I'm literally a thinking lump of fat
from Neurologist@mander.xyz to science_memes@mander.xyz on 18 Dec 14:32
https://mander.xyz/post/22099100

#science_memes

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marcos@lemmy.world on 18 Dec 14:43 next collapse

There’s a lot of water and ions (IONS!) besides that lump of fat.

dankm@lemmy.ca on 18 Dec 14:44 next collapse

A CPU is just a rock we hit with magic lightning…

rockerface@lemm.ee on 18 Dec 14:59 next collapse

And inscribed with runes

dankm@lemmy.ca on 18 Dec 15:03 collapse

Well yes, it’s the lightning that makes the inscription.

TeamAssimilation@infosec.pub on 18 Dec 15:21 collapse

Light makes the inscription, lightning runs through it.

photonic_sorcerer@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 18 Dec 15:42 next collapse

Light, gas, CVD and a dozen other processes, depending on the application, make the inscription.

rockerface@lemm.ee on 18 Dec 23:49 collapse

Username checks out

dankm@lemmy.ca on 18 Dec 15:43 collapse

🤔

JTPorkins@lemmy.world on 18 Dec 16:41 collapse

This is covered pretty well in the Discworld series with the druids.

dankm@lemmy.ca on 18 Dec 18:24 collapse

One more series I need to read…

Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca on 18 Dec 14:44 next collapse

You’re an electrified hunk of fat piloting a meat-covered skeleton riding on a damp rock that’s hurling through space and time.

saltesc@lemmy.world on 18 Dec 14:55 next collapse

I enjoy Marcus Aurelius paraphrasing Epctetus…

“You are a little soul bearing about a corpse.”

Diplomjodler3@lemmy.world on 18 Dec 15:04 next collapse

It’s actually a lump of lava with a thin crust. Any time the crust breaks we have a very bad time.

Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca on 18 Dec 15:32 next collapse

Lava is just liquid rock

ignotum@lemmy.world on 18 Dec 17:36 collapse

The core is metal, the outer shell is hard rock, i would assume what’s inbetween is a mix of pop and smooth jazz maybe?

sp3tr4l@lemmy.zip on 18 Dec 17:45 collapse

acid metal

abfarid@startrek.website on 18 Dec 20:09 collapse

Obligatory “um, akhtually, it’s magma”.

Ensign_Crab@lemmy.world on 18 Dec 15:54 next collapse

Be fair. You are an abstraction layer; a subsystem running on that electrified hunk of fat. There’s plenty of stuff that evolution has delegated as non-conscious functions of the fatlump.

Someonelol@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 18 Dec 16:02 next collapse

So you’re saying humanity is a mecha space opera?

nickwitha_k@lemmy.sdf.org on 18 Dec 20:45 collapse

Yes.

kozy138@lemm.ee on 18 Dec 16:09 next collapse

It’s weird that we, as people, think that our being or self ends at our skin. And we’re just a consciousness controlling a meat cube.

What about all the bacteria living on and inside of us? People would die without their microflora.

What about our subconscious/unconscious doings/thoughts? Are we in control of them? Or are they in control of us? Could consciousness be an illusion? One created by our senses’ interpretation of external stimuli.

SaharaMaleikuhm@feddit.org on 19 Dec 00:42 next collapse

And I want off.

SkidFace@lemmy.world on 19 Dec 01:26 collapse

“At thе end of the day, your brain is just a meat computеr in a bone cockpit piloting a skin robot You think the world makes sense? Nothing makes sense! So you might as well make nonsense!”

Karyoplasma@discuss.tchncs.de on 18 Dec 15:03 next collapse

The brain is not a “lump of fat”. If you desiccate the brain, most of what’s left are lipids, yes, but at that point you are not conscious anymore. The brain is a mix of proteins, carbohydrates, water and fat.

TeamAssimilation@infosec.pub on 18 Dec 15:22 next collapse

A lump of mostly fat then? Seems needlessly specific.

porous_grey_matter@lemmy.ml on 18 Dec 17:52 next collapse

Mostly water, in that case

Silic0n_Alph4@lemmy.world on 18 Dec 21:54 collapse

I’M NOT FAT I’M JUST BIG BRAINED!!

