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What a load of rubbish I used the term metaphysical not mythical, it is you which is misrepresenting me.And you are making false representations of what I said. I never said that Nature is promoting mystical stuff. Thats your version. I said that mainstream journals like Nature have become open to publishing on ideas about consciousness beyond brain.
If IIT has such broad support then why does a Nature link in my previous post dismiss IIT as pseudoscience?There are legitimate scientific theories on consciousness beyond brain. Two examples published in mainstream journals are Integrated Information theory and Global Neuronal Workspace Theory (GNWT).
These both posit consciousness and information which creates consciousness beyond the brain. In the case of IIT all things have some form of consciousness based on the level of Information and Integration. Which is more or less similar to Panpsychism and other Mind as fundemental theories.
Your link wasn't about non-brain mind studies it was about paranormal phenomena. My request has always been about scientific studies of non-material or non-brain mind/consciousness. For claims regarding humans that could be in neurobiology, psychology, etc. For claims about consciousness being some sort of fundamental property or emergent generally from QM, then we need to see how these ideas are popular or growing in physics. Studies of NDEs, past-life experiences, etc. don't cut the mustard, so bibliographic studies of reports of such are not what I have been looking for. (I have said this man times already.)Lol. Are you saying you don't believe in Gomer. Whatever Gomer says is true, I tell you.
I wasn't. I was making a legitmate observation. You made a truth claim about my link. I asked where was the peer reviewed support or stats that you demanded of me. I laughed because I find it amusing that I am pointing out the double standards.
LOL. Valid evidence of pyschic phenomena. Are you serious? LOLLol now your using popularity. Yet there were objections my logic was based on popularity. Please be consistent.
Its not just about Pyschics but a wide range of phenomena. So you are misrepresenting the papers. Second there is valid evidence on the Pyschic phenomena. So this is once again tarring good science as nonsense.
Well known by people with half a brain. (And by their nature the number of testimonies of people who claim to have experienced something that does not exist is always growing whether it is true or not since the "testimonies" don't cease to exist.)[content about a specific physics paper removed for discussion ELSEWHERE]
Well known by whom lol. This is what I mean. We have a growing data base of testimony of people who sware the truth. Whose lives are changed. But skeptics have to force them to be deluded or imagining things to be right on this. Its always the way. Peoples testimonies and the evidence is dismissed as not real.
How can you say to someone that their sincere testimony is not real when they tell you it was definitely real and they know that they are not dreaming or deluded. What then. You just double down and say theres no evidence and their deluded.
I already explained why.I don't think there were any bad sources. Thats your misrepresentation.
Don't call a non-peer reviewed source a peer-reviewed source. If you are making a claim based on the sources within your source, cite those, not the summary article.If you actually look at them the ones that were not peer review they either had a link to peer review or stated the same idea as what was proposed in peer reviewed science. So in fact this is good science as we have many independent articles all converging on the same idea. All coming to the same findings.
The thread is still in the science section, not the philosophy section. Poltics, theology, current events, fellowship, arts and crafts, etc. are also off topic here.Your changing the goal posts. I said the thread opens the door for philosophy and alternative metaphysics because it asks the question about 'Vision beyond the physical brain'.
Proving there is vision or not beyond brain does not change the fact that this thread naturally leads to philosopy and the debate about proving such. We are doing it right now in discussing whether its possible lol.
It's about not believing in any creator god, or something like that. There are plenty of people who don't believe in a god (like yours) but do believe in souls, spirits, ghosts, reincarnation, psychic powers, ghosts, an afterlife, ESP, telekinesis, etc. I personally dropped all of the supernatural stuff before I dropped God.Well there you go I learnt something new. I assumed that it was about not just belief in God but belief in supernaturalism. So why disbelief in God if its not about supernaturalism.
"Atheism" (and I don't like the "ism" ending since it isn't a practice or dogma) is just not believing. If you don't think there is evidence for a god, then you don't believe it. I don't think there is evidence for your god, so I don't believe in it.Belief is about believing something without the evidence. Is that atheism. A belief that requires physical evidence. I am not sure what the basis for atheism is.
Discuss religion, no, but I have colleagues I have worked with for 20 years and I know what their religions are and they know that I have none. We certainly don't discuss theology, proof for/against god(s), scripture, or any of that stuff even within ourselves.But what about in the lunch room or private time. I would imagine this may come up sometimes. I know in my work its not always conducive to talk religion.
Yeah, this is why I had at least marginal interest in the surveys of professional philosophers. Since they aren't all hard bitten scientists and can work through any possibility without the restrictions of physical reality, they'd be the most likely to support these notions, and -- well -- they don't. Isn't it weird how the people who are most likely to know the philosophical arguments for the existence of a god don't? Hmmm.I think from memory the Phil paper survey showed a high support for materialism and atheism.
