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What If Consciousness Comes First?

atanu

Member
Premium Member
There are many ways to define consciousness. I don't know that just being able to respond to external stimuli is consciousness under the normative usage of the word. I tend to think of consciousness as the ability to be self aware and have an awareness of surroundings, not just react through a chemical process. But as I indicated, for purposes of this thread, I can entertain other definitions.


Commonly people take the conscious thought/sensation in mind as consciousness. That is just a minuscule fraction of what consciousness is. First and foremost, it is the power of discernment. It is the will. It is the "I" sense that runs through the waking, dreaming, and deep sleep states. It is the self awareness of self awareness. It is awareness of presence of objects (mental and material) and also awareness of lack of objects (as in deep sleep). And this is only from the human perspective.

Earlier I had made a thread. You may wish to read that.
Consciousness and Mind according to Vedanta


I do not consider machines conscious in the normative use of the word.

Yeah. Only Abacus mystics are certain that they can upload consciousness onto computers.

Why 'upgrading' humanity is a transhumanist myth
 

atanu

Member
Premium Member
Here is a recent article. We now have *maps* of how different words affect the brain. This means we can know (some of) what a person is reading by looking at their brain scans.
A map of the brain can tell what you're reading about: Through brain imaging, scientists open another door to our inner thoughts and narratives
Here is a similar situation where we can tell what a person is seeing from a brain scan:
'Mind-reading' brain-decoding tech
And here is one where we can identify the emotion someone is experiencing from a brain scan:
Scientists identify emotions based on brain activity
And here is one (old) that recreates what someone sees (their internal images):
Sientists use brain imaging to reveal the movies in our mind
And these are just the tip of an iceberg of how much we can map internal states to brain states. We can, in some situations, literally read someone's mind.
Isn't this a demonstration that the hard problem isn't really a problem at all?

No it is not a demonstration that the 'experience' aspect of consciousness is explained by these examples of correlations.The audio monitors in radios may faithfully correlate with the audio output. That does not mean that the audio monitors are producing the sound. All links you provided show correlation and do not prove that brain activities give rise to consciousness, which is the competence to discern and experience.

Even if you map out the exact pattern of brain waves that give rise to a person’s momentary complex of awareness, that mapping would only explain the physical correlate of these experiences, but it wouldn’t be them. A person doesn’t experience patterns, and her experiences are as irreducibly real as her brain waves are, and different from them.
 

Polymath257

Think & Care
Staff member
Premium Member
No it is not a demonstration that the 'experience' aspect of consciousness is explained by these examples of correlations.The audio monitors in radios may faithfully correlate with the audio output. That does not mean that the audio monitors are producing the sound. All links you provided show correlation and do not prove that brain activities give rise to consciousness, which is the competence to discern and experience.

But if we stimulate the brain directly, they get the same experiences. That would be like stimulating the audio monitors and getting the sound.

So, yes, there is a direct causal connection.

Even if you map out the exact pattern of brain waves that give rise to a person’s momentary complex of awareness, that mapping would only explain the physical correlate of these experiences, but it wouldn’t be them. A person doesn’t experience patterns, and her experiences are as irreducibly real as her brain waves are, and different from them.

And what if we can reliably cause those experiences by stimulating the brain appropriately? Which, in many cases, we can.
 

atanu

Member
Premium Member
I am not insisting that I am a zombie. I am wondering whether or not I am. How can I tell? how can you?

Will a zombie wonder whether it was a zombie? :facepalm: And is a zombie expected to discern the truth? Actually, I should stop right here. Although I am disappointed at the level of discourse, I go on for the sake of records.

Consciousness is a brain information neural process. Because it isn't 'aware' of discontinuities it interprets itself as continuous. The same thing happens in other brain processes such as the blind spot (where our field of vision seems continuous but there is actually a rather large blind area we are usually just not aware of).

Where is 'discernment' in brain information? Where is information of experience and where is information of gaps in experience? Where is information of self hood? Where is information about how it feels to be in pain etc.?

(BTW, the example of blind spot actually shows the executive unitive consciousness that self is. )

Once aain, I have yet to see a good description of what the hard problem of consciousness *is*. As far as I can see, it hasn't been solved because it simply doesn't exist at all.