Kyrgizion@lemmy.world on 18 Dec 15:39 collapse

Also fairly sure that electrical impulses alone cannot account for consciousness. If that were “all” there was to it we’d have simulated a human brain by now. There’s a few theories about quantum processes being involved but this isn’t exactly easily proven.

anarchrist@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 18 Dec 15:45 next collapse

If that were “all” there was to it we’d have simulated a human brain by now.

Didn’t it take them a long ass time to do this for a fruit fly brain?

frezik@midwest.social on 18 Dec 18:00 next collapse

Depends on when you start the timer. The fruit fly brain was only completely mapped recently. There’s a simulation of it that runs on a laptop. If that simulation can run on a modern laptop and the map was otherwise available, then it likely could have been done on supercomputers in the decades prior.

Kyrgizion@lemmy.world on 18 Dec 18:34 collapse

I thought they were up to mice now but I might be mistaken.

frezik@midwest.social on 18 Dec 15:49 collapse

To simulate a human brain, we would need a complete map of it. We don’t have that yet. If the quantum theories around neurons are correct, then the map would be incomplete without it.

I doubt we could simulate it directly without a very specialized ASIC.

Wintex@lemm.ee on 18 Dec 17:57 collapse

The connectome doesn’t really seem to be so realistic, at smaller scales sure.

henfredemars@infosec.pub on 18 Dec 15:24 next collapse

It’s OK. Consciousness is but a brief anomaly in the vast sea of time.

Neuromancer49@midwest.social on 18 Dec 15:24 next collapse

Don’t sell yourself short. It’s a salty lump of fat.

solsangraal@lemmy.zip on 18 Dec 15:35 next collapse

people don’t like this idea because if that’s all we are, then who is anyone to say that the inevitable equivalent man-made lump of fat with electrical activity isn’t entitled to all the same rights and status that we are

also jeebus doesn’t want you to think you can’t go on getting punished even after you’re dead

7bicycles@hexbear.net on 18 Dec 17:51 collapse

honestly I never got this. Same with the simulation thing. What’s it matter if we’re in a simulation or all I ever do is the result of some salty fat firing off neurons? I mean what am I going to do about that?

solsangraal@lemmy.zip on 18 Dec 17:56 collapse

people used to get burnt at the stake for this shit. and dont’ forget how butthurt people got over the suggestion that –gasp– the earth isn’t the center of the universe

7bicycles@hexbear.net on 18 Dec 18:13 collapse

I’m aware it’s controversial, I just genuinely do not get why you would care.

solsangraal@lemmy.zip on 18 Dec 18:18 collapse

because when you have deeply entrenched religious indoctrination, ideas about the world, life, and reality that don’t mesh with your “god” are literally personal attacks on your very identity.

some people care about this shit more than they care about anything else. you should get rid of the assumption that things need to make sense to these people

7bicycles@hexbear.net on 18 Dec 18:23 collapse

you should get rid of the assumption that things need to make sense to these people

trust me I don’t but especially if I pick up the simulation thing that also seems to concern a lot of people who aren’t religious. I mean I get the religious people, it’s in direct affront to the axioms you structure your entire shit around. That makes sense to me, even if I don’t share the axioms.

solsangraal@lemmy.zip on 18 Dec 18:26 collapse

the simulation thing implies we don’t have “free will” or that we don’t have control over our life (which we don’t anyway), and that scares people half to death. so, classic denial

SomeAmateur@sh.itjust.works on 18 Dec 15:48 next collapse

br-

rrrrr

Kwakigra@beehaw.org on 18 Dec 15:52 next collapse

I’ve never understood why people think the most sophisticated and complex technology humans have ever been aware of is too mundane just because we have scratched the surface of understanding it.

SpruceBringsteen@lemmy.world on 18 Dec 16:19 next collapse

consciousness is stored in the balls

BrazenSigilos@ttrpg.network on 18 Dec 17:22 collapse

Next to the microplastic.

Natanox@discuss.tchncs.de on 18 Dec 16:20 next collapse

To my knowledge there are interesting quantum-mechanical effects at play as well though. There’s a lot of esoterical nonsense around that of course, however first discoveries pointing into this direction are quite promising.

I always remember a quote from Alan Watts talking about this topic: “You are the universe experiencing itself”. The idea of consciousness being an emerging property of the universe itself makes most sense to me, and the non-deterministic properties of quantum mechanics open this possibility.

Definitely more inspiring to think about it this way than just as a lump of fat.

