(2017-10-17, 04:43 PM)Chris Wrote: But in any case, I'm not convinced that psi couldn't be consistent with Darwinism, or with the view that consciousness is purely a result of physical processes in the brain. If psi exists, we know so very little about how it works.
On one hand is the meaning of "Darwinism" inferred in general speech - and on the other - what Darwin actually wrote.
As someone who has read Darwin's work, it finds a much more prominent role for intelligent action's role in evolution; than it is given credit. Darwin believed in and endorsed mental evolution!
Quote: As in ‘The Descent,’ there is almost no mention of natural selection in ‘The Expression.’ Instead, the principle throughout is implied: individuals that can communicate better, using their species-specific behaviors, are likely to have more offspring. - from Darwin and Animal Behavior by R. A. Boakes, University of Sydney
I am prescribing a science methodology whereby physics/chemistry is at one level of process modeling and communication and information processing is at another. There are no units of measure for communication in the chemistry of biology.
If communication is a major factor in biological evolution, (duh) then it is measured by informational processes! DNA maybe described by organic chemistry - but its function is the communication of instructions. The study of DNA processes is via Bioinformatics.
Here is a tasty tidbit:
Quote: Two years after publishing ‘The Expression,’ the then 65-year-old Darwin invited to his home in the country a young physiologist, George Romanes. Darwin decided that Romanes was just the person to develop the ideas on mental evolution that Darwin had proposed in ‘The Descent.’ Their admiration was mutual. Darwin became a revered father figure for Romanes who for the rest of his life vigorously defended every aspect of Darwin’s theories, even those that after Darwin’s death in 1882 began to look increasingly dubious, such as his theory of inheritance, ‘pangenesis,’ and his belief that instinctive behavior could evolve both as a result of natural selection and from inheritance of individually acquired habits. Romanes’ aim in life became that of first accumulating systematic data on animal behavior and then using these to construct a detailed theory of mental evolution following the lines that Darwin had sketched - ibid
http://www.eebweb.arizona.edu/Courses/Ec...havior.pdf
Natural Selection was not as important to Darwin as it is Neo-Darwinists. The influence of the information processing done by living things is much more causal in evolution that mutation. In the last twenty-five years Lamarckian inheritance has made a huge comeback.
The answer to how minds work - is the answer to how living things evolve.