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€uromeinke, FEJ. and Ghoulish Delight RULE!!! NA abides. |
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#27 | |||
ohhhh baby
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This isn't to say that we aren't "more" than the whole of our parts - the beauty of the top layer of our brains is well established. We've taken these rough bits of reality and made amazing things with it. The uncountable billions of neuron fires that go into painting and political theory and space travel should not go uncredited. Hell, I'll even say that cars DO have a personality of their own - and that it's a combination of their many parts. A 1988 Toyota Tercel with a high pitched whine, high gas mileage, springy seats and no a/c would feel totally different than a 1979 Cadillac with a lazy turn signal, low slung ride and well-worn leather...and we would interact with the cars in different ways. That doesn't mean that they are anything more than the sum of their physically limited parts. Quote:
If this is true (I'm too lazy to research it) then how does that affect causality and decision making theory? It doesn't matter to me what the nuts and bolts in my head actually are, what matters is that they are things that act in a certain way. If the claim is that "we can therefore know nothing of the universe" then you may want to turn in your television, your polio vaccine, and everything else man ever created because of scientific inquiry. Obviously, there is plenty we can and do know. If the claim is that "we can never know how minute physics works because we can't view it", that doesn't mean we assume that it doesn't work by any rules. Everything we have ever discovered works on rules, and the burden of proof is on the other side of things. If you haven't heard it already - Here's a short-short version of Hofstadter's "Careenium" analogy, which I think goes a long way towards making firing neurons and bouncing electrons make more sense in terms of consciousness.
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