SpruceBringsteen@lemmy.world on 18 Dec 18:19 next collapse

maybe but he’s a skinny guy

BudgetBandit@sh.itjust.works on 18 Dec 19:36 next collapse

Gnosticism, one of the oldest known religions that is thought to be the forefather of all religion, taught about that.

HawlSera@lemm.ee on 19 Dec 02:32 collapse

I can only hope that when this flesh dies, that my consciousness returns to the cosmos and persists free from the limitations of the body.

Ziglin@lemmy.world on 19 Dec 13:00 next collapse

That would be preferable to my current existence though I think I still might prefer non-existance in the long term.

HawlSera@lemm.ee on 19 Dec 14:24 collapse

Don’t sell yourself so short

Natanox@discuss.tchncs.de on 20 Dec 00:40 collapse

If it is an emerging property then the sense of “self” is most likely bound to this “lump of fat”; more precisely its inability to have connections to someone else except through physical barriers. the most interesting aspect of this is probably what siamese twins once described who were connected at their head. They said that they could “hear the other one’s thoughts”.

if we could share our minds with one another it would most likely completely change our understanding of consciousness. Likewise, if something can survive the death of the body (the “emerging property” part) then most likely not as an individual given that part is more of a property of our brains.

It’s self-evident why esoterical stuff got hooked on these things. The idea of closure on one of the most central religious questions is really appealing.

HawlSera@lemm.ee on 20 Dec 02:24 collapse

All I know is that if it all ends at death, then I should never have been born.

ShinkanTrain@lemmy.ml on 18 Dec 17:23 next collapse

Calling it a lump of fat is a bit like calling the Milky Way a very sparse field of hydrogen

UraniumBlazer@lemm.ee on 18 Dec 17:32 collapse

That’s true tho

porous_grey_matter@lemmy.ml on 18 Dec 17:50 next collapse

Right, but it doesn’t capture the whole story, namely that it’s arranged in a very particular way

ShinkanTrain@lemmy.ml on 19 Dec 02:54 collapse

It’s accurate, but not precise.

Masta_Chief@lemmy.world on 18 Dec 18:12 next collapse

This gets explored a bit in The Talos Principle and it’s sequal. Working on the 2nd one now, it’s been fun

theneverfox@pawb.social on 18 Dec 19:38 next collapse

I never understood this weird hangup, it’s like people struggling to reconcile free will with deterministic actions to a being outside normal time. Of course you’ll make the same choices if you rewound time and changed nothing… You’re the same, the universe is the same down to the last particle - how does that conflict with the idea of agency?

Consciousness is an emergent property. One neuron is complex, but 1000 can do things one could never do alone. Why is it so surprising that billions, arranged in complex self organizing structures, would give rise to something more than the sum of its parts?

Maybe there’s a quantum aspect to it, maybe there’s not… It seems like it’s all based in this idea humans are so extra special that surely there must be special laws of the universe just for us

TropicalDingdong@lemmy.world on 18 Dec 20:15 next collapse

Yep. This was the issue people took with Chomsky’s approach to language, basically the same sentiment. Humans are “special” in some way. It underlines the basis of almost all cognitive, neuroscience, and language research for decades.

theneverfox@pawb.social on 18 Dec 22:17 collapse

It’s crazy to me how much this holds us back, and the amount of cognitive dissonance involved

Take pets. We look at them acting shifty around the sock they know they aren’t allowed to play with, and say “she’s thinking about it”. We avoid words like “walk” because they’ve understood one of the meanings of it. And usually not just the meaning, but the difference between tone and context - most won’t react the same to “should we take her for a walk” and “is he able to walk”. My mom’s dog knew all of our names, and the difference between “soon”, “tomorrow”, and “the day after tomorrow” - she would watch the door all day on the right day

And yet, most people will share all of these observations and turn around to dismiss it as “she’s just a dog”. For them it’s just association and behavioral conditioning, but the same things are different for humans because we’re extra special. Clearly her acting shifty before stealing the sock isn’t planning or considering, it’s instincts fighting against training

But only humans can ever understand, only we make choices. Because we’re extra special

Soleos@lemmy.world on 18 Dec 23:27 next collapse

The distinction being made when we talk about “understanding” and “choices” I about the distinction between sentience and sapience.

Dogs are sentient, meaning they have a conscious experience involving emotions and works with memory and instincts to determine motivated actions. This is a complex system that results in complex behaviour like preferring one food over another, stubbornly ignoring your commands, or recognizing when you’re upset and coming up to you to comfort you. It’s beautiful.

