theory of what physical interactions feel like what sorts of feelings, beyond any correlations we have mapped out in the specific instance of the human body/brain-- and even these are tenuous since it's not clear what parts of these physical interactions are necessary for feeling, what parts are sufficient for feeling, and what parts are superfluous.
 
  • #21
Originally posted by Mentat
Believe me, this was my initial, secondary, and subsequent approach for quite some time, but I have run into the logical impossibility of a non-physical "thing" interacting with a physical "thing" too many times, and no one (so far) has been able to explain it away.
And yet what we're really talking about here is the difference between what is concrete and what is abstract or, that which we can experience through our five "physical senses," and that which we cannot. So in this sense the non-physical does exist, in terms of "the abstract."

Similarly, as I have mentioned before, you can make the comparison between the physical and non-physical in terms of radio receiver. Where the radio itself represents the physical, and the radio waves it picks up -- which, permeate everything, as perhaps consciousness does? -- reperesents the non-physical. Doesn't that at the very least suggest the possibility that information and/or communication can be sent and received from "remote" sources?
 
  • #22
Mentat, et al, as long as you insist that only the material exists and only the material can and does effect the material then you are limited to never finding a logical reasonable solution to the above and related philosophic problems.
Thought and intent is not physical or material but abstract and subjective. Whether thought is a product of the physical brain or of the immaterial mind it exists and effects the physical brain and body and through the body anything and everything it touches. This is shown to be true with every thought and intent that we have and act on. How it does this I don't know; but, it is obvious that it does.
To deny this is true is to deny the reality of life. To artificially cling relentlessly to an artificial philosopy proven to be absurd with its own words is absurdity in itself. You can not prove or disprove anything with a faulty logic or reasoning system. Its like trying to do math with only half of the numbers and wondering why it never works out right.
Without going into the spiritual realm of the soul and only sticking to the subjective and material realms we can only say that the subjective not only effects the objective but in the case of our bodies controls the objective. The only why that I can think that it can do this is to allow thought to have or be a force and or have energy as in an electromagnetic field or gravitational force. This energy or force would then be able to effect and control the physical
realm within our bodies.
I know that love is more than just an emotion. I know that love has both energy and force and can and does effect not only our bodies within but other bodies external to ourselves. Love can be felt, detected and responded to by another outside of ourself. There are numerous thing such as love that can do this. Laughter is one such that is infectous and has positive influence on others. It is all but irresistable as is love. These are just two of the most obvious examples that exist.
We have gone over all of this a number of time and you deny all of it
every time. Denying the intuitive and physically obvious in order to elude having to deny your absurd premise of materialism is simply illogical in suport of the illogic. There is no way an intelligent discussion can be had nor any way to come to an intelligent logical reasonable conclusion.
 
  • #23
Bald assertion of ones personal feelings does not a logical argument make.
 
  • #24
Originally posted by hypnagogue
Hm, we always seem to run up against the same walls. :smile: Saying that the physical interactions themselves are the feeling does still not explain why this is so.


Science cannot answer "why" questions. Philosophy can, but science is the branch of philosophy that I am using in my materialist postulations, and it is limited to "how", "what", "which", "when", and "where" questions.

There is not even really a theory of what physical interactions feel like what sorts of feelings, beyond any correlations we have mapped out in the specific instance of the human body/brain-- and even these are tenuous since it's not clear what parts of these physical interactions are necessary for feeling, what parts are sufficient for feeling, and what parts are superfluous.

The point is that the same parts that are active when experiencing something from external stimulus are necessary for experiencing them from internal stimulus (by the memory and pattern-recognition parts of the brain), which makes the job not discovering what causes subjective experience when there is no external stimulus, but discovering what causes subjective experience when there is. This point is dealt with by an explanation of the evolution of consciousness (which Dennett takes a stab at in his book - which I still highly recommend).
 
  • #25
Originally posted by Iacchus32
And yet what we're really talking about here is the difference between what is concrete and what is abstract or, that which we can experience through our five "physical senses," and that which we cannot. So in this sense the non-physical does exist, in terms of "the abstract."

But there is nothing we are not conscious of through one of our five physical sense (or reproduced from previous stimulations, recorded in memory). To assume that there are other other things is up to you, but it is not logical to assume that these other things interact with the brain at any time.

Similarly, as I have mentioned before, you can make the comparison between the physical and non-physical in terms of radio receiver. Where the radio itself represents the physical, and the radio waves it picks up -- which, permeate everything, as perhaps consciousness does? -- reperesents the non-physical.

Why should this be the case, when radio waves really are physical?

Doesn't that at the very least suggest the possibility that information and/or communication can be sent and received from "remote" sources?

"From 'remote' sources"?
 
  • #26
Originally posted by selfAdjoint
Bald assertion of ones personal feelings does not a logical argument make.

Did you intend the yoda approach?

Oh, btw, was that in response to Royce, or was that directed at "Mentat et al"?
 
  • #27
Originally posted by Mentat
Science cannot answer "why" questions. Philosophy can, but science is the branch of philosophy that I am using in my materialist postulations, and it is limited to "how", "what", "which", "when", and "where" questions.

