Are spirits stupid?

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_Some Schmo
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Post by _Some Schmo »

SeekerofTruth wrote:
Schmo wrote:

I challenge you to cite a single example of something non-physical the claims consciousness.


Spirit


Prove it.

SeekerofTruth wrote:
And I'm still waiting for you to explain how your consciousness can be under the influence of alcohol or drugs if consciousness is not a result of your physical being.


A good point. I assume you are talking about subjective experience. Objective observation can be easily explained because what is being observed is behavior and not consciousness. I do not do drugs and alcohol so I cannot speak personally to their effects on my consciousness. Apparently you have had a personal experience with them and can speak directly to their effects. What you are dealing with then is your personal experience and observation of others. Let us assume that drugs and alcohol do have an effect upon behavior. How do you know that they have an effect upon consciousness other than from your personal experience? You can't.

If drugs and alcohol do have an effect upon consciousness, it does not necessarily have to be direct. The conscious aspect of a person could observe the behavior of the body and consciously assume "I am drunk" or "I am drugged" when as a matter of fact, the body is drunk or has been drugged. An open question is: "Do drugs and alcohol necessarily affect the consciousness or everyone?" I have read of instances where this is not the case:

http://www.stevens.edu/csw/cgi-bin/blogs/scientific_curmudgeon/?p=32


Now you're grasping at straws. There's nothing subjective about a drunk swerving all over the road and running other people into ditches. I have objectively witnessed this very thing happening. We have laws prohibiting such behavior and huge penalties for it because it is widely acknowledged that alcohol affects your consciousness.

How about a better example: why do people lose their consciousness when under the influence of an anesthetic?
God belief is for people who don't want to live life on the universe's terms.
_Tarski
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Post by _Tarski »

SeekerofTruth wrote:
Can you directly measure the position of all the atoms in the room? Can you directly measure quarks or black holes.


You are narrowly defining consciousness. I do not accept your definition. For me consciousness has nothing to do with behavior. It includes self-awareness, awareness of the world around me and awareness that I am having thoughts, among other things.

self awareness and thinking are behaviors of the brain. The brain is doing something. It is processing information about the world and about itself. It is employing concepts to help if negotiate the world.

You are not saying anything yet.

If consciousness doesn't do anything and it is undetectable then it is no better than the elves that are in my fridge but only when no one is looking.
Seriously dude! What are you talking about?
when believers want to give their claims more weight, they dress these claims up in scientific terms. When believers want to belittle atheism or secular humanism, they call it a "religion". -Beastie

yesterday's Mormon doctrine is today's Mormon folklore.-Buffalo
_SeekerofTruth
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Post by _SeekerofTruth »

Sethbag wrote:
And Tarski has been quite explicit as well, but you just aren't really reading what he's saying, or else you're refusing to understand it. The experience of consciousness in a human being is "what it feels like" to have an exceedingly complex, evolved brain, which has access to memories, knowledge, intuition and the ability to predict things based on perceived circumstances, access to complex sensory organs and the ability to interpret the stimuli coming from these senses, and an OS and software that are running 24/7. Right now I'm "conscious of being conscious", and what that means to me is that my brain is thinking about the fact that I'm here, alive, looking at things, thinking about things, etc. My "software" is running constantly, and what I sense as consciousness is "what it feels like" to be doing this.


You are assuming that awareness of being, for example, is dependent upon "an exceedingly complex, evolved brain." This may seem true to you, but it is not true to me. Science has not proven it to be true and there are millions of individuals who have had experiences that to them demonstrates that it is not true (e.g. NDEs).

It might actually be possible to ask a human-built, extremely complex computer someday what it "feels like" to be executing whatever software it's running, and it might actually have something to say about it.


It might be possible to construct such a machine, but would it actually be feeling what it says it is feeling? How would you know one way or the other without actually being the machine?


What does it feel like when you hit your thumb with a hammer? Would you deny that this "what it feels like" is the result, in your brain, of its processing the inputs from various nerves in your thumb? You know what heat "feels like", would you deny that this experience is the result of your brain processing the inputs from various nerves in your body which are sensitive to temperature?


