S
STT
Guest
An hallucination is a conscious mode. The very fact that we can make a person to have an hallucination by changing physical process indicates that consciousness is a physical state. Physical process defines state of matter.An hallucination isn’t an indication of consciousness; rather, an hallucination is a false visual perception. Therefore, deep brain stimulation shows the interface between sense organ and brain, not brain and consciousness.
No. We only observe a correlation in motion of things and then suggest a theory in which it describe the motion. There is no proof here.Science is about proof, not correlation. Perhaps you’re using ‘correlation’ in a rather casual sense?
We know that the reality is about correlation between things. We don’t need to prove that.That’s why your claims are rather weak. If you’re going to make an assertion, you need proof, not mere correlation.![]()
So you deny that the cause when you lough at a joke is due to hearing the joke?Hearing – that is, a physical process – does not cause ‘happiness’.
It does. Do you want me to prove that too.Again: ‘happiness’ (that is, an emotion, which does not have physical extension) does not cause facial muscle contraction (or any other physical manifestation).
Finding a correlation between two phenomena is huge step toward to understanding of the truth. Formulating a theory which it can describe the correlation is another step. A theory is however not a proof.Then you’re not a very good scientist (or philosopher). In these disciplines, a mere correlation does not suffice to prove assertions.![]()
Could we agree on this?: Any physical process give rises to a state of matter.You keep making this claim, without giving proof. We’ve been through this before. Bald assertion just doesn’t suffice to justify truth propositions.
There is a set of order parameters when matter is in a specific state. We don’t know yet that what are those order parameters in the case of consciousness otherwise we could measure consciousness.How does one measure this state, then?
You could of course measure how conscious is a person if you know what are the order parameters. Needless to say that we can know about the mode of consciousness that a person undergoes by scanning his brain, mode of deep sleep for example. But you cannot know what the subjective experience really are, for example we cannot know how a bat feels.So, are you saying it’s not measurable? Are you saying it’s subjective?
As I mentioned showing the correlation is a big step in understanding the reality.Well, if you cannot demonstrate or prove your claim, then it’s just your opinion. I’m cool with you having opinions; the thing is, you can’t assert them as truth unless you can substantiate them, nor can you expect us to concur with them.
You are just giving a theory which describe the correlation. You are not proving anything.I could measure the motion of the balls prior to the moment of impact, at the moment of impact, and following the moment of impact. I could use these measurements to demonstrate that energy has been conserved. I could demonstrate that the velocities and directions of the balls follow from the way the impact occurs. In short, yes: I could demonstrate that the motion of the cue ball and the subsequent motions of the balls follow from the impact. That is, I could demonstrate the cause and effect.
That is not correct. We know that there exist a correlation between a certain activity in a part of brain and seeing red. Measuring consciousness as I mentioned before requires the knowledge of order parameters.No. You just said (above), that you cannot demonstrate that brain processes cause internal awareness; in other words, that means that you cannot measure brain activity and infer consciousness.
Yes. Nothing interesting regarded what we are discussing, consciousness.Wait – you read this Wiki page and didn’t find anything that helped you understand the various types of monism? Not even these quotes?
Thanks.See the descriptions above. It looks like you’re talking about “substance monism”.