RAMAHLite, you're asking for alot!! David Chalmers and Daniel Dennett
(among many, many others) are at the spearhead of this debate, and
they're not really making any progress on the fundamental issue at
stake here (if one considers the fundamental issue to be the
production of final and unequivolcal proof that conscious is either
primary or derivative). Chalmers has said that neuroscience has helped
in the understanding of the "easy problem" of consciousness, i.e.
cognition, but it hasn't even begun to explain the "hard problem",
i.e. qualia. Chalmers also offers a thought experiment as a
demonstration of his point involving zombies, but I’m not familiar
enough with the detail to go into it reliably - nor do I have a link,
I'm afraid - but you'll find it soon enough if you google David
Chalmers..... Dennett, on the other hand, thinks there's no hard
problem to explain! He's a materialist, of course. I don't really know
what either man's ultimate philosophical position is, as I lost
interest once I realized that no-one can really say much about
consciousness from a purely objective point of view, save for the fact
that one is, somehow, what we commonly refer to as "conscious"......
So, I agree, RAMAHLite, it is THE question..... However, I personally
feel (am thoroughly convinced) that the "discovery" of neural
correlates - and the potentially limitless sophistication of the
interpretation of the information they offer - adds absolutely nothing
to the oldest debate in history.
Here’s an attempt to explain my (limited) understanding of the
problem….
For an object to exist within space-time, it must necessarily be in
and of that space-time. A brain, therefore, is as dependent upon this
principle as anything else, and it would be odd to imagine that the
argument is reduced to one which only requires consciousness to
fulfill the demands of cognition and motor functioning alone. I think
the problem is simpler and more obvious than a problem founded on the
particulars of human physiology or the brain‘s ability to make
pictures of the world. For example, one might reasonably ask whether a
plant's response to its environment requires consciousness or not. The
question then isn't even concerned with so-called cognition or, for
that matter, agency, but begs the question, "how is consciousness
defined?" If consciousness necessarily requires a brain, then any
sensate object without one (back to our plant) suddenly becomes
unconscious. This means that all its sensory functions (and they
clearly are sensory) operate without any conscious awareness of them,
as if there were the capacity for sensory response, but no sense of
the thing it is responding/reacting to or the response itself. It
means that a leaf's recoil from heat (or its process of
photosynthesis) or a tree limb's clamour for a clearer patch of
sunlight are only apparently sensory actions, when really they are
utterly blind and numb; dead, dead, dead mechanical responses.....
Which is crazy!! What this (sommonly held) position would have us
accept is that for any sense to be registered, there must be
cognizance of it, which necessarily requires a brain and a central
nervous system. So a microorganism which requires sunlight for it to
photosynthesize somehow achieves this without any awareness whatsoever
of the light it depends upon; and a tree sheds its leaves in winter
without any recognition whatsoever that it is winter……
Show me, then, a rock or a mote of dust or a vacuum that doesn't
exist, in some sense, as an object for the senses. And don't try and
argue that if a rock were on a planet with no sensate life-forms
inhabiting it then it would exist outside of any sensory recognition -
because I would say, "prove it!!". If you could see that rock, or
touch it or smell it, then consciousness is present. To argue that it
is still there when there is no sensory acknowledgement of it AT ALL
(and no-one has yet laid claim to defining every conceivable sense
form, as far as I'm aware) is meaningless, because it is only possible
to speculate. Now tell me that you can prove that any thing exists,
whether animate or inanimate, which is entirely unconscious on every
single level and in every single way...... I believe this is
impossible, for we can only really say that it is likely that
something is not aware of ITSELF, which is entirely different from
arguing that it is not aware, or that it's being is not dependent on
being known by some sensory recognition (even if it is only the
recognition of another conscious being) - OR…… That consciousness IS
and every object is only an instrument of its limitless and infinitely
dimensioned potential, all the way through to transcending even the
notions of consciousness and non-consciousness or being and non-being.
Something which would be necessary for there to be any resolution to
the dichotomy of eternal life and absolute oblivion.
Anyway, there’s nothing I’m saying here which hasn’t already been said
by the great man himself - and in much more convincing and lucid
terms, too! And this, really, is the point. Once one is convinced of
the possibility that consciousness is primary, then it seems that the
matter can be lent no authority by merely becoming convinced. It
remains to look elsewhere for some form of verification. Luckily, we
have it in abundance in Wolff’s works. But it doesn’t end there! There
are, as we all know, many other people throughout history who have
said effectively the same thing (or at least an aproximation of the
same thing), and so an argument which would otherwise have been
decided on a personal level by mere preference now becomes something
much more, because the only thing which can really adequately enable
someone to explain away consciousness as an epiphenomenon once and for
all would be for that individual to become enlightened and to then
say, from an insider’s point of view, that it’s a state of delusion.
As I said before, I don’t know of anyone who has yet achieved this -
and, even if they had, how would we know that they’re genuinely
enlightened!? It seems insane to imagine that someone who is
intelligent and rational would enter into some kind of state of
consciousness which has simply “deluded” them into believing that they
exist outside of time and space and are a somewhat which somehow IS,
but it entirely beyond the mind’s competence to define! This is why I
believe that Franklin Merrell-Wolff and his philosophical works
together make for a quite overwhelmingly complete representation of
life’s true nature, as he was clearly a man of authenticity and
integrity, not to mention high intelligence and deep sanity.
B
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