The thing about that bibliographic survey is that it covers all sorts of things that are not credible. For NDEs it is *hard* to build a proper controlled study. It is relatively *easy* to design a bad study with poor controls that results in a "positive" outcome. Many of the others are just case studies which are utterly useless.But if this is evidence for say showing that these alternative ideas are not just psuedoscience but are being taken serious. Does not these kinds of analysis help support that and be important evidence.
It seems that this is dismissing important evidence and the very thing I am talking about where sometimes the evidence is dismissed as a priori due to a belief rather than the science. How can anyone present evidence if its dismissed.
I would imagine if there was analysis for NDE or Psychic research you would also dismiss that.
I thought I had already done this. Does not peer review papers count. I must have linked at least 10 papers or articles all saying that these ideas are increasing. The longitude research shows they are increasing. These ideas are making featured articles in all the top journals like Nature.
And you've not provided anything but "colloquial" impressions from friendly news articles.It is a fact that even 10 years ago this would not have happened. That in the everday sense of the meaning is an increase. How about you now counter this with some peer review and support that shows it has not increased. Instead of knocking down everything I link.
I mean not just in your field but across all fields associated with the study of consciousness.
Yes and I am not saying that anyones idea of what the Mind represents should be excluded. I think all possibilities should be considered. Especially when you say that peoples ideas may vary. It seems subjective and not an objective or physical thing that we should be placing stipulations on peoples beliefs.Other people's "idea of a mind" may vary.![]()
Lol I thought it said mystical. Must have been the word bogus before metaphysics that threw me off. Either way bogus or mythical I did not say this. You are misrepresenting what I said. Why on earth would I claim that Nature is promoting bogus ideas.What a load of rubbish I used the term metaphysical not mythical, it is you which is misrepresenting me.
I never said IIT had broad support. I said it has become accepted in mainstream journals like Nature. When even 10 years ago this would not be the case.If IIT has such broad support
I don't know. I would imagine there are papers supporting or dismissing it. But ideas like this are being published all the time and its increasing. This is a fact and I provided the longitude study and other articles.then why does a Nature link in my previous post dismiss IIT as pseudoscience?
Not exactly. Ideas like GNWT appeal to the best of both worlds. Its using neural connectivity but its also proposing that there is some sort of consciousness that can be sent out into the world so that other conscious humans can tap into the same consciousness. Like it has a global influence.What makes a theory of consciousness unscientific? - Nature Neuroscience
Theories of consciousness have a long and controversial history. One well-known proposal — integrated information theory — has recently been labeled as ‘pseudoscience’, which has caused a heated open debate. Here we discuss the case and argue that the theory is indeed unscientific because its...www.nature.com
Global Neuronal Workspace Theory (GNWT) has an important clue, it is neuronal derived from the word neuron which is one of the building blocks of brain matter. The theory clearly states consciousness stems from brain functions and not from beyond the brain.
As is so typical you either have zero comprehension of your sources or deliberately misrepresent them.
But as I keep saying its not just about what your looking for. Otherwise you cut everyone else out of this thread who disagrees that this topic should only be determined by one disiciple of science being physics.My post is about the meta conversation. The parts of Steve's post about the actual topic have been removed to avoid confusion.
Your link wasn't about non-brain mind studies it was about paranormal phenomena. My request has always been about scientific studies of non-material or non-brain mind/consciousness. For claims regarding humans that could be in neurobiology, psychology, etc. For claims about consciousness being some sort of fundamental property or emergent generally from QM, then we need to see how these ideas are popular or growing in physics. Studies of NDEs, past-life experiences, etc. don't cut the mustard, so bibliographic studies of reports of such are not what I have been looking for. (I have said this man times already.)
I never said IIT had broad support. I said it has become accepted in mainstream journals like Nature. When even 10 years ago this would not be the case.
Here is a paper on IIT in Nature that has been cited over 2,000 times. If its psuedoscience then why is it even published and cited by Nature.
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Integrated information theory: from consciousness to its physical substrate - Nature Reviews Neuroscience
Uncovering the neural basis of consciousness is a major challenge to neuroscience. In this Perspective, Tononi and colleagues describe the integrated information theory of consciousness and how it might be used to answer outstanding questions about the nature of consciousness.www.nature.com
That's because I want to discuss one topic/claim properly rather than to discuss all of them at once like you do.But as I keep saying its not just about what your looking for. Otherwise you cut everyone else out of this thread who disagrees that this topic should only be determined by one disiciple of science being physics.
I've spent 30 years immersed in physics and if you hadn't posted them, I'd never heard of any of them. So...But lets look at what you want for a bit. I don't mind. Lets start with "consciousness being some sort of fundamental property or emergent generally from QM. We can come back to the others.
The first thing to say would be. Is not consciousness as fundemental one of the interpretations of QM. At least as far as several pioneers and current physicists like Wheeler, Wigner and Stapp.
