Experience in reality tells us that our thoughts do not dictate reality, or that consciousness is not primary. Through a little trial-and-error, you can easily deduce that reality follows its own rules, and that we must abide by them in order to succeed.
I think you have not quite come to terms yet with what MindOverMatter tries to express. – In fact, consciousness is primary. Subjectivity is primordial, the surrounding world comes next. How do you know about the existence of the external world? You know about it through your conscious experiences, your consciousness, your self-awareness. In fact, a world that wouldn’t contain any conscious entities could hardly be called a world at all, since no one would be aware that there was a world, that there was a world to be known. Think of a world only consisting of grass and its unconsciousness – it’s a world in total oblivion of everything, even of itself.
In other words, empirical science relies on subjective experiences; it cannot be otherwise. However, the defining moment about subjective experiences is that they are not objective, not measurable via empirical investigation. I like to employ the example here of a proband tasting the delicious depths of his favourite brand of chocolate while a neuroscientist watches the proband’s brain patterns; the scientist may see a lot of firing in different brain areas but however close he may get, even if he starts to lick his proband’s brain, he will never be able to tell that the proband’s experiences could be his own, that he could experience by now what the proband experiences. That’s the inscrutability of subjectivity. It’s not accessible to empirical science, and it never will be, by definition.
Again, with his subjectivity the scientist has access to the empirical, to objectivity. It’s not the other way around. In other words, its far more easy to prove the existence of consciousness than to prove the existence of an external world. Descartes showed this in his famous thought-play and I won’t repeat it here – a little research on Google will lead you there – cogito ergo sum etc.
Consciousness transcends the empirical. The scientist will never find any such thing as consciousness. What he finds are neurons firing in different places at slightly different times in the brain. The miracle of consciousness is that these neuronal activity patterns which are temporally and spatially seperated are united, in consciousness, into one global psychic entity or experience – which defies all empiricism, and is, indeed, inasmuch as the laws of physics are done away with, a miracle. – I’ve always thought it a wonderful joke when scientists tell us there are no miracles while they themselves, as conscious beings, already make up a tremendous miracle.
Consciousness definitely has some sort of basis in the human brain, as the destruction of certain parts of the brain produces a permanent loss of consciousness in an individual. Whether it’s a byproduct of brain activity, or the result of a soul directly sitting in between the neurons, I don’t know, but it’s certainly a candidate for empirical investigation, as a soul that can interact with neurons must be somehow capable of interacting with matter
That’s the whole point. It’s no candidate for empirical investigation. Subjectivity cannot be a candidate for empirical investigation. Subjectivity is even the precondition for any empirical investigation taking place. You cannot place yourself aside of subjectivity, aside of consciousness and try to examine it – you cannot make a step out of your own self.
Perhaps the confusion in this everlasting mind-soul debate is largely due to an overly great appeal to substantial instead of dynamic conceptions. – I think the substantial ideas serve rather as an aid here to get a better hold on the dynamic ones. “Subjectivity” is quite a hazy term and we are instantly tempted to ground it with some substantial basis, that is, the concept of the soul. It should not be forgotten, however, that the soul is not meant to be a material object that could ever come into the focos of empirical investigation. It’s just another, more convenient term for the strictly immaterial experience of subjectivity.