Is this supposed to be a joke? Hard problem of consciousness is well known in scientific and philosophical circles.

https://www.iep.utm.edu/hard-con/

Your whole world is a world of experience and discernment. You experience yourself as an "I" awareness, you experience your thoughts in mind, and your body-brain. You experience the objects of the mind and of the world. But then inexplicably you ascribe this very power of discernment and experiencing to theses experienced (external) objects.

The problem stems from dualism inherent in the materialistic worldview. According to mainstream physicalism, qualities may exist only in the phenomenal field of the experiencer and not in phyla ultimates. It is the specific arrangement of ultimates in a nervous system that, somehow constitutes or generates its phenomenal properties.

Now, the problem relates to how our subjective experience of qualities — the warmth of fire, the redness of an apple, the bitterness of disappointment, etc. — can arise from arrangements of ultimates. These ultimates do possess abstract relational properties such as mass, spin, momentum, and charge, but there is nothing about mass, spin, momentum, or charge, or the relative positions and interactions across ultimates, in terms of which one could deduce what the warmth of fire, the redness of an apple, or the bitterness of disappointment feel like, subjectively.

I had earlier shown an example of pain. The verbal report of your pain and your shrieks of pain may well be correlated to some brain state. But there is no way that the feeling of pain can be expressed in terms of language or in terms of brain states.

Let me, for benefit of other readers repeat that example:

Quale does not differ from sensation but it differs from the observable behaviours. For example, suppose xyz is in pain and I see him wincing and groaning. But I do not have any idea of his subjective sensation of pain. Two aspects of consciousness elude functalisation and they are "the self (consciousness itself) and its subjective experiences and mental causations. Let me illustrate this with an example.

To use correlation data of ‘partly visible and partly subjective first party experience’ versus ‘measurable brain state’ (suppose correlation of ‘pain’ to stimulation of ‘x centre’ in brain), we have to functionalise ‘Pain’. An example is given below:


    • Observation: xyz has his x-centre in brain stimulated at t.
    • Established Correlation data: x-centre stimulation (in humans) is caused by tissue damage and it in turn causes winces and groans.
    • Functional definition of pain: To be in pain, by definition, is to be in a state which is caused by tissue damage and which in turn causes winces and groans.
    • Prediction: Therefore, xyz must be wincing and groaning due to pain at t.
The third line, a functional definition of pain, does not represent empirical/factual information about pain; it gives us the meaning of “pain”. This way we can predict xyz's pain from physical/behavioural information alone. This also answers as to why sensations accompany the brain’s workings. Here, I assume that we are able to functionalise the behavioural aspects in a foolproof manner, incorporating all aspects that matter. Yetsensations, or qualia, resist functional reduction and there still is no glimmer of an explanation in above. Groans and winces are observable effects. But the inner sense of pain and its intensity are not functionally definable.

We know that in brain ions move across membranes and cause electrical activity which can be measured. That in turn causes the neuron to turn on its metabolic interface and cause release of different kinds of neurotransmitters that move across synaptic cleft and activate other neurone/s. So where in all of this does the thought occur? Where is our thought? Where is our experience of the world? When we say we see something, we feel something, we think something where in all of that is that really happening? And so if you give a person a drug or if a person meditates, how do you ultimately link that back to what’s going on in the brain itself and how reductionistic can we ultimately be
?​

Unfortunately @polymath does not answer the questions raised but simply asserts again and again that here is no qualitative experience other than the neuronal interactions. But how? How the physical ultimates characterised by mass, spin, momentum etc., give rise to phenomenal experience? There has been no explanation of the linkage. But there has been repeated eliminative assertions.

You seem to confuse being alive with being conscious. Then you confuse the ability to learn with an aspect of consciousness. I don't see *either* as necessarily meaning there is an 'internal mental state' because life alone doesn't imply the existence of a mind. Simple reactivity is not the same as consciousness.

So, at least part of the problem here seems to be definitional. What, precisely, do you mean when you say something is conscious? You have previously claimed that robots cannot ever be conscious. Why not? You have claimed that insects, for example, are conscious. Why so? What do you see as the relevant difference between the two (robots and insects)?
I see consciousness as a type of information processing that includes knowledge of 'self'. But, for example, I do not consider the immune system to be a type of consciousness even though it deals with 'self' versus 'non-self'.