Don't most of the ideas such as Quantum Bayesianism (QBism), Panpsychism, Information theories like Wheelers (it from bit) and the Participatory Universe and other variations on Quantum Field Consciousness come from this interpretation.
If you have evidence for support for your notions that these are important in my field, fine, but I don't feel like debating physics with you.Should I bother linking support as there are also plenty of papers on these. Or are they all Woo lol.
Who said that? Who made physics the one disciple of science? Why not, say, neurobiology?But as I keep saying its not just about what your looking for. Otherwise you cut everyone else out of this thread who disagrees that this topic should only be determined by one disiciple of science being physics.
Don't bother. They are unlikely to support your claims.But lets look at what you want for a bit. I don't mind. Lets start with "consciousness being some sort of fundamental property or emergent generally from QM. We can come back to the others.
The first thing to say would be. Is not consciousness as fundemental one of the interpretations of QM. At least as far as several pioneers and current physicists like Wheeler, Wigner and Stapp.
Don't most of the ideas such as Quantum Bayesianism (QBism), Panpsychism, Information theories like Wheelers (it from bit) and the Participatory Universe and other variations on Quantum Field Consciousness come from this interpretation.
Should I bother linking support as there are also plenty of papers on these. Or are they all Woo lol.
He lacks the discipline to keep the discussion to a single discipline.I imagine he meant discipline.
That was me, maybe I overstated it. The fact is, brain and mind is always at the same place in my experience (I gave this explanation already). Additionally, manipulations of the brain changes the mind in my experience. What would you call that kind of connection if not obvious? Inherently connected?Perhaps, perhaps not. Just because we have correlates doesn't imply any sort of intrinsic relationship. And it is only if they are identical that we would be able to locate mind within the brain.
You replied to an ongoing discussion in which I was responding to a poster who had claimed it was obvious, with my principal contention being that saying it is obvious is not an explanation of how such a determination was made.
You are so confused as to who said what.Lol I thought it said mystical. Must have been the word bogus before metaphysics that threw me off. Either way bogus or mythical I did not say this. You are misrepresenting what I said. Why on earth would I claim that Nature is promoting bogus ideas.
IIT as a 'beyond the brain theory" has never been published in any reputable peer reviewed journal because it is pseudoscience.I never said IIT had broad support. I said it has become accepted in mainstream journals like Nature. When even 10 years ago this would not be the case.
Here we have an opinion piece where IIT is explicitly expressed as a theory of the brain not beyond the brain. The abstract cannot make this any clearer.Here is a paper on IIT in Nature that has been cited over 2,000 times. If its psuedoscience then why is it even published and cited by Nature.
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Integrated information theory: from consciousness to its physical substrate - Nature Reviews Neuroscience
Uncovering the neural basis of consciousness is a major challenge to neuroscience. In this Perspective, Tononi and colleagues describe the integrated information theory of consciousness and how it might be used to answer outstanding questions about the nature of consciousness.www.nature.com
You have a history of failing to understand your references and reading your own biases into them.I don't know. I would imagine there are papers supporting or dismissing it. But ideas like this are being published all the time and its increasing. This is a fact and I provided the longitude study and other articles.
Totally irrelevant to anything I have discussed in this thread.Why is it so hard to admit that people have become more open to such ideas. I think there was some survey done which showed that the vast majority of people believe in the soul and afterlife. Why is it such a controversial thing. You can't say the majority of people are engaging in Woo.
This is exactly the point I was making, you do not understand how GNWT works so you read your own bias into it.Not exactly. Ideas like GNWT appeal to the best of both worlds. Its using neural connectivity but its also proposing that there is some sort of consciousness that can be sent out into the world so that other conscious humans can tap into the same consciousness. Like it has a global influence.
The GNW proposes that, in the conscious state, a non-linear network ignition associated with recurrent processing amplifies and sustains a neural representation, allowing the corresponding information to be globally accessed by local processors.
More or less like telepathy lol.
You repeatedly answer a different question to the ones you are asked. The common exponents of this approach are either dishonest politicians, or bumbing fools. I'm sure you fit into a third category, but at this point I have no idea what it is.The fact you did not even acknowledge this disagreement and assumed I did not answer your question is evidence that you don't even acknowledge my arguements and disagreements.
1. GNWT refresher (brain-centric)
In Global Neuronal Workspace Theory (GNWT), consciousness corresponds to:
Most brain activity is local and unconscious.
- Transient, large-scale activation linking
- frontal cortex
- parietal cortex
- cingulate cortex
- thalamic and neuromodulatory systems
A mental content becomes conscious only when activity in its local circuit ignites and is broadcast across this fronto-parietal network.
2. What cognitive dissonance looks like neurally
Cognitive dissonance is not localized to one brain region.
