(May 29, 2013 at 5:58 pm)bennyboy Wrote: There are two possibilities:
1) The physics of humanity would function exactly the same without consciousness. In this case, the evolution of consciousness would be pointless-- all the genetic interactions with the environment would have deterministically led to non-aware beings that function exactly as we do. There's no "need" for an actual sense of awareness.
2) Consciousness adds something to our genetic fitness that goes beyond the pure physics of the body. In this case, whether it's dependent on brain structures is irrelevant-- consciousness is an extra layer that transcends the pure mechanics of the human body (including brain function).
That is quite a jump in thought. How can you justify that statement?
Assuming that the mind is a product of the brain, then by its very definition, it is a product of the mechanics of the brain. To say otherwise is to invoke a transcendent or supernatural explanation that has absolutely no grounding in the reality we currently know.
Really, the two possibilities are:
1. The mind is a direct product of the mechanics of the brain
2. The mind is of supernatural origin and is something beyond the mechanics of the brain.
Mind you, I am not silly enough to argue that these are the only possibilities for the mind/brain dichotomy. But within the bounds of this discussion, these are the options we come down to.
So I have to ask, what do you believe? Is the mind supernatural?
"Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I'm not sure about the universe." -Einstein