Sapience is related to the capacity to be meta/self-aware. This is what is normally meant by “understand” and “choice” when talking about how “special” humans are. As far as we can tell in experiments, dogs do not have the capacity to understand themselves like “I’m a dog who really enjoys walking” or “Good dogs take care of people, so I’m going to choose to take extra care of human because I want to be good.” This is what you might call “wisdom” or “rational” behaviour, and some animals to exhibit sapience to an extent. Both can be involve what we think of as “choices” e.g. selecting one of several options, but they’re distinct behaviours.

Humans engage in both, making it extra confusing. I’m not being particularly meta-aware and rational when I choose to cut off a piece of my steak and eat it. I am being more meta-aware when I choose to slow down my eating because I want to be respectful of my friend who cooked it for me, and I want to savour the moment, appreciating the flavours, texture, and effort that went into its preparation.

My dog knows that I prepare her food and she expresses her emotions and desires to me and she responds to my behaviour/communication. But she doesn’t understand that I chose to rescue her or that we are two people living our short and shorter lives together.

theneverfox@pawb.social on 19 Dec 01:00 collapse

How can we truly know this though - we don’t even really understand sapience on a philosophical level, let alone on a scientific one. The word itself is based on homo-sapien, and ultimately it means “why are we the most special”. It’s been a constant game of moving goalposts

Here’s a paper on animal metacognition. The intro is worth a read

Moving on to more common examples of metacognition, think of the many videos of dogs feigning injury when their human has an injured leg. That’s the same as your example with eating slower

There’s also a recent study I read where they trapped a rat in a tight cage, and another rat would learn to let them out. Then they added chocolate chips - the other rat would usually eat most of them before letting the other one out - but would save at least one

There’s even videos of a dog having a conversation with those word-pads, where they had to be convinced that their owner was human and not a dog, but was adamant that the small dog was a cat

We hold ourselves back, because we’re always starting from the perspective of humans being more, or that animals would act like us if only they were smarter… But ultimately, they have different priorities

Only recently have we started to look for things like language, culture, meta cognition, and every other “human” trait with an open mind. And we find it, everywhere

Whose to say dogs don’t wonder where we go all day, why they get left behind, and ponder their life as a dog?

Soleos@lemmy.world on 19 Dec 01:54 next collapse

You bring up some great points! Indeed it is very difficult to determine scientifically what kinds of reasoning occurs within animals’ experiences and behaviours. My post was more to clarify the classic distinction between sentience and sapience going with the assumption that dogs aren’t sapient. But as you indicate, it’s absolutely an ongoing question we’re actively interrogating. Sure, sapience is a bit of a floppy term, but we can choose more operational definitions around meta-cognition and the like. I leave it to the experts to refine terms and conduct research. We have very strong collective evidence that animals are sentient and very weak evidence (so far) to indicate sapience (however you define it). Epistemologically, we are limited in that we can only ever approach this question from the human perspective.

Your dog may well ponder their life as a dog, but the evidence for it is nil. So scientifically we cannot conclude it and assume the null hypothesis of non-sapience.

Philosophically we can consider how we approach the possibility of it though. Metaphysically, we can consider whether dogs’ consciousness resemble humans re: perception, free will, or self. Ethically, we can consider if it’s better to treat them as if they are sapient or not, I can imagine arguments either way. And an example of where we would is with humans who are extremely cognitively impaired.

Emotionally, we can also decide for ourselves what is the appropriately meaningful relationship we have with our pets in how we relate to them.

zeca@lemmy.eco.br on 19 Dec 04:02 next collapse

It seems weird to me that the null-hypothesis there should be that dogs are non-sapient. It seems to be common for scientists to default on non-existence until evidence of existence is found. But in some situations existence and non-existence should have equivalent weights. In the field of mathematics, the existence of a thing can be logically equivalent to the non-existence of another thing, and we dont know which of the two exists, but we cant default to assuming neither of the two. Science is a bit different from pure mathematics though, but im not sure in what ways.

