Dualism is an illusion we need for pragmatic reasons.
Cheers
Luc

 
www.lucdelannoy.com



________________________________
 From: William Conger
<[email protected]>
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Thursday, May
17, 2012 10:24 AM
Subject: Re: "...The realm of emotion and conscience, of
memory and  intention and sensation."
 
As you often claim, no one can know
what is in another person's mind, in
reference of intention. I want to say
that you are wrong in claiming I intend
contempt in my responses about
dualism.  I have no contempt for anything that
doesn't include my sorrow as
well.  Since I have no sorrow for ideas I have no
contempt for them either. 
My contempt is your interpretation of something I
wrote but where do I express
it, exactly?   Dualism is a very appealing
concept, 
a Cartesian fancy that
resolves the riddle of mind-body and sits at
the 
pituitary center of the
Western Man Identity. I love it but I can't
justify it 
and will certainly
read the book you mention, hoping to find the
flaw in my 
counter intuitive
doubt.

  I am interested in getting to the most
basic assumption that
undergirds the 
distinction between material cause and
immaterial effect.  All
of the examples 
you give are faulty because
materiality is present in both
cause and effects. 
The one possible exception
is gravity since as yet no one
can account for it in 
specific terms.  But I
think both of us would agree
that when gravity is fully 
defined and
described, it will not be done by
theologians but by physicists.  I 
agree
that it is intuitive to suppose that
the physical brain gives rise to
immaterial thoughts.  But those thoughts
can't exist independent of a living
brain and as you argue, nothing guarantees
that those thoughts are ever
transmitted intact from one brain to another
because they require some medium
and the medium itself 'colors' the
translation, not only from one brain to
another but to the same brain moment
to moment.

I am not sure whether the
medium, image, language, symbol, grunt,
gesture, is a 
product of 'thought' or
is thought itself.  I am inclined to
say that we have no 
thoughts independent
of the medium that we claim
transmits them but in fact may 
create them.  I
think/believe that language is
fundamental to thought.  When 
people say that
an experience is indescribably
or beyond words or can't be 
imagined, I reply
that they their so-called
independent experience of sheer 
emotion or feeling
or whatever is merely a
mass of neuronal activity and not 
really an
'experience'.  To be an
experience in the proper sense, it must be 
defined or
described --- an
exclamatory ouch! would be an example as would a 
poetic
oration on love.

I
shrink back in fear knowing that my view seems to
contradict the Bard:
"Word
fly up, thoughts remain below
Words without
thoughts never to heaven go"
Maybe the Bard and I could agree, however, if he
were to explain that words
ARE 
thoughts and thus can't be divided into
immaterial heavenward thoughts
and 
earthbound words.  Could there be a
Shakespeare without words?  Is not
Shakespeare equivalent to his words? 
wc
----- Original Message ----
From:
"[email protected]" <[email protected]>
To:
[email protected]
Sent:
Wed, May 16, 2012 11:06:29 PM
Subject: Re:
"...The realm of emotion and
conscience, of memory and  intention 
and
sensation."

I presume you know you
convey contempt, and intentionally do so.
I again urge you to spend some time
in Chalmers's PHILOSOPHY OF MIND
anthology. It may not win you over, but
perhaps it will convince you some
people
of noncontemptible intelligence have
mounted considerable arguments for
dualism.


> The question is can something
material give rise to something
immaterial?
>
That's not THE question but it's
certainly A question.   And it
has the
hint of conceding that neural matter
and consciousness are two
different sorts
of entities. A magnet is material,
but how about the magnetic
field it gives
rise to? A physical mass is
material; how about gravity? A
dark, inert
piece of coal when inflamed give
off heat and light.

But of
course the dualist answer would be yes, of course,
neural excitation
gives ise
consciousness.

> People have always claimed that
magic for themselves but do

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