- Joined
- Sep 8, 2018
This OP will be an unusual blend of mockery (in the spirit of the site) and actual deep thinking; please be gentle, it's my first time : (
Also if someone could tell me how to put description text on spoilers, I would appreciate that.
Here we have this wonderful essay by Aeon, that is so full of obfuscation that I'm not really sure what it's trying to convey.
Nevertheless, I will make an attempt.
Your sense of self doesn't really exist, it's just an outgrowth of your neurons communicating with each other. This means that you may not really be in control of your thoughts— you only THINK you are. The agent-self model, as he refers to it, is just your brain's attempt at trying to assign causes to your actions in order to learn from them.
Except that causes don't exist, and so neither do you. How he knows this, I don't know, but he has a philosophy degree so let's flow with it.
Now is where things get interesting. You can be conscious but not have a sense of self; this sense of self is only your brain telling itself that it can tell itself things. Don't worry, I had trouble comprehending that at first too. But I digress; here is the quote evidencing his thinking (or, according to him, the illusion of thinking).
Now, like any well-written article, he tries to tie it in with existing issues. As many intelligent rationalists would say:
"This process of learning about ourselves is emotionally unattractive to many. It forces us to confront centuries-old systems of systematic self-deception, often represented by certain forms of organised religion. Indeed, one of the interesting aspects of mental autonomy is our general inability to notice when we lack it."
But of course, that is too simple a stance. We're philosophers, goddammit, and we need complexity. And so we get this gem:
Of course, he's anti-religion. Except buddhism. Because muh eastern tradition.
Yes, he says this.
Now, maybe I'm just not intelligent enough to grasp this article. But he seems to try separating consciousness and sense of self— you can somehow think, without knowing it is you thinking. And this prompts the question, then.
What is thinking? What is consciousness? What is the self?
My theory is that consciousness is the manifestation of a critical mass of semi-independent neurons cooperating. In this framework, thinking would then be the processing of information by the network, and the self is the conglomeration of all the cooperative efforts of the individual units. Like how a car is the sum of its parts, and only exists because the parts in it work together to make it exist. This means it is real, though perhaps in a sense less real than something physical because it requires an extra medium upon which to exist (the mind).
But that's just me. What are your thoughts?
Also if someone could tell me how to put description text on spoilers, I would appreciate that.
Here we have this wonderful essay by Aeon, that is so full of obfuscation that I'm not really sure what it's trying to convey.
Nevertheless, I will make an attempt.
Your sense of self doesn't really exist, it's just an outgrowth of your neurons communicating with each other. This means that you may not really be in control of your thoughts— you only THINK you are. The agent-self model, as he refers to it, is just your brain's attempt at trying to assign causes to your actions in order to learn from them.
Except that causes don't exist, and so neither do you. How he knows this, I don't know, but he has a philosophy degree so let's flow with it.
However, even if you do experience yourself as an agent, that doesn’t mean you fundamentally are one. In the physical world, there is no such thing as ultimate origination. Science is what explains why you think and behave the way you do, not some pre-existing agential self.
Now is where things get interesting. You can be conscious but not have a sense of self; this sense of self is only your brain telling itself that it can tell itself things. Don't worry, I had trouble comprehending that at first too. But I digress; here is the quote evidencing his thinking (or, according to him, the illusion of thinking).
But since the real cause – unconscious, sub-personal processes, such as synapses firing – can’t be represented within the workspace of our consciousness, the brain tells itself something else: there must be a self acting so as to make all these thoughts and actions occur!
Now, like any well-written article, he tries to tie it in with existing issues. As many intelligent rationalists would say:
"This process of learning about ourselves is emotionally unattractive to many. It forces us to confront centuries-old systems of systematic self-deception, often represented by certain forms of organised religion. Indeed, one of the interesting aspects of mental autonomy is our general inability to notice when we lack it."
But of course, that is too simple a stance. We're philosophers, goddammit, and we need complexity. And so we get this gem:
Meditation research is poised to make major contributions to mental autonomy. Mindfulness practice can sometimes lead to a crystal-clear and silent mind that is not clouded by thoughts at all, the pure conscious experience of mental autonomy as such that arises without actually exerting control. In long-term practitioners, this can result from the cultivation of a kind of inner non-acting that includes noticing, gently letting go, and resting in an open, effortless state of choiceless awareness.
Of course, he's anti-religion. Except buddhism. Because muh eastern tradition.
Yes, he says this.
Whether this sort of cognition really requires a robust notion of selfhood, as most Western philosophers would argue, would be disputed in many Eastern traditions. Here the highest level of mental autonomy is often seen as a form of impersonal witnessing or (in the words of the Indian-born philosopher Jiddu Krishnamurti) ‘observing without an observer’ (though even this pure form of global meta-awareness still contains the implicit knowledge that the organism could act if necessary).
Now, maybe I'm just not intelligent enough to grasp this article. But he seems to try separating consciousness and sense of self— you can somehow think, without knowing it is you thinking. And this prompts the question, then.
What is thinking? What is consciousness? What is the self?
My theory is that consciousness is the manifestation of a critical mass of semi-independent neurons cooperating. In this framework, thinking would then be the processing of information by the network, and the self is the conglomeration of all the cooperative efforts of the individual units. Like how a car is the sum of its parts, and only exists because the parts in it work together to make it exist. This means it is real, though perhaps in a sense less real than something physical because it requires an extra medium upon which to exist (the mind).
But that's just me. What are your thoughts?
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