Yes. I think you need to be clear that the awareness of an object (material or mental) is an effect of power of consciousness, which is competence to discern and experience.

You may wish to read this to understand what I mean by the term 'consciousness'.

Consciousness and Mind according to Vedanta

Note to @Polymath257 :

After three months you will very likely again act confounded about my use of the term consciousness. You will again come from the premise as if consciousness is only what the mind is aware of. It is irritative and painful to repeat explanations and see the same refuted arguments thrown back again and again.

Till date I have not seen a demonstration from you or anyone that the intense qualitative 'what it feels like to be in orgasm' is equal to the corresponding state data of the brain of the orgasmic person. I repeatedly fail to make you comprehend that the state data is 'third party' data. Whereas the 'orgasm' is first person datum.

Suppose I am in deep sleep and see no self and no world. It is the first party experiential datum. The corresponding brain wave data is the waking state POV of the scientist who records the data. The first party 'non-dual experience' of deep sleep is not same as the wave patterns recorded in waking state by a waking person that is replete with dualism. There is no correspondence.

But I know that in next post you will again claim that the qualitative experience of orgasm is same as the brain state record.

...
 
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atanu

Member
Premium Member
But if we stimulate the brain directly, they get the same experiences. That would be like stimulating the audio monitors and getting the sound.

So, yes, there is a direct causal connection.

I can bring up body temperature by meditation. I can stabilise blood pressure and pulse by meditation. And there are so many other volitional and intentional stances that I can take to control brain state. So, your example of stimulating brain to obtain experience proves nothing. You still cannot explain away the hard problem of consciousness.

OTOH, t is much more parsimonious and logical to accord 'discernment (consciousness)' a fundamental status in 'Existence'. In this scheme, the body-brain and all phenomena are partial expressions of non dual consciousness only. I am not offering you this as a scientific proof. I am offering you this for thinking.

You may wish to see the following video:


You may also wish to read the following paper, especially the section on consciousness.

https://static1.squarespace.com/sta...1425656584247/universe-life-consciousness.pdf


...
 

Polymath257

Think & Care
Staff member
Premium Member
Will a zombie wonder whether it was a zombie? :facepalm: And is a zombie expected to discern the truth? Actually, I should stop right here. Although I am disappointed at the level of discourse, I go on for the sake of records.

Well, since zombies are physically *identical* to conscious people, they would certainly *speak the words* expressing curiosity as to whether they are zombies or not.

Where is 'discernment' in brain information? Where is information of experience and where is information of gaps in experience? Where is information of self hood? Where is information about how it feels to be in pain etc.?

Literally all over the place. Discernment is just an aspect of information processing--making a judgement. Information is what the neurons convey--that is sort of their role here. Information about how it feels to be in pain is located, as mentioned in those articles, in the brain stem with projections to the frontal cortex.

(BTW, the example of blind spot actually shows the executive unitive consciousness that self is. )

It shows how the brain 'papers over discontinuities'. Which is why the consciousness *seems* unitive, just like our visual field.

Is this supposed to be a joke? Hard problem of consciousness is well known in scientific and philosophical circles.

https://www.iep.utm.edu/hard-con/

Yes, I know there is a flurry of discussion about it, but I have never really seen the problem pinpointed. And part of the problem is figuring out a decent definition of the term 'consiousness'. There seems to be a range of opinion about what it even means. So, is a thermostat conscious? If so, then consciousness is just another aspect of physical existence and it is no problem to say that our consciousness originates in the brain or that machines can be conscious.

Your whole world is a world of experience and discernment. You experience yourself as an "I" awareness, you experience your thoughts in mind, and your body-brain. You experience the objects of the mind and of the world. But then inexplicably you ascribe this very power of discernment and experiencing to theses experienced (external) objects.

No, I attribute them to the *internal* objects: like my brain (which is internal to me). Again, I fail to see how having correlates to every conscious state and some brain state along with, say, the ability to stimulate the brain to give that conscious state *isn't* a solution to the problem.

The problem stems from dualism inherent in the materialistic worldview. According to mainstream physicalism, qualities may exist only in the phenomenal field of the experiencer and not in phyla ultimates. It is the specific arrangement of ultimates in a nervous system that, somehow constitutes or generates its phenomenal properties.

