Pain & Consciousness: What is It?

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    Consciousness Pain
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Discussion Overview

The discussion revolves around the nature of consciousness and its relationship to pain, exploring philosophical, psychological, and neurological perspectives. Participants examine how consciousness may arise, its role in experiencing pain, and the implications of these ideas on moral behavior and cognitive differences.

Discussion Character

  • Exploratory
  • Conceptual clarification
  • Debate/contested

Main Points Raised

  • One participant references Descartes' substance dualism, suggesting that consciousness may have evolved as a mechanism to prevent injury.
  • Another participant argues that consciousness encompasses thoughts, experiences, and a conscience, proposing that mind and body are a singular entity rather than separate components.
  • A question is raised about the necessity of consciousness for the experience of pain, implying that without consciousness, one cannot recognize or record pain as a feeling.
  • One viewpoint presents consciousness as an emergent property resulting from the brain's synchronization with external stimuli, suggesting that this process is a survival strategy.
  • Another participant expands on the emergent property idea, proposing that differences in cognitive abilities among individuals may stem from varying levels of consciousness and brain responsiveness to stimuli.
  • A participant questions why individuals react differently to moral dilemmas if consciousness was originally designed to prevent pain, suggesting that conscience is a part of the mind that evolves with personal growth.

Areas of Agreement / Disagreement

Participants express a range of views on the nature of consciousness, its emergence, and its implications for moral behavior. There is no consensus on these topics, and multiple competing perspectives remain present throughout the discussion.

Contextual Notes

Some claims rely on assumptions about the nature of consciousness and its relationship to pain, which are not universally accepted. The discussion also touches on the interplay between biology, psychology, and philosophy without resolving the complexities involved.

King Arthur
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http://philosophy.uwaterloo.ca/MindDict/substancedualism.html
Quote
Perhaps the most famous proponent of substance dualism was Descartes, who cashed out the distinction between minds and bodies as follows:

Minds are things that think but lack spatial magnitude, and bodies are things that have spatial magnitudes, but don't think.
End Quote

Just a thought, our evolutionary ancestors had bodies, but these were only simple one celled creatures. I would have thought the mind, (consciousness) was something that the body developed along the lines of pain, to prevent injury.

What do you think consciousness is?
 
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Consciousness is our thoughts, experiences, pleasures and the fact that we have a conscience, "i think therefore i am"

the problem with referring to Descartes in the present day and age is the fact that the knowledge available now, far transcends what was available then.

Today scientist know that the mind and body (and I am including spirit) are one, there is no separation and the two/three should not be considered as anything other than one singular entity in which our conscious is given an opportunity to expand, grow, and learn, for all we truly are are our thoughts and experiences, the rest is subjective.

Mind is a platform for conscious experience
Spirit is a platform for growth based on our conscious experience
the one cannot survive and (grow) without the other.
 
Wouldn't we need consciousness in order to feel the pain, otherwise how would we know that it is pain so that we could record it as a feeling that we either like or dislike if we were not conscious?
 
King Arthur said:
What do you think consciousness is?

That's always an interesting thing to think about. This is my personal opinion:

I think consciousness is an emergent property that arises from the brain synchronizing it's dynamics to those of the outside world. It does this as a survival strategy. For example, I hear dogs barking outside in the distance. I believe I'm conscious of that because my brain adjusts the firing patterns of some neurons in the brain to somehow "match" the dynamics of the dogs barking. I can't say exactly how. But I think the brain does this for every other phenomenon it "experiences": the brain mimics the outside world by modeling it's dynamic behavior in the form of nerve impulses.

An analogy I would give is tuning a wave form to match another wave form in terms of frequency and amplitude. The second waveform now "experiences" the first waveform because it has grown "like" it. Now imagine millions of these similarities coupled together and what emerges I believe is the conscious experience.

That's why I believe the answer to the problem of mind and consciousness will not come from biology or medicine or chemistry but from mathematics in the form of understanding massively-coupled non-linear dynamics.

So if I was a young man interested in this problem I would become a mathematician. But when I was a young man I was interested in Biology so I became a Chemist. :)
 
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LudusRex said:
That's a cool sounding idea. It could explain the differences in cognitive abilities between humans as well. The only difference is that some are just more conscious than others. Their brains are better able to mimic the stimuli coming from your sense organs and therefore present themselves with a more accurate representation of reality.

I guess that also explains why a digital recording of a dog's bark is more conscious than our experience of it ;-)
 
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if our conscience was originaly disigned to prevent pain then wouldent everybodys act and develop in a similer way? if thts the case why do people react differently? why could some people murder in cold blood and other throw up with guilt at stealing some spice. i believe our conscience is just another part of your mind that grows as you do and its just an a part of you brain that isent dominent and isent prejudiced telling you what you honestly think right and wrong is
 

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