EAllusion wrote:I'm not saying it is a bunch of black boxes. I used to work in a neuroscience lab Mak. I focused on physiological psych in college. I think you'll have to trust that I know a fair amount about the science of the brain.Maksutov wrote:This isn't a bunch of black boxes.
We know what each of the sensory organs does. We know how to enhance, repair, even replace parts of them. We know where they tie into the brain. We know where they tie into the brain. We have watched activity in those areas in real time. The combination of sensory inputs, organizing faculties and other neurological features we are only beginning to understand--but will--constitute consciousness.
Note that I did not need to use the terms "physicalism" or "materialism" or "idealism" or "philosophy" or any other abstraction beyond the facts above. I did not even use the words "irrelevant", "red herring", or "anachronism", either, in reference to the insistence on dualism and defense of arguments in support of it.
I think what I asked you to consider didn't actually land. Imagine that your experience of color (the greeness of green if you will) was purely mental. There is no "green" in the world out there - only in your thoughts. This does not mean there isn't a photons of different wavelengths. It means that "greeness" is a mental property. Imagine the feeling of a solid object. I'm sure you know that solid objects are almost entirely made up of empty space. Their firmness is you detecting electromagnetic interactions. Let's say the experience of "solid" is a mental construct. Now, if you are holding onto that notion, apply it to every other category of property you normally think of as physical. Time, space, etc. Even the very language you use to describe quantum mechanics and how the brain operates in the world is entirely made up of metal constructs. The only thing you ever get know are mental properties and therefore the world as you know it is purely mental.
I'm not saying this position is correct. I'm asking you to hold it in your brain for a second to contemplate it. Do you see how simply pointing out that only things with brains have consciousness doesn't refute it?
I understand that qualia exist. But they're rooted in material things. You see a contradiction where I don't, apparently.