Well, I have *never* claimed that 'qualities may exist only in the phenomenal field of the experiencer'. In fact, I specifically deny that. I'll go further and say that seems to be directly *counter* to what physicalism means: that everything can ultimately be understood in terms of physical events.

Now, the problem relates to how our subjective experience of qualities — the warmth of fire, the redness of an apple, the bitterness of disappointment, etc. — can arise from arrangements of ultimates. These ultimates do possess abstract relational properties such as mass, spin, momentum, and charge, but there is nothing about mass, spin, momentum, or charge, or the relative positions and interactions across ultimates, in terms of which one could deduce what the warmth of fire, the redness of an apple, or the bitterness of disappointment feel like, subjectively.

Sorry, but your metaphysics is getting int he way. 'Ultimates' seems like a nonsense term to me. Do you mean fundamental particles? If so, then these 'ultimates' interact with each other and those interactions carry information. And consciousness (awareness?) is ultimately a matter of information processing. as far as I can see.

I had earlier shown an example of pain. The verbal report of your pain and your shrieks of pain may well be correlated to some brain state. But there is no way that the feeling of pain can be expressed in terms of language or in terms of brain states.

Even if true, so what? If we can cause that pain solely by stimulating some area of the brain (that would be stimulated by pain receptors otherwise) and the person reports feeling pain, how have we *not* given a causal explanation of the feeling of pain?

Let me, for benefit of other readers repeat that example:

Quale does not differ from sensation but it differs from the observable behaviours. For example, suppose xyz is in pain and I see him wincing and groaning. But I do not have any idea of his subjective sensation of pain. Two aspects of consciousness elude functalisation and they are "the self (consciousness itself) and its subjective experiences and mental causations. Let me illustrate this with an example.

To use correlation data of ‘partly visible and partly subjective first party experience’ versus ‘measurable brain state’ (suppose correlation of ‘pain’ to stimulation of ‘x centre’ in brain), we have to functionalise ‘Pain’. An example is given below:


    • Observation: xyz has his x-centre in brain stimulated at t.
    • Established Correlation data: x-centre stimulation (in humans) is caused by tissue damage and it in turn causes winces and groans.
    • Functional definition of pain: To be in pain, by definition, is to be in a state which is caused by tissue damage and which in turn causes winces and groans.
    • Prediction: Therefore, xyz must be wincing and groaning due to pain at t.
The third line, a functional definition of pain, does not represent empirical/factual information about pain; it gives us the meaning of “pain”. This way we can predict xyz's pain from physical/behavioural information alone. This also answers as to why sensations accompany the brain’s workings. Here, I assume that we are able to functionalise the behavioural aspects in a foolproof manner, incorporating all aspects that matter. Yetsensations, or qualia, resist functional reduction and there still is no glimmer of an explanation in above. Groans and winces are observable effects. But the inner sense of pain and its intensity are not functionally definable.


Now, let's add to this that when we stimulate that area of the brain even without tissue damage the person winces and reports having pain. Isn't that a causal link between the brain state and the sensation? What else do you require?

Let me give a physical analogy. In electromagnetism there is the concept of an electric charge. There is also a concept of an electric field. We have a 'law' that says that charges produce/cause magnetic fields. There is no 'mechanism' for this. There is simply the consistent correlation between the existence of a change and the existence of an electric field. But that connection is considered to be an explanation of the properties of charges and electric fields.

I don't see how getting a consistent, testable, correlation between brain states and conscious states *isn't* an explanation of the two, especially when we can actually stimulate the brain and produce those conscious states reliably.

What else do you want? And would you not consider the charge/electric field connection to be 'explained' even though there isn't a mechanism?

We know that in brain ions move across membranes and cause electrical activity which can be measured. That in turn causes the neuron to turn on its metabolic interface and cause release of different kinds of neurotransmitters that move across synaptic cleft and activate other neurone/s. So where in all of this does the thought occur? Where is our thought? Where is our experience of the world? When we say we see something, we feel something, we think something where in all of that is that really happening? And so if you give a person a drug or if a person meditates, how do you ultimately link that back to what’s going on in the brain itself and how reductionistic can we ultimately be

Where does a calculation that a computer does occur? Where is it that the computer 'decides' to do one job and not a different one? Where is it that the computer 'recognizes' an image as being a face?