Soleos@lemmy.world on 19 Dec 05:15 collapse

You are right to think through this question, and as you imply, there are different forms of knowledge, i.e. epistemologies. Science geneologically derives from empiricism, the epistemological idea that true knowledge comes from sensory experience and observation–philosophy has moved on from this idea. But accepting empirocism, the default is necessarily no knowledge, as absence of knowledge precedes knowledge from observation. Science applies empirical methods and deductive/inductive reasoning to generate new knowledge; while you may reason a theory, that theory must ultimately be tested against observation. So empirically, we cannot conclude/know sapience exists somewhere without observing it. Now the idea of “null hypothesis” can be thought of as a formalization of this. It comes from statistics in the 1920s when they were trying to determine a relationship between two data sets. As per empiricism, the null hypothesis is always that there is no relationship and therefore observations are due to random chance. And the purpose of the tests are to see if this null hypothesis should be rejected/disproven.

Another dated, but still helpful approach to thinking of the scientific question is Karl Popper’s falsifiability. It is possible to falsify the theory that “dogs cannot possess sapience by” observing one instance (not due to random chance) of sapience in a dog. However you cannot falsify the theory that “dogs can possess sapience” unless you can observe all dogs throughout space and time and show they don’t possess sapience.

theneverfox@pawb.social on 19 Dec 05:10 collapse

But that’s kind of my point - we do have evidence. As much as we have for humans, at least

Koko the gorilla is what made me start to question all of this back in grade school. This gorilla learns sign language, and is shown picture books with cats. She asks for a cat for Christmas, despite never having actually seen one. They give her a toy one and she gets angry.

Months later, they bring in kittens. She picks the tailless tabby and names it “all ball”. It was her pet all its life, she would take care of it and even told the keepers it had ear mites

On a foggy December morning, one of the assistants told me that Ball had been hit by a car. He had died instantly. I was shocked and unprepared. I didn’t realize how attached I had grown to Ball, and I had no idea how the news would affect Koko. The kitten meant so much to her. He was Koko’sbaby. I went to Koko at once. I told her that Ball had been hit by a car; she would not see him again. Koko did not respond. I thought she didn’t understand, so I left the trailer.

Ten minutes later, I heard Koko cry. It washer distress call—a loud, long series of high-pitched hoots. I cried, too.

Three days later, Koko and I had a conversation about Ball. “Do you want to talk about your kitty?” Iasked. “Cry,” Koko signed.“ Can you tell me more about it?” I asked. “Blind,” she signed. “We don’t see him anymore, do we? What happened to your kitty?” I asked. “Sleep cat,” Koko signed. A few weeks later, Koko saw a picture of a gray tabby who looked very much like Ball. She pointed to the picture and signed, “Cry, sad, frown.”

Koko described herself as “fine gorilla person”, she painted and joked and understood mortality.

Why is Koko special? Because she was interested in communicating, and so was her keeper. That was decades ago… Back when we rarely accepted animals were even sentient, let alone sapient

I’ve watched a video where a dog described it’s dreams, and one where a cat lied and negotiated for a treat before being convinced over the course of minutes to willingly take it’s medicine to make the “hurt go bye”.

My childhood dog was well behaved, so we’d let him in or out when he scratched on the door. We stopped paying attention… We only caught him exploring the suburbs when a neighbor called us. One day we were driving and saw him miles from home, so we followed… He kept to the sidewalks, avoided people, and looked before crossing the street. So we let him have his secret life, and he never got into any trouble… We wouldn’t have known otherwise, because he timed his adventures well

My mom’s dog used to watch dog shows, and smiled wide when I put a medal around her neck jokingly… Not when I put my keys around her neck, just the medal - I did ABACAB testing, just the medal got that reaction.

You can explain away all these things, or you can entertain the idea. Maybe Koko was the exception or my mom’s dog just thought the medal was pretty, or maybe she dreamed of winning a dog show.

We can’t even philosophically nail down sapience, and yet we don’t have a second Koko… Because we barely try to meet them where they are, and dismiss every success as an anomaly

The evidence is everywhere, we just seem to ignore it

Soleos@lemmy.world on 19 Dec 05:35 collapse

Koko is a great example! I should clarify that when I say evidence, I mean the collected body of scientific evidence, of which Koko would be one data point. I will also clarify that I was talking about weak evidence for sapience in dogs, not animals in general. Different species are different. We have much more evidence for sapience in animals such as simians like gorillas, as well as dolphins. Just because gorillas are sapient doesn’t mean Koalas are likely to be. But heck Cows may well be more intelligent and closer to sapience than dogs.

None of this is to put a downer on how folks may perceive dogs and it certainly doesn’t shut the door on their possible sapience. I project all of the sapience into my dog. I just think it’s important to understand and acknowledge where scientific knowledge is at as we rely heavily on it for policy, if not individual beliefs.

zeca@lemmy.eco.br on 19 Dec 03:51 collapse

Very well said!

