SeekerofTruth wrote:Tarski wrote:
Without evidence for an entity, what is the reason for believing in it? One at least needs it to have a clear definition/description and a detailed role in explaining what we can measure (think quarks).
Now in the case of spirit, do we have anything like that?
1. What are the posited basic characteristic of spirit--don't just define the problem away by say "spirit has the property of being conscious" or something like that. that's like asking how sleeping pills work and answering that they have a "virtus dormativa" (power to induce sleep)
2. Having given the clarifying posited simple fundamental properties of spirit, how do those enter into a detailed explanation of consciousness and qualia?
In fact, I would, for the sake of argument, allow you to just make something up! In other words, what could it be, even in principal, that would explain those aspect of consciousness that to you seem to think so far beyond what a material system can accomplish.
Make a toy model. No proof needed. Just make the meaning of the words clear and let it have explanitory power (simple assumptions lead to answer more difficult question like how one might explain how a TV works or how heat can be explained by the motion of molecules. Those actually make one understand something and give a sense of enlightenment.
Do a flow chart with some boxes and arrow but don't include a "miracle box" with magic powers. Make every step clear to an unbiased epistemic peer.
I want to feel like "oh! that's what spirit could be and how it could step by step solve this mystery of subjectivity"
So far I don't even know what the word spirit means, and I am unclear on what immaterial could mean outside of it being something abstract the number Pi or democracy or information. Does it occupy space? Is it nowhere? Is it discrete or continuous? Is it "in" a brain" Does it have parts? What rules could it obey at the bottom level?
On the one hand I can understand your frustration but on the other I see that you just don't get it. How can you expect someone to describe the ineffable?
Oh no. Here we go.
By definition, the ineffable cannot be put into words.
So all that has to be explained is why you can't put something into words? That's not an ability but a deficit. So do you really think a
lack of ability can't be explained by the brain. You can't imagine how a physical thing could
fail to be able to do something. That's an odd position.
Does this mean that someone cannot have an ineffable experience?
But where is the mystery in this inability? My computer can't say damn thing about the information going into it either.
Would you deny them that? Spirit is immaterial.
Well I am pretty sure that ineffable and immaterial are two totally different concepts. Is this just the non sequitur that I think it is?
Something immaterial cannot be accurately described in physical terms.
Well if you can't accurately describe it in
any terms then I submit that you don't know what you are talking about.
People make an attempt to do this, but they always come up short. The closest we can come, as far as I know, is with consciousness. Each of us knows what it is to be conscious but it is impossible to put that experience accurately into words. We can say something to the effect that it is like this or like that. One thing is certain, to say that it is brain function doesn't begin to do it justice.
So far I have two words that are both myterious (to you) and therefore somehow explain each other (spirit and consciousness).
They must do this explaining behind our backs because since they are ineffable we are mute.
We are better off thinking about consciousness as a set of abilities that allow us to navigate, speak about and be in functional contact with the world and our own bodies. The difference with some of these abilities is that we can hinge action policies on them. These are the conscious ones. Read about the training of people to recover from blind-sight in CE for this omportant insight on the difference between unconcious information processing and conscious processing.
As I see it, you are expecting people to jump through a hoop that it is physically impossible to jump through and then you are ridiculing them for not doing so.
So you have nothing. That's fine I won't demand you do the impossible (make any sense of your claim that consciousness is immaterial and must be related to "spirit"). My only question is why you don't realize that this utter lack of ability to say what you are talking about is evidence that you are confused.
Did you know that there is even a neural model of why color qualia is felt to be ineffable?
Cortical Feedback and the Ineffability of Colors:
http://psyche.cs.monash.edu.au/articles ... harlow.pdf
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