These seem to me to be precisely equivalent to what you just asked.​

Unfortunately @polymath does not answer the questions raised but simply asserts again and again that here is no qualitative experience other than the neuronal interactions. But how? How the physical ultimates characterised by mass, spin, momentum etc., give rise to phenomenal experience? There has been no explanation of the linkage. But there has been repeated eliminative assertions.

Well, information is carried in those physical interactions. We know this to be the case in computers, for example, but it is common to essentially *all* physical interactions that information is produced and carried.

What is an experience except the information about what is 'sensed'?

Yes. I think you need to be clear that the awareness of an object (material or mental) is an effect of power of consciousness, which is competence to discern and experience.

You may wish to read this to understand what I mean by the term 'consciousness'.

Consciousness and Mind according to Vedanta

Note to @Polymath257 :

After three months you will very likely again act confounded about my use of the term consciousness. You will again come from the premise as if consciousness is only what the mind is aware of. It is irritative and painful to repeat explanations and see the same refuted arguments thrown back again and again.

Till date I have not seen a demonstration from you or anyone that the intense qualitative 'what it feels like to be in orgasm' is equal to the corresponding state data of the brain of the orgasmic person. I repeatedly fail to make you comprehend that the state data is 'third party' data. Whereas the 'orgasm' is first person datum.

Suppose I am in deep sleep and see no self and no world. It is the first party experiential datum. The corresponding brain wave data is the waking state POV of the scientist who records the data. The first party qualitative experience of deep sleep is not same as the wave patterns recorded in waking state by a waking person.

But I know that in next post you will again claim that the qualitative experience of orgasm is same as the brain state record.

...

Again, I see those brain activities (not just the brain waves) as being a different look at exactly the same phenomenon. I see the first person/third person as being rather irrelevant and trivial. It happens in my brain so I am the one that feels it. If it happens in your brain, you are the one that feels it. If it happens in mine, it is first person for me and third person for you. If it happens in your brain it is first person for you and third person for me. So what?

You seem to discount the idea that first and third person data are just different sides of the exact same coin. It is a bit 'irritating and painful' for you to keep missing this simple point.
 
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Polymath257

Think & Care
Staff member
Premium Member
I can bring up body temperature by meditation. I can stabilise blood pressure and pulse by meditation. And there are so many other volitional and intentional stances that I can take to control brain state. So, your example of stimulating brain to obtain experience proves nothing. You still cannot explain away the hard problem of consciousness.

And the reason you can do this is that your brain is part of your body and controls a good part of it, often unconsciously.

OTOH, t is much more parsimonious and logical to accord 'discernment (consciousness)' a fundamental status in 'Existence'. In this scheme, the body-brain and all phenomena are partial expressions of non dual consciousness only. I am not offering you this as a scientific proof. I am offering you this for thinking.

You may wish to see the following video:


You may also wish to read the following paper, especially the section on consciousness.

https://static1.squarespace.com/sta...1425656584247/universe-life-consciousness.pdf


...

What I would say is that interaction is fundamental to existence and interaction produces and carries information. Maybe you identify that as consciousness, but I see that as an abuse of the word.

I didn't yet watch the video, but I read the paper. it seems like fairly typical quantum woo. I'm not impressed at all.
 

atanu

Member
Premium Member
And the reason you can do this is that your brain is part of your body and controls a good part of it, often unconsciously.

You know that that the reductionist materialistic model fails to explain the explanatory gap. To avoid this problem Dennett et al foolishly explain consciousness away. The knowledge and experience is the datum on which everything is built. It is self-delusional to explain away the consciousness that allows you cognition and conceptualisation and claim that the electro-chemical processes are the subjective experiences. These physical ultimates are defined in terms of mass, charge etc. How do you convert these mass/charge to feeling of colour red or feeling of pain.

Instead of wasting my time, you could please explain this mechanism first. Explain how physical parameters: mass, charge, momentum, spin etc. will give rise to the Self and the Sensations. Please be honest, if you can't.

