RE: Is atheism a belief?
March 7, 2019 at 8:32 pm
(This post was last modified: March 7, 2019 at 8:51 pm by bennyboy.)
(March 7, 2019 at 1:22 pm)Bucky Ball Wrote:
I'm trying to be civil with you, but I'm finding it difficult. I'd even venture to say that you are deliberately making it difficult. Please stop treating this discourse as mortal combat of the mind, and start treating it as a philosophical discussion. That being said, let me proceed.
Saying that we are ignorant of something does not constitute an argument from ignorance. I'm not saying "We don't know exactly how mind works, so woo!" I'm saying that given the brain, and only the brain, is the mechanism of human consciousness, we still don't know on what level of organization the most elemental essence of consciousness occurs. If you disagree with this, and you seem very much to want to, you can clear up the mystery by answering this question: on what level of organization does the most elemental essence of consciousness occur?
This is a non-trivial question, because the brain is a layering of very many systems of organization, from fully-integrated brain parts, right down to QM wave functions. Some of those systems of organization are unique to the human brain, and some are not.
We can all agree that the unique flavor of experience that is human being depends on a functioning human brain. But that's not the question-- the question is on what level the simplest elements of subjective experience supervene. What's required that minimal flash-in-the-darkness? At what level of complexity can it be said, "There was no mind, but now there is?"
It seems to me that there's no cut-line, no critical mass of processing at which this can be said. Rather, as you keep simplifying the processing system, you'll get something less and less human, then less and less recognizable as conscious by our standard. Eventually, we'll say: "Yeah. . . I for sure wouldn't call that system conscious any more." But so long as the system is capable of accepting inputs and producing outputs, it is in fact processing its environment. And that basic functionality extends right down into the quantum world.
Now, it may be that there IS some point at which there's nothing remotely like mind, but I don't know where that is. . . and neither do you.