JJM
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- Apr 4, 2004
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This is not the point. What is stored in the brain is not the image, but a chemical, perhaps electrochemical (it really doesn't matter) sequence or something of the like. This is not the image properly, but a catalyst for bringing it about. Again, as an analogy, there is not actual sound on a CD. The sound only occurs once it is working in conjunctions with speakers. That which is burned into a CD is only catalyst for the creation of sound. We are equivocating when we say there is sound stored on the CD. We are playing a word game, to allow us to think about the thing in a way we find conceptually useful as opposed to the way it actually is.Where else is it stored, specifically? If I vaporize a person's brain, where else is that person's imagination?
I'm speaking of when you simply imagine a pineapple. When you imagine a pineapple, there is an image of a pineapple in your mind's eye. This pineapple does not exist external to your mind. Yet there is a representation of it in your mind. This image is an image properly, a chemical secquence is not the same thing as the image itself. Simply close your eyes and imagine a pineapple. The thing you are experiencing which resembles a pineapple is a true image. If you cannot do that consider some people who hallucinate and have images appear to them in their direct conscience experience which are not really there, or the images associated with a vivid dream you have had. There is an apparent representation of things which have no reality external to the mind. These may have the chemical workings of the brain as their source, but they are not the chemical workings of the brain. When I dream about a pineapple, I'm not seeing hormone levels changing in my visual cortex or whatever might be the correct way to describe the physical reality that is occurring within my skull, I'm seeing a pineapple, but it is not a real pineapple so it is an image. The question I'm asking is where is this image. You can only tell me where the chemical catalyst is. I'm terribly sorry if you cannot understand this distinction despite all of my efforts, but if not, then there is no longer any point in discussing the matter.I have no idea what you're asking. Are you imagining an image it or are you seeing it?
No, of course not. Again, not sure why this is surprising.
Yet there is an image in the consciousness which is like the image on the monitor and not like the magnetic sequence in the harddrive. It is the thing which corresponds to without being the image on the actual monitor in the article you referenced. If the image exists, as anyone who has a visual imagination can attest, but it does not exists in physical space as you admit, it must exist in or as some sort of nonphycial reality.
Nice rant. I particularly like the implied claim that philosophy is a higher level of thought than all of those other lowly approaches which only manage to produce actual answers.
Well it is. The answers philosophy seeks are of a higher level of answers than those which science seeks. This is true conceptually, they conceptually precede the scientific one and as a matter of difficulty typically. The reason science finds answers so readily is that its questions are not all that difficult. Francis Bacon, the father of the inductive method, makes this his principal reason for proposing use of the method. Essentially the argument in favor for the scientific method in the Novum Organon is: Let us spend our time answering easy questions we are more capable of by the scientific method than attempting to come to answers to these more difficult and profund questions, via another method because the scientific method cannot begin to approach them.
Someone who doesn't realize that the questions science answers are of a lower order and/or doesn't realize that it cannot answer questions of a higher order, has completely missed the point of the scientific project, which is essentially to create knowledge about physical bodies for the purpose of making technology which makes our lives more physically convenient. It simply cannot begin to approach questions of the nature of consciousness. Such questions are beyond its capacity.
I remember walking out of class once at Oxford, which was really more of a seminar, and having doctors of philsophy lamenting how frustrating it was that scientists, especially particle physicists, could not grasp the simplest philosophical concepts that virtually everyone agrees on and how even more frustrating that it was socially taboo to tell them so.
Can you not see how pompous this is? Are you so a priori convinced of my own stupidity that you cannot stop and consider what I am actually saying. I'm not suggesting that I ever guessed the image is actually in the harddrive like it might be in a filing cabinet. We agree on the physical reality that is occurring. The point I'm trying to get you to realize is that "store" like put something in a filing cabinet and "store" as in save something to a harddrive do not have the same meaning. Again we are equivocating. Again we are playing a word game to simplify the reality for our day to day purposes, but you are behaving as though the game is a reality. We are only virtually storing the image on the harddrive. "Virtual": being such in power, force, or effect, though not actually or expressly suchThe image is encoded and stored there in a particular way. It isn't the way you might have naively guessed it would be stored, but all that says is that your assumptions about how things work are incorrect.
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