While we are on the subject, here's a Guardian article I came across via Google. It is a long article and generally critical of the brain is a computer analogy. However, it is nevertheless an unwaveringly materialist account, completely ignoring the possibility that consciousness might not be a product of brain activity. From reading this - if it is a representation of where neuroscience and consciousness research stands - then there's not much hope for the views expressed on this forum. Those views are, apparently, not even part of the conversation.
The closest the article comes to acknowledging even a dualist approach is contained in the snippet:
The closest the article comes to acknowledging even a dualist approach is contained in the snippet:
Quote:The materialist working hypothesis is that brains and minds, in humans and maggots and everything else, are identical. Neurons and the processes they support – including consciousness – are the same thing. In a computer, software and hardware are separate; however, our brains and our minds consist of what can best be described as wetware, in which what is happening and where it is happening are completely intertwined.
Imagining that we can repurpose our nervous system to run different programmes, or upload our mind to a server, might sound scientific, but lurking behind this idea is a non-materialist view going back to Descartes and beyond. It implies that our minds are somehow floating about in our brains, and could be transferred into a different head or replaced by another mind. It would be possible to give this idea a veneer of scientific respectability by posing it in terms of reading the state of a set of neurons and writing that to a new substrate, organic or artificial.
I do not make any clear distinction between mind and God. God is what mind becomes when it has passed beyond the scale of our comprehension.
Freeman Dyson
(This post was last modified: 2021-12-08, 08:45 PM by Kamarling.)
Freeman Dyson