TeddyKGB said:And yet the self at some point loses the ability to distinguish qualia from the perception of qualia. The self cannot differentiate two different adaptive modalities.
I imagine if the experiment were altered somewhat to go back and forth between the two, the self could indeed differentiate. The process of going back and forth would itself become easier in time I suppose. But the fact that practice makes thing second nature does not to me imply much of anything one way or the other about the nature of "self".
TeddyKGB said:Perhaps now you know how I feel when I see explanations that appeal to the non-physical.
I wish I could say I had phrased it like that on purpse. After I posted it though I had a twinge of a smile because this is exactly what a lot of atheists seem to say regarding the spiritual, yes.
TeddyKGB said:Forgive me for revisiting motives, but it is perhaps your theistic bias that leads you to find epistemological comfort in a position that I find to be more of an explanatory black hole.
Well we've posted back and forth in a thoughtful way together at this point to have built a little good faith, and truthfully, motive, slippery as it is, is an important subject of its own in these matters. Still, I have to remind you (or tell you for the first time?) that I was not born a Christian, nor was I raised one. For me, the process was the exact opposite. I came to my understanding of self first, then from there went to spirituality and from there to the specific reigion of Christianity. This process was largely guided by my father in my late grade school years, who at the time and really, still to this day operates mostly as a sceptic, although he likes to confess Christ almost it seems as a hedge. Later, around 14, I came to a sort of crisis of conscience. I simply could not keep from thinking about spiritual matters, and found myself at a Methodist church. I joined it more or less out of a sort of combined sense of patriotism and civic duty. A few weeks later, I went to a Baptist church and for the first time really grasped the "good news", or gospel, however one might want to put it. I can say that as an experience, it is a lot like discovering the answer to a question you have been studying long and hard over. I think that's why it is often considered "revelation". But my conversion was long, long after I had decided that my personal self was at least in some way separate from the physical body.
TeddyKGB said:In fairness, it is possible that I have a bias in the other direction. Of course, if I had a more concrete notion of the non-physical (pun sort of intended) I might be able to better bridge the gap in my understanding.
... but the fact that I do not share your phenomena does not entail something non-physical.
You can never have a concrete notion of the non-physical, and I think that is what trips you up. You're trying to shoe horn something that does not fit into your frame of reference into your frame of reference rather than simply changing your frame of reference to include the thing in question. Even your use of language seems to betray a conscious effort to avoid even the appearance of implying the immaterial. Anyone else might have said, "but the fact that I do not share your perceptions does not entail something non-physical." But I think at some level you are aware that the word "perception", being more aligned with the subjective, is much closer to what I mean by the non-physical, whereas "phenomena" is a word that can bridge that gap. If you had no notion of the thing, you would not know to avoid words like "perceptions". So I think you have about as good an idea as is necessary. You just are uncomfortable with it for reasons I have yet to really understand.
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