OTOH, if the the body, including the brain, is in mind, where is the problem? In this case, there is no explanatory gap either and all physical laws are explained as before. This is parsimonious since in this scenario, unlike the materialistic world view, there is no forced imagining of a shadow layer of physical ultimates that we can never experience.

What I would say is that interaction is fundamental to existence and interaction produces and carries information. Maybe you identify that as consciousness, but I see that as an abuse of the word.

Hmm. Interaction. It sounds like an animist to me. How does interaction understand what is interaction is going on without there being conscious agent involved in the interaction? You seem to be woolly.

I didn't yet watch the video, but I read the paper. it seems like fairly typical quantum woo. I'm not impressed at all.

That seems very arrogant. To help readers I paste the transcript of the part of Ed Witten's talk that pertains here and ask readers to show me the 'woo'.

Ed Witten


“Biologists and perhaps physicists will understand much better how the brain works. But why something that we call consciousness goes with those workings, I think that will remain mysterious. I have a much easier time imagining how we understand the Big Bang than I have imagining how we can understand consciousness…

Understanding the function of the brain is a very exciting problem in which probably there will be a lot of progress during the next few decades. That’s not out of reach. But I think there probably will remain a level of mystery regarding why the brain is functioning in the ways that we can see it, why it creates consciousness or whatever you want to call it. How it functions in the way a conscious human being functions will become clear. But what it is we are experiencing when we are experiencing consciousness, I see as remaining a mystery…

Perhaps it won’t remain a mystery if there is a modification in the laws of physics as they apply to the brain. I think that’s very unlikely. I am skeptical that it’s going to be a part of physics.”

What is quantum woo here? Do you think that Ed Witten will indulge in quantum woo? Actually you seem to be exhibiting the trend of arrogance that scientism has generated recently -- bullying.

Similarly, when a respectable and reputable physicist, Andrei Linde, questions the premise of materialism as below, the bullies come pouncing.

Andrei Linde
https://static1.squarespace.com/sta...1425656584247/universe-life-consciousness.pdf

If quantum mechanics is true, then one may try to find the wave function of the universe. ... For example, at the classical level one can speak of the age of the universe t. However, the essence of the Wheeler-DeWitt equation, which is the Schrodinger equation for the wave function of the universe, is that this wave function does not depend on time, ........ Therefore if one would wish to describe the evolution of the universe with the help of its wave function, one would be in trouble: The universe does not change in time, it is immortal, and it is dead.

The resolution of this paradox is rather instructive. The notion of evolution is not applicable to the universe as a whole since there is no external observer with respect to the universe, and there is no external clock as well which would not belong to the universe. .....Without introducing an observer, we have a dead universe, which does not evolve in time. ....

This problem was known to us for more than 30 years, but it was easy to ignore it ... However, in the context of inflationary cosmology the situation is entirely different.
.... A number of authors have underscored the complexity of the situation, replacing the word observer with the word {it participant}, and introducing such terms as a “self-observing universe”. In fact, the question may come down to whether standard physical theory is actually a closed system with regard to its description of the universe as a whole at the quantum level: is it really possible to fully understand what the universe is without first understanding what life is?

The question of Andrei Linde is not different from what Max Plack stated.
Science cannot solve the final mystery

So. What is woo in the positions of these respectable physicists?
...
 
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Polymath257

Think & Care
Staff member
Premium Member
You know that that the reductionist materialistic model fails to explain the explanatory gap. To avoid this problem Dennett et al foolishly explain consciousness away. The knowledge and experience is the datum on which everything is built. It is self-delusional to explain away the consciousness that allows you cognition and conceptualisation and claim that the electro-chemical processes are the subjective experiences. These physical ultimates are defined in terms of mass, charge etc. How do you convert these mass/charge to feeling of colour red or feeling of pain.

Well, can we start by acknowledging that these parameters are able to form and convey information in a variety of different ways?

Instead of wasting my time, you could please explain this mechanism first. Explain how physical parameters: mass, charge, momentum, spin etc. will give rise to the Self and the Sensations. Please be honest, if you can't.

Well, we don't know the details, on that I agree. But I don't see a 'hard problem' here, just a lot of 'soft problems'.

But what we do know is that information from the senses is conveyed along the nerves to the brain. This happens through the interaction of the atoms and molecules comprising those neurons and sense organs. Can we at least agree to this? That your low level description involving mass, charge, etc allows for neurons which convey signals carrying sensory information?