HawlSera@lemm.ee on 19 Dec 02:27 collapse

Clearly humans are special in that we’re the only species to have the ability to use tools or a complicated language. But we’re also inferior in very major ways, humans are horrible at reproduction and we need to alter the environment for our survival because there’s no habitat we can thrive in that we don’t make ourselves.

It’s like creatures such as us don’t really belong here or something.

neidu3@sh.itjust.works on 18 Dec 20:18 next collapse

Maybe there’s a quantum aspect to it, maybe there’s not…

I see what you did there, intentionally or not.

theneverfox@pawb.social on 18 Dec 20:54 collapse

Heh. It was unintentional, next time it won’t be

thedeadwalking4242@lemmy.world on 19 Dec 01:39 next collapse

To be honest the thing that confuses me is that I am conscious. That’s weird, how am I aware, there is no explanation of this. Assuming we pretty much understand all physics and science and there isn’t anything surprising around the corner. Consciousness has to be a physical thing, a computation. But that’s weird as hell too? What rule of the universe governs whether or not something is aware. A brain could do everything it does now without being really aware just pretending. And if that’s true does that mean it’s just the flow of information that can become conscious? Could anything become conscious? If I made a marble Rube Goldberg machine complicated it enough and doing the right calculations could it be conscious?? It feels wrong it feels like we are missing something

HawlSera@lemm.ee on 19 Dec 02:25 next collapse

We absolutely are missing something. Clearly it requires more than just a lot of intelligence, otherwise we’d have seen a computer become sentient by now instead of ChatGPT proving beyond a shadow of a doubt that they absolutely will not be anytime soon.

zeca@lemmy.eco.br on 19 Dec 03:42 next collapse

This is exactly what puzzles me. Or at least you seem to be talking about what puzzles me. The problem is that when I mention this to others, most missunderstand what I mean by “being aware” or “conscious”, and im not sure its possible to refer to this phenomena in a much better way. But that is exactly the argument i usually make, that an automata could behave exactly like me, following the supposed physical laws, but without being aware, or having any sensation, without seeing the images, hearing the sounds, only processing sensorial data. Processing sensorial data isnt the same as feeling/hearing/seeing it.

tomalley8342@lemmy.world on 19 Dec 08:37 collapse

I believe the academic label for your concern is the mind-body problem, or the hard problem of consciousness which specifically questions the gap in explanation between the physical process and the subjective experience. Going against the grain of the OP picture, this is definitely still firmly within the realms of philosophy, not at all a settled science.

theneverfox@pawb.social on 19 Dec 07:16 next collapse

Consciousness is the AI assistant in meat mecha suit.

It seems like we make decisions, but we don’t. Think of a decision you’ve made - you think over it, you sleep on it, you imagine outcomes and might decide intellectually - but you don’t lock it in. That just happens - sometimes it even flips at the last second, and you don’t know why you did it - for better or worse

Our brain does a lot of preprocessing - vision, hearing, balance, walking, language…

Our conscious minds preprocess time. It turns our senses and our experiences into stories, abstract predictions, laterally pattern matching, and ultimately - analysis and recommendations

u_u@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 19 Dec 11:49 collapse

Also, I am very interested in the question of, why me? Why am I in charge of this body’s consciousness. How was it decided that of all conscious being that ever and will exists, I am conscious of this world from my point of view, at this point of time.

This is the only existential question I can’t seem to let go, especially since I am a non-theist. It will be easier to answer if I am a believer, or at least spiritualist.

HawlSera@lemm.ee on 19 Dec 02:24 collapse

It seems like it’s all based in this idea humans are so extra special that surely there must be special laws of the universe just for us

I never got that argument against the soul as it were. What makes you think that these special laws would only exist for humans? Aren’t there plenty of people who believe all things have some kind of soul or spirit? Isn’t that most Eastern Religions and quite a few Western Pagan ones?

Hossenfeffer@feddit.uk on 18 Dec 23:23 next collapse

We are ALL thinking lumps of fat on this blessed day :)

dragonfucker@lemmy.nz on 19 Dec 00:15 next collapse

Sorry Natural Intelligence bros, but meat can’t think. You’ve been duped into thinking human beings are conscious by Big Omega 3. Intelligence can only exist in computers using real electricity. Not that piddly ion pump stuff.