How is a physical process conscious? If not all physical processes are conscious, then how is it that some are conscious and some are not? What physical processes are conscious, besides (at least some of) the physical processes taking place in a human body/brain? Which parts of physical processes in the human body/brain are necessary for conscious, which are sufficient, and which are superfluous?

Science may have some roughly sketched hypotheses to answer all these questions, but there is a critical problem. Scientific hypotheses are verified or falsified by objective measurements, but there is no currently known way to make direct, objective observations of subjective experiences. It may even turn out to be impossible. The only objective observations that can be made are second-hand, indirect ones such as behavioral analysis. Thus we must assume that consciousness is indicated by such and such behaviors, and not by others. This approach may work well enough in studying human consciousness, and indeed I think science can give better answers than we currently have for many of the above questions as applied to the special case of humans. We may even derive results that we can apply with some confidence to non-human animals, and indeed we already have undertaken such extrapolative procedures with apparent success.

But such an understanding of consciousness is necessarily to be derived ultimately by way of comparison of our own human subjective experiences to our own human physiology. Thus our understanding via this approach would seem to still be fated to be incomplete. If we encounter alien life some day, whose physiology is not readily comparable to our own human physiology and whose functional principles are not intimately related to our own as is the case with all our evolutionary cousins on earth, how then can we approach the question of the quality of this life form's conscious, or even indeed the question of whether it is conscious or not?

We cannot, because we would still have an incomplete theory of the physical underpinnings of consciousness that we could not depend on with any great degree of confidence for cases of physical systems drastically different from human beings. We would still be using the human subjective experience of consciousness as the pivot of our supposedly objective understanding of the entire phenomenon.

In science, complete understanding is derived by abstracting oneself away from a specific subjective situation or viewpoint, and performing an exclusively objective analysis on exclusively objective measurements. In the case of consciousness, this does not appear to be possible; rather, instead of abstracting ourselves away from the situation/viewpoint of a personal, subjective experience of consciousness, we are bound to rely on the specific situational viewpoint of our own exclusively human consciousness in order to attain any meaningful understanding in the first place. As such, we are necessarily prevented from attaining a truly universal and complete understanding of consciousness using the scientific method.
 
  • #28
I was gone for a week and a discussion grew too big for me to read now, I'm tired after a long drive. So i will put my input later when i catch up with you guys and gals.
 
  • #29
Originally posted by hypnagogue
How is a physical process conscious? If not all physical processes are conscious, then how is it that some are conscious and some are not? What physical processes are conscious, besides (at least some of) the physical processes taking place in a human body/brain? Which parts of physical processes in the human body/brain are necessary for conscious, which are sufficient, and which are superfluous?

My dear friend, we've covered some of this before (remember this thread?), and some of it is as yet mystery (meaning, there is no theory to directly address it).

Anyway, only physical things that can multi-task in the question/answer + production of multiple drafts (very interrelated concepts, btw) fashion are "conscious". Nothing else has the right qualifications, AFAIC, and the only example I can give you of something that actually does that is the brain.

Science may have some roughly sketched hypotheses to answer all these questions, but there is a critical problem. Scientific hypotheses are verified or falsified by objective measurements, but there is no currently known way to make direct, objective observations of subjective experiences.

That's the all-important/constantly brought up/somehow never understood point: Subjective experience is nothing but the question/answer processes of the brain. There is no further investigation necessary, once one has observed that these processes occur in the CPU of the subject, to prove that they are "conscious".[/color]

I really don't want to sound insulting in any way, so please don't take this wrong, but do you get what I'm saying now?

It may even turn out to be impossible. The only objective observations that can be made are second-hand, indirect ones such as behavioral analysis.

As per previously stated (in red) postulate (intentional stance, btw, but you already knew that), behavioral analysis is all that is necessary[/color] (provided, of course, that "behavior" encompasses activity of the brain).

Thus we must assume that consciousness is indicated by such and such behaviors, and not by others.

Consciousness is not indicated by any behaviors, it is a behavior. There's a huge difference in these two postulates.
 
  • #30
Truthfully i believe that the universe works in terms of 50/50 so my beliefs would have me saying that there is no wrong answer. And since it's 50/50 it would also mean that there is no right answer. Just thought I'd point that out since everything is possible, even impossibility is possible.

Now as for consciousness. I am aware of my existence but not fully aware. I know that i am physical and everything around me is physical including the air we breath. I know that i think faster then i can even comprehend because i am aware that every action i do from breathing to making a leap of faith requires a lot of thinking. If what we subconsciously think affects what we do to our conscious thinking then i assume that there must be something deeper then subconsciousthinking because why else would our nerves, movements, heart pumping blood and the other things our body does to keep it's survival just do what it does.

I also believe there is room for those with the soul idea but i don't really believe that it's that simple. I think of soul as the easy answer so we don't have to look into non-existence any further. After all souls moving on to non-physical realms is more comprehendible then a non-existent void isn't it? I would assume that it would.

I believe that the only way perfect can exist is that nothing else exist with it. After all if i were the only human left i would be perfect because there would be no other humans to compete with. That is why i strongly believe that nothing is very important even in the beginning when people say that our universe came from nothing. If nothing is something then that something is perfect.

Why change the subject eh? Well consciousness only exist within thought and thought alone. Without thought consciousness will not exist. Without thought there is no time or reality, no existence. There is only nothing. Now to me that is the perfect answer.
 

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