It is a network-level conflict involving several systems being co-activated in an unstable way.
3. Step-by-step neural account of dissonance
3.1 Competing representations arise in different regions
Example: “I am honest” vs “I just lied”
At this stage:
Content Primary brain systems Self-concept (“I am honest”) Medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC), posterior cingulate cortex (PCC), default mode network Action memory (“I lied”) Hippocampus, lateral temporal cortex, motor planning areas Social norm violation Orbitofrontal cortex (OFC), ventromedial PFC Emotional salience Amygdala, insula
- These representations can coexist without discomfort
- As long as they remain locally processed
3.2 Simultaneous access to the global workspace
Dissonance begins when:
Neurally:
- Both representations are simultaneously recruited into the global workspace
Now incompatible contents are globally available to:
- Dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) supports sustained activation
- Inferior parietal cortex enables global broadcasting
- Thalamus synchronizes long-range communication
- language
- planning
- working memory
- conscious report
3.3 Conflict detection and discomfort
The conflict itself is detected primarily by:
Anterior Cingulate Cortex (ACC)
Supporting regions:
- Monitors inconsistency between competing action or belief signals
- Signals cognitive conflict and prediction error
This network activity correlates with:
- Anterior insula → interoceptive awareness of discomfort
- Brainstem neuromodulatory systems → arousal (noradrenaline, dopamine)
➡️ This is the felt experience of dissonance.
- Subjective tension
- Physiological stress markers
- Motivational urgency
4. Why the discomfort demands resolution
From a control-systems perspective:
Thus, the brain is under pressure to reduce global inconsistency.
- The prefrontal cortex requires a coherent model to guide behavior
- Conflicting global signals impair:
- decision-making
- prediction
- social navigation
5. Neural mechanisms of dissonance reduction
Different strategies correspond to different neural suppressions or re-weightings:
Importantly:
Strategy Neural implementation Rationalization dlPFC reinterprets memory representations Attitude change mPFC updates self-model Attention shifting Parietal cortex down-weights one representation Memory suppression Hippocampal retrieval inhibition Trivialization OFC reduces value / salience signal
- These are executive control operations
- Not failures of rationality per se
6. Why dishonesty and projection follow dissonance
They are secondary coping mechanisms, not the dissonance itself.
- Dishonesty: dlPFC constructs an outward narrative while suppressing ACC conflict signals
- Projection: self-threatening representations are displaced to social cognition networks (TPJ, mPFC)
7. Why dissonance is conscious
In GNWT terms:
This explains:
- Conflict must be globally broadcast to be experienced
- Unconscious inconsistencies do not produce discomfort
- Why reflection triggers dissonance
- Why distraction reduces it
- Why accountability amplifies it
8. One-sentence neural definition
Cognitive dissonance arises when incompatible neural representations—originating in distinct brain systems—are simultaneously broadcast across the fronto-parietal global workspace, triggering conflict monitoring in the anterior cingulate and control responses in prefrontal cortex.9. Why this framing matters
This account:
If you’d like, next I can:
- Grounds dissonance in specific neural circuits
- Explains variability across individuals (ACC/PFC efficiency)
- Avoids vague “ego” or “self-conflict” language
- Fits cleanly with neuroimaging and lesion data
- Map this to fMRI / EEG findings
- Compare GNWT with predictive-processing models region-by-region
- Explain how brain injury alters dissonance
- Or connect this to moral reasoning and belief polarization
The author is the person who came up with IIT Giulio Tononi.This is an opinion piece, Steve. Please examine your links before you post them. This part should have given it away:
"
"
- Opinion
- Published: 26 May 2016
Ok fair enough so long as you realise that this will never verify that consciousness is ontologically physical.That's because I want to discuss one topic/claim properly rather than to discuss all of them at once like you do.
And another physicist like Henry Stapp who worked with both Wolfgang Pauli and Werner Heisenberg would be involved in such ideas most of their careers. So what.I've spent 30 years immersed in physics and if you hadn't posted them, I'd never heard of any of them. So...
Ok thats strange. You have been demanding physics and when I go along you don't want to discuss it.If you have evidence for support for your notions that these are important in my field, fine, but I don't feel like debating physics with you.
If you noticed that reply was for Hans and not you.Who said that? Who made physics the one disciple of science? Why not, say, neurobiology?
So you disagree with some of the pioneers of QM like Planck, Schrödinger, Wheeler, Wigner and Stapp.Don't bother. They are unlikely to support your claims.
Information Integration Theory (IIT) refers to two distinct but related concepts:As an AI exercise I asked if @stevevw's cognitive dissonance, habitual dishonesty and propensity for projecting his views on others can be explained by his butchered account of GNWT (Global Neuronal Workspace Theory).
It's one of those questions I asked GPT-5 as a novice as I have a mathematics background not neuroscience.
Evidently his behaviour can be explained.