Ziglin@lemmy.world on 19 Dec 12:58 collapse

What about photons, hmmm? They’re used for quantum computing and don’t (technically) need “real electricity”.

dragonfucker@lemmy.nz on 19 Dec 13:27 collapse

Hmm, still a boson particle, the same as electrons. Organic neurons don’t transmit boson particles, they create a fake electromagnetic field by equalising ions in solution. It’s lame and not real intelligence.

roguetrick@lemmy.world on 19 Dec 01:29 next collapse

Action potential doesn’t do thinking. Thinking happens at neuron junctions and that shits chemical and analogue. The electrical part just moves the data to the next synapse. There are some gap junctions but those aren’t really associated with thinking.

bennieandthez@lemmygrad.ml on 19 Dec 02:11 next collapse

“The material, sensuously perceptible world to which we ourselves belong is the only reality… Our consciousness and thinking, however supra-sensuous they may seem, are the product of a material, bodily organ, the brain. Matter is not a product of mind, but mind itself is merely the highest product of matter.” — Karl Marx

HawlSera@lemm.ee on 19 Dec 02:22 collapse

presses X to doubt

bennieandthez@lemmygrad.ml on 19 Dec 03:35 collapse

See for yourself.

www.marxists.org/reference/archive/…/09.htm

HawlSera@lemm.ee on 19 Dec 03:50 collapse

I know he said that, I’m saying his conclusion was incorrect.

bennieandthez@lemmygrad.ml on 19 Dec 04:16 collapse

So you’re saying matter is a product of the mind? Or what “conclusion” are you talking about

HawlSera@lemm.ee on 19 Dec 04:19 collapse

Why must matter or mind be the product of one another? Why can they not be separate yet interacting phenomena?

bennieandthez@lemmygrad.ml on 19 Dec 04:56 collapse

things conform to law, regardless of the subjects awareness of it, we should strive to learn the laws that govern the universe and leave behind obsolete idealism. Modern science has done a lot uncovering how our brain works and the complex processes behind conciousness, at this point arguing for conciousness as something separate is like arguing that rain is caused by deities.

HawlSera@lemm.ee on 19 Dec 07:01 collapse

I would like to see a source that says “This is how the brain creates consciousness.”

Not about correlations, but as that being the absolute undeniable source of consciousness.

Cause the last I checked it was still a hard problem with no real answer.

HawlSera@lemm.ee on 19 Dec 02:22 next collapse

I’m still rooting for Idealism or the immortal soul to somehow be a thing.

Go Banana!

Leate_Wonceslace@lemmy.dbzer0.com on 19 Dec 04:10 next collapse

No, you’re the electrochemical interactions happening inside the lump of fat.

kibiz0r@midwest.social on 19 Dec 10:57 next collapse

If by consciousness, you just mean thinking, then sure.

But if you mean awareness — “phenomena”, if you prefer — then I don’t see why an experiential state would (or could) be entirely secondary to a physical state.

It is, after all, possible for me to write words and perform other physical actions based on my experiential state. In many ways, my mental world is more “real” than the physical world.

For what it’s worth, I don’t think rejecting physicalism necessarily requires embracing the idea of a soul. I’m an atheist, and a neutral monist, for example. But if I had to choose between only physicalism and idealism, idealism makes more sense. Before anything else, I’m conscious.

Matriks404@lemmy.world on 19 Dec 11:42 next collapse

Depends on what you mean by ‘consciousness’. If you mean the actual biological process that is happening in our brains - yes. If you mean something different, it is probably not a scientific meaning but more a philosophical or religious one, which is ultimately not a bad thing but you should separate this from actual science.

Zementid@feddit.nl on 19 Dec 13:09 next collapse

What if life’s evolutionary end point is always sentience?

theonlytruescotsman@sh.itjust.works on 20 Dec 01:06 collapse

Then life is even more pointless and cruel than it appears.

Wizzard@lemm.ee on 19 Dec 13:27 next collapse

Speak for yourself. I try not to think.

TimewornTraveler@lemm.ee on 19 Dec 13:33 collapse

code “object-request-error”

msg ‘Invalid status 503 Service Unavailable for Some(“01/93/da/2e/55/b3/75/2a/84/1c/2ee79309c6b9.jpeg”) - {“message”:“failure to get a peer from the ring-balancer”}’

lmao so true