OTOH, if the the body, including the brain, is in mind, where is the problem? In this case, there is no explanatory gap either and all physical laws are explained as before. This is parsimonious since in this scenario, unlike the materialistic world view, there is no forced imagining of a shadow layer of physical ultimates that we can never experience.

Even if everything is all mind, there are *still* ultimates that we cannot ever experience: electrons, neutrinos, infrared light, etc. So this is not solving the basic problem. Furthermore, we know that the brain is the location where the information from our senses is processed via physical processes. We know that the brain has a dynamic 'resting state'. Can we at least agree to this much?

Hmm. Interaction. It sounds like an animist to me. How does interaction understand what is interaction is going on without there being conscious agent involved in the interaction? You seem to be woolly.

Well, each and every interaction has the potential to produce information or to carry information. Again, this is nothing new.

I think the basic problem here is that I see 'consciousness' as more of a state of information processing than anything else. It is a way of identifying and processing information about the world around us and ourselves.

The reason some thoughts are 'mine' is because they happen in the brain that is in one particular body, which is me.

That seems very arrogant. To help readers I paste the transcript of the part of Ed Witten's talk that pertains here and ask readers to show me the 'woo'.

Ed Witten


“Biologists and perhaps physicists will understand much better how the brain works. But why something that we call consciousness goes with those workings, I think that will remain mysterious. I have a much easier time imagining how we understand the Big Bang than I have imagining how we can understand consciousness…

Understanding the function of the brain is a very exciting problem in which probably there will be a lot of progress during the next few decades. That’s not out of reach. But I think there probably will remain a level of mystery regarding why the brain is functioning in the ways that we can see it, why it creates consciousness or whatever you want to call it. How it functions in the way a conscious human being functions will become clear. But what it is we are experiencing when we are experiencing consciousness, I see as remaining a mystery…

Perhaps it won’t remain a mystery if there is a modification in the laws of physics as they apply to the brain. I think that’s very unlikely. I am skeptical that it’s going to be a part of physics.”

What is quantum woo here? Do you think that Ed Witten will indulge in quantum woo? Actually you seem to be exhibiting the trend of arrogance that scientism has generated recently -- bullying.

Similarly, when a respectable and reputable physicist, Andrei Linde, questions the premise of materialism as below, the bullies come pouncing.

Andrei Linde
https://static1.squarespace.com/sta...1425656584247/universe-life-consciousness.pdf

If quantum mechanics is true, then one may try to find the wave function of the universe. ... For example, at the classical level one can speak of the age of the universe t. However, the essence of the Wheeler-DeWitt equation, which is the Schrodinger equation for the wave function of the universe, is that this wave function does not depend on time, ........ Therefore if one would wish to describe the evolution of the universe with the help of its wave function, one would be in trouble: The universe does not change in time, it is immortal, and it is dead.

The resolution of this paradox is rather instructive. The notion of evolution is not applicable to the universe as a whole since there is no external observer with respect to the universe, and there is no external clock as well which would not belong to the universe. .....Without introducing an observer, we have a dead universe, which does not evolve in time. ....

This problem was known to us for more than 30 years, but it was easy to ignore it ... However, in the context of inflationary cosmology the situation is entirely different.
.... A number of authors have underscored the complexity of the situation, replacing the word observer with the word {it participant}, and introducing such terms as a “self-observing universe”. In fact, the question may come down to whether standard physical theory is actually a closed system with regard to its description of the universe as a whole at the quantum level: is it really possible to fully understand what the universe is without first understanding what life is?

The question of Andrei Linde is not different from what Max Plack stated.
Science cannot solve the final mystery

So. What is woo in the positions of these respectable physicists?
...

OK, so we have a couple of opinions about how our understanding of consciousness will proceed in the future. Neither of these physicists is a specialist in how the brain works. Nor are either of them biologists. So I don't regard their concerns about biology and consciousness as authoritative, especially when the specialists tend to disagree with them.

As far as when Wheeler-DeWitt equation goes, it is an equation for the *whole* of spacetime, so yes, it is static. But in that regard, so is general relativity. The role of consciousness just isn't as central as many people seem to think.
 
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