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Apparently, the assertions are such that you can't refute them. Walk off with you nose in the air, if you will. No one is fooled but you.I would respond but you just seem to argue via assertion, so theres no real point.
Apparently, the assertions are such that you can't refute them. Walk off with you nose in the air, if you will. No one is fooled but you.
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No. The software becomes part of the system. The computer is the computer, on or off, barebones or OS installed.
Ahh! But we are discussing the "mind body problem". The body can exist without a mind, but the mind, it would seem, cannot exist without a body. And that point addresses the "theological" implications that are historically linked to that topic. Some of those electrochemical signals, even, can exist in a comatose person, so conciousness is obviously something else. So what is relevant about the "problem" to you?Now, whether the mind, as a collection of electrical signals can exist without a brain can exist is irrelevant and untestable, as for the moment, consciousness can only exist as a process of the brain.
I can't believe anyhting so nihilisic (reducing to nothing) about conscious life and the existential condition. Neitszche attacked religion for being nihilistic about life in favour of a future heavenly state. I think that "science" is belig nihilistic in favour of so many so called experimental findings. Of course science may be right, and has better standards of evidence than religion, but whilst is is so incomplete I am not going to become a nihilist, and deny 'common sense' phenomenological reality, just because of some 20/1 century (after a mere 100 years of psychology) experiments say such and such.
So that there is a meaningful "why"-question (and an answer to it) is merely a baseless premise that creates a problem it can´t solve.A professor (IIRC) wrote that the problem is so deep we do not even know what kind of answer we might expect.
Well the science was presented as if is backed the opinion that experience is just some kind of unimportant added accidental extra. I don't think the science actually implies that, but that was what it was "made to say". And it was that which I was arguing against.So "science" may be right, but you can't go there because you think it is incomplete?
In what way? What do you think they have missed?
IIRC the "master" does it better here.David Chalmers on the "hard problem" of consciousness - The Consciousness Chronicles Vol. 1 - YouTubeWell if you are looking for the answer to, "why are you, you?" I think we can answer it by explaining all the physical processes that go on, how your DNA came to be what it is, and the environment you grew up in. If you think a deeper answer exists, but it is impossible for us to get to the answer, I can (kind of) see where you are coming from, I think, but I think the question needs to be defined better.
#2. Why does consciousness arise in the brain.Now, let me clarify something: Are you asking why we developed consciousness as humans or why consciousness arises from the processes in the brain?
Well we would have to know sufficient the condition(s) for consciousness and check whether any are there in a computer. AFAIK we do not have that capability as of yet. So whats left? We cuold argue by analogy (as computers are similar in some ways to humans and other things we believe are aware), but that would be a less failsafe method as the analogy is not that strong.How would you go about determining if the computer is conscious and self-aware?
Quatone why is a question meaningful only if we can begin to answer it?
Where else would you expect it to arise?#2. Why does consciousness arise in the brain.
So "science" may be right, but you can't go there because you think it is incomplete?
In what way? What do you think they have missed?
Well the science was presented as if is backed the opinion that experience is just some kind of unimportant added accidental extra. I don't think the science actually implies that, but that was what it was "made to say". And it was that which I was arguing against.
And you think that "why does consciousness arise in the brain?" is a nonsensical question?That´s not exactly what I said, but anyway:
Because that´s the meaning of the word "meaning": The question must have an intelligible meaning to us in order for it to be meaningful.
I can ask questions like "What´s the square root of blue?" by the dozens, merely demonstrating that I´m just assembling words without even knowing what I am saying. Referring to the fact that there might possibly an answer that I/ don´t/can´t know of doesn´t change anything about it.
All well and good they are questions but they do not answer the original quesiton.Where else would you expect it to arise?
What else would you expect to arise in the brain?
Yes (actually "meaningless" was the term of my choice), unless you tell me what you mean.And you think that "why does consciousness arise in the brain?" is a nonsensical question?
Certainly not, and they aren´t meant to. They are meant to help understanding what you are asking.All well and good they are questions but they do not answer the original quesiton.
No, at this point I am not saying anything. I just asked questions.Are you saying there is a rational a priori expactancy that the brain ought to be consicous?