What I "felt" would depend upon my state of consciousness. If I had hypnotized myself I might feel nothing. Athletes have been known to endure what should have been painful injuries without being aware that the injury had taken place. The point is that there can be a dissociation between conscious awareness and brain activity. You say that brain activity affects consciousness. In a previous post I gave a link which demonstrates that conscious thought can affect brain activity. Herbert Benson has presented convincing evidence that Tibetan Monks can consciously control body temperature:

http://www.hno.harvard.edu/gazette/2002 ... tummo.html



Our brains clearly think. The brain scans too clearly demonstrate electrical and chemical activity in various centers of the mind corresponding to certain types of thoughts or mental tasks, for this to be in dispute. The experience of consciousness is the result of processing in your brain of various mental clues having to do with the evaluation of your current mental activity and the various stimuli you are receiving, and results in the "feeling" that you are actively in control of and directing your thoughts. Just as intense pain is "what it feels like" when your brain processes the electrical and chemical stimuli channeled to your brain by the nerve cells in your thumb after you hit it with the hammer, consciousness is "what it feels like" when your brain is processing thoughts about its own mental and processing state.

By hooking your brain up to a scanner and looking at what centers in your brain are active when you are contemplating your own consciousness, and by evaluating the relative level of these activities.

Researchers have already done many brain scans where specific brain tissues are measured to be more electrically and chemically active during the performance of various mental tasks, on purpose, by the person being measure, as a response to requests to perform those tasks by those doing the measuring. If this isn't measurement of "consciousness" in your estimation, than I submit you're just hand-waving and being deliberately obtuse.

We've commented on these things, and yet you still come back and keep claiming we haven't answered any of your questions. I submit that, if this is indeed true (which I doubt), it is the result of your questions being only vaguely defined, and only in your own mind, and that you haven't actually articulated your questions clearly.



It may be clear to you but it is not clear to me that our brains "think." Nor is it clear to me that the experience of consciousness is the result of processing in my brain. Simply because a correlation between brain activity and some mental tasks has been demonstrated does not necessarily mean that there is a cause/effect relationship between brain activity and consciousness as you seem to state.

It may seem obtuse to you, but to me the question still has not been answered as to how the brain produces conscious awareness and conscious thought, as well as other aspects of what I call consciousness.

Bullsh*t. We can measure, directly, the brain activity associated with thoughts. Sensors are being developed which allow a human being to control things on a computer, merely by thinking about things. They have actually succeeded, literally, in detecting, with sensors worn on the head, thoughts by the wearer specifically to have the computer respond in a certain way, and that is picked up by the sensors, and fed into the computer, and it responds that way.

Scientists have already produced rudimentary thought-controlled computer interfaces, which really worked. How can you continue trying to deny that thoughts are a physical activity, cannot be measured, etc.? If thoughts aren't the result of measurable physical activity in physical brain matter, how then have scientists measured these thoughts and used them as inputs into a computer? Have the scientists actually managed to make a "spirit detector" or something? Is that what you think is really going on here?


Scientists have measured the outcome, not the thoughts. Admittedly this is an interesting area of research. Also interesting is remote viewing in which a person can be looking at something at a randomly selected location and another individual, isolated in a Faraday cage, is able to describe or draw a picture of what that person is viewing. Also there are the statistically significant results from thousands of trials in which the thoughts of individuals have influenced physical objects, all of this without any kind of physical connection between the two.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Princeton_ ... search_Lab

How can these results be explained in terms of brain function? It is not good science to accept the one and ignore the other.
Last edited by Guest on Fri Apr 25, 2008 7:28 pm, edited 1 time in total.
_SeekerofTruth
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Post by _SeekerofTruth »

You still have not fixed that link.
Tarski wrote:
self awareness and thinking are behaviors of the brain. The brain is doing something. It is processing information about the world and about itself. It is employing concepts to help if negotiate the world.

You are not saying anything yet.


So say you. I say they are not. Thousands who have had NDEs say the same. True, the brain is probably doing something, much of it having to do with processing sensory information and controlling motor output. I don't know about concepts. That's a psychological term. I doubt you would ever find activity in the brain that demonstrated it was employing concepts, but I may be wrong on this.

If consciousness doesn't do anything and it is undetectable then it is no better than the elves that are in my fridge but only when no one is looking.
Seriously dude! What are you talking about?


