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Helios Panoptes
10-12-2006, 07:53 PM
A NATURAL ACCOUNT OF PHENOMENAL CONSCIOUSNESS.

Physicalists commonly argue that conscious experiences are nothing more than states of the brain, and that conscious qualia are observer-independent, physical properties of the external world. Although this assumes the ‘mantle of science,’ it routinely ignores the findings of science, for example in sensory physiology, perception, psychophysics, neuropsychology and comparative psychology. Consequently, although physicalism aims to naturalise consciousness, it gives an unnatural account of it. It is possible, however, to develop a natural, nonreductive, reflexive model of how consciousness relates to the brain and the physical world. This paper introduces such a model and how it construes the nature of conscious experience. Within this model the physical world as perceived (the phenomenal world) is viewed as part of conscious experience not apart from it. While in everyday life we treat this phenomenal world as if it is the "physical world", it is really just one biologically useful representation of what the world is like that may differ in many respects from the world described by physics. How the world as perceived relates to the world as described by physics can be investigated by normal science (e.g. through the study of sensory physiology, psychophysics and so on). This model of consciousness appears to be consistent with both third-person evidence of how the brain works and with first-person evidence of what it is like to have a given experience. According to the reflexive model, conscious experiences are really how they seem.

http://cogprints.org/1813/00/Natural_account_of_CS.htm

Thoth
10-16-2006, 01:34 AM
The way one must approach consciousness, when communicating, is through communication: the contents of consciousness are what are successfully transferred by use of signs (words, pictures; metaphors, sight gags).

Phenomenalism is one (the lowest, including dreams) level of content, given through "it appears to me...." (making no claim to independent, external existence). THE SAME qualitative base organized under predicates of physical objects is the next level of content. Another is the phenomenal/physical world organized under affective predicates of libido/thanatos: the world my body experiences as gendered. Still another step up the hierarchy of predicates (of predicates of ...ultimately neurophysiological impulses of sufficient intensity to go over into conscious awareness) is the world under moral distinctions, given to humans as agents. Then there is an 'upper triad' (existential, philosophical, theological). The totality of an individual consciousness, as communicated under use of signs, is laid out under this octave of levels, from highest ("God" - the completing totality) to lowest (dream/neurone discharge) -- seven strata of 'worlds' in separte logical orders.

It is a useless dialectic trying to establish the phenomenal or physical (or moral, etc.) as metaphysically primary.