William wrote: ↑Wed Aug 27, 2025 6:24 pm
Because your assumptions haven't been fully mapped
I assume that you agree with me that a functioning brain is all that is required in order to explain consciousness. This position was and continues to be fully mapped. I acknowledge that you didn't and possibly still don't understand the idea that brain is all that seems to be necessary, but I post for the readers and if my opponents are struggling to follow along my main goal is still accomplished.
so I have no where to go with this until you explain why you assume I should agree with you
I assume you do.
I do not agree until you have explained what YOU mean by "Emerge"...once you do that, I can tell you whether I agree or not.
I don't need you to tell me. Clearly, from the start, I have assumed that you agree that a brain is all that is required in order to explain consciousness. I still assume this and await correction if you don't agree with this statement. The amount of hand holding that you require is unreasonable though, but again, I believe our readers are not having an issue following along.
The issue is that you are relying on that term to carry the whole weight of your claim about consciousness,
Let's test this heavy lifting claim for accuracy shall we?
A brain is all that seems to be required in order to explain our consciousness. I assume you agree. Your claim was and is false as my position doesn't even require the use of the word emerge, but using such a word offers clarity to most. For some reason, this word that supplies additional meaning has 'locked you up'. I acknowledge this and believe our readers do not share your confusion.
but you haven’t explained what it means in your framework. Is it purely physical causation? A novel property? A supervenience relation? Unless you clarify that, I can’t evaluate whether I agree with you - because right now you’re just asking me to nod along to your undefined term.
Holy Monkeys!
Our brains seem to be the only thing required in order to explain our consciousness. I assume you agree.
Copy/paste from post 154: "Here is where you might offer something up that might challenge this statement, but so far, upon each request I get met with questions only."
Your continual failure to challenge my simple statement is what continues to inform me that you likely agree that brains are enough (which still leaves open other possibilities mind you).
Should I continue to assume that you feel a functioning brain is all that is needed to explain consciousness or will you ever get around to supplying your position or why you find mine 'wanting'?
No.
No? Why is a functioning brain not enough? Again, admitting that a brain is enough would not mean something more is in fact at play.
This presumes that the hard problem of consciousness is simply explained by the existence of brains.
Your emotions are getting in the way it seems.
My position only presumes that brains are enough to explain our consciousness.
If you are interested in the science:
Scientists have landed on two leading theories to explain how consciousness emerges: integrated information theory, or IIT, and global neuronal workspace theory, or GNWT.
https://www.scientificamerican.com/arti ... d-to-head/
The existence of brains does not explain consciousness
Clearly they can, but theories are not proof and can be falsified of course.
Indeed, produce a paper on your claim
Not my claim, but two have been provided. Do with them what you want.
and show the world that you have explained what consciousness
I acknowledge that you have somehow missed the many, many times I have done this in this thread. I trust our readers saw it.
con·scious·ness
/ˈkänSHəsnəs/
noun
the state of being awake and aware of one's surroundings.
(Look familiar?)
But if you do the work and bring the results back to me, then I having something to work with in answering your presumption.
See the theories I provided if you actually do care. What I continue to ask you that you continue to quote mine out of your replies has been:
"If you are able to think of anything that might suggest that consciousness is external (from our brains), let us know. Perhaps that will give us something to discuss."
It seems to me that a functioning brain is all that is required in order for the process of our ability to become aware of our surroundings (conscious) to rise into notice (emerge).
Good. Now we have a sense of what you are trying to convey re your perception.
Now?!!!! William, it has never been a hard thing to understand. I really fail to see why you struggle, but do acknowledge it.
It's not so much that "something apparently material is emerging from the brain" - rather it is something hard to define. What can be defined is the effect that happens - that "rising into notice" and what is noticed is the surrounds and while we might assume at this stage that the surrounds are not doing the noticing we still need to acknowledge that whatever IS doing the noticing has to be what is "rising into notice" itself.
My brain notices (detects) my surroundings. What does the noticing for you? Please be succinct because I want to understand this thing that isn't our brain.
Good, then if we accept that consciousness is moving out and rising from "the brain", we can say that this is an example of consciousness being external to said brain.
Say that only if your goal is to stifle debate. Our brains seem to be all that is required in order to explain our consciousness. You don't agree, so I ask what else is required?
Either way, we are no closer to explaining what it is that has "arisen"...so your claim can be said to be without merit and I can say "no, you should not presume I agree with you about this".
You don't agree with my claim that our brains seem to be all that is required in order to explain our consciousness, which is why I now ask you what more is required.
If you can think of anything that might suggest that consciousness is external from our functioning brains, that might be interesting and something worthy to debate.
If we agree that consciousness emerges/rises from the brain, then we can say that is is external from said brains.
Let's test this shall we? Please identify what external thing you have imagined.
All you seem to be doing is playing word games (we can 'say'). Please prove me wrong by supplying the evidence that consciousness is actually external from our brains.
I don't agree, because I think both provide a function and we cannot say with any certain that this emerging/arising isn't something which comes through the brain...or uses the brain for the temporal experience of being human....or that after the brain is deceased, that the consciousness which used it for the human experience, doesn't go on to some other ride...which of course spirals us back to the Thread Subject - nicely.
I don't say any of this. Please follow along.... Our brains seem to be all that is required in order to explain our consciousness. I think it is time that you admit that you cannot deal with my actual claim. You just disagree with it. I acknowledge your disagreement and your continued lack of criticism of my view enforces its reliability.
So yes, I can think of something other than what you think explains consciousness...and while doing so doesn't itself explain consciousness,
I acknowledge your imagination and take no issue with this.
it does not seek to presume consciousness as strictly an "emergent property" of brain functionality,
Wait?! Is this what you think my position is? That consciousness is strictly emergent from our brains?
All this disagreement from you over poor reading comprehension! I only acknowledge that our brains seem to be enough, not that more could not be in play. Please amend your thinking on my position.
because if it did, someone would have already collected the Nobel for showing evidence to support that notion...
Ya, a notion that no one here is putting forth.
consciousness might use the brain as interface
Our brains are most certainly involved. The only thing involved as far as I can detect. Can you think of anything else that is at play, or do you acknowledge that a brain could be enough? Don't get emotional now, I'm saying 'could' be enough, not that it 'is' enough an no other options should be considered. If I thought that, I wouldn't continue to be asking you if you are able to think of anything that might suggest that consciousness is external from our brains, but I do ask you just that in just about every post (you quote mine it out of your replies, but the ask is still there).
Copy/paste to save time and sanity:
"Nothing has been presented that would suggest that consciousness is external form our functioning brains or that anything else would even be necessary. I'm open to being shown such a thing if you can manage to make an argument. Can you?"
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