I consciously do a lot of things and I know when I am conscious. I just don't think that the brain is necessarily producing my consciousness.
_Tarski
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Post by _Tarski »

SeekerofTruth wrote:


http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Princeton_ ... search_Lab

How can these results be explained in terms of brain function? It is not good science to accept the one and ignore the other.

Because this is total BS.
when believers want to give their claims more weight, they dress these claims up in scientific terms. When believers want to belittle atheism or secular humanism, they call it a "religion". -Beastie

yesterday's Mormon doctrine is today's Mormon folklore.-Buffalo
_Tarski
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Post by _Tarski »

SeekerofTruth wrote:

You are assuming that awareness of being, for example, is dependent upon "an exceedingly complex, evolved brain." This may seem true to you, but it is not true to me. Science has not proven it to be true and there are millions of individuals who have had experiences that to them demonstrates that it is not true (e.g. NDEs).

LOL
Has science also failed to show that dreams are not real also?

NDE and OBE are the similist thing to explain in terms of brain. They are hallucinations pure and simple. The do not even occur when the subjects think they do becuase the memory of when (the neural timestamp) is also faulty. No surprise since the brain is under extreme durress usually.

By the way, I have had an OBE or two. Cool, realist etc. But since I am not stupid I don't think it is real anymore than my dreams are real.

If you would let me, I could produce an OBE in you in a matter of seconds by doing something directly to your brain. It would be dramatic and life changing and you would be unharmed (except emotionally).

Mine was spontaneous in case you are wondering.
when believers want to give their claims more weight, they dress these claims up in scientific terms. When believers want to belittle atheism or secular humanism, they call it a "religion". -Beastie

yesterday's Mormon doctrine is today's Mormon folklore.-Buffalo
_Tarski
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Post by _Tarski »

SeekerofTruth wrote:You still have not fixed that link.
Tarski wrote:
self awareness and thinking are behaviors of the brain. The brain is doing something. It is processing information about the world and about itself. It is employing concepts to help if negotiate the world.

You are not saying anything yet.


So say you. I say they are not. Thousands who have had NDEs say the same. True, the brain is probably doing something, much of it having to do with processing sensory information and controlling motor output. I don't know about concepts. That's a psychological term. I doubt you would ever find activity in the brain that demonstrated it was employing concepts, but I may be wrong on this..

Yes you are wrong already. Strategic brain damage and you will be severly unable to handle some of the same concepts you did before.
Sometimes I wonder if you are kidding us.
when believers want to give their claims more weight, they dress these claims up in scientific terms. When believers want to belittle atheism or secular humanism, they call it a "religion". -Beastie

yesterday's Mormon doctrine is today's Mormon folklore.-Buffalo
_Moniker
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Post by _Moniker »

Tarski wrote:
If you would let me, I could produce an OBE in you in a matter of seconds by doing something directly to your brain. It would be dramatic and life changing and you would be unharmed (except emotionally).


How would you do such a thing?
_Some Schmo
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Post by _Some Schmo »

Tarski wrote: Sometimes I wonder if you are kidding us.


It definitely feels that way. Had I not met so many people who talk like he does and seriously think they're onto something, I'd say he was completely having one over on us.

His is a case where getting bogged down in what he considers intellectualism masks the obvious fact that he's off his rocker, or that he's confused himself into oblivion (the latter more likely, in my estimation). Coggins is another fine example of that.
God belief is for people who don't want to live life on the universe's terms.
_Tarski
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Post by _Tarski »

SeekerofTruth wrote:
.It might be possible to construct such a machine, but would it actually be feeling what it says it is feeling? How would you know one way or the other without actually being the machine?

Well, you would have to find a way since you are in the same position with respect to every other human being.
Are we "actually feeling" what we say we are feeling? How would you know one way or the other without actually being one of us?

By the way, there are experiments that strongly suggest that people are in part learning things about their own feeling in a way similar to the way we learn about how others feel--we hear what we say and observe our own behavior. Strange but true.

By the way, do you think it is possible to experience an object as being both perfectly uniformly green and prefectly uniformly red at the same time?
Do you know that some patients can sincerely say that they are seeing a hammer and sincerely write on paper that they are seeing a chicken?
when believers want to give their claims more weight, they dress these claims up in scientific terms. When believers want to belittle atheism or secular humanism, they call it a "religion". -Beastie

yesterday's Mormon doctrine is today's Mormon folklore.-Buffalo
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