Minds: Death, anaesthetic, babies, animals and Sonic the Camcorder-Doom player.

Agreed, and I’m not sure we ever will, but that is perhaps just the nature of those fields of study. Computer science is most certainly science, but I can’t see there being a Periodic Table os it either.

I’d suggest we already have such lists, in terms of sensory memory and filtering operations, which explain why we at least eg. remember the stuff we do from the entire detailed visual field. I’d say memory (sensory, short and long term), emotion (limbic system output) and frontal cortex processing are useful starting “elements” of the mind, which might subsequently and testably be connected in an analogy manner to chemical analysis. Or, the neurons are the “elements” of the mind just as the logic gates are the elements of computers, and the scientific study could progress analogous to that of combining logic gates into not “molecules” but modules having a specific function, as in computer science.

Not so strange if they are dreams correlated with haywire limbic kindling, perhaps. But a disconnected computer which could remember something while completely inactive would certainly shake my worldview to the core.

But what and where is the substrate when the offal in the bed is inactive? Does it not exist independently of that particular bed-ridden offal?

The wooziness or normalcy comes from the activity of that particular substrate in my skull. If the pattern of that substrate is repeated elsewhere, it is independent, yes?

I suspect so, but do read Lakoff if you get the chance. I have reservations about his position myself given the “unreasonable effectiveness” of maths and logic you correctly point to. However, I think that overall his position is sound and does not require maths and logic to be “out there”, a dualism which I feel an overriding (but admittedly, emotional!) urge to shave.

Well, we could start with what children and tribesmen can do naturally, and see what hey can only do after being taught. The second would suggest something which was more a convention than an “ultimate” something (which one might expect children and tribesmen to perform as easily as walking and eating). These tests of what various organisms can and cannot do are the bedrock of cognitive science, although I’m sure that we might interpret these results differently.

I think math and logic are two related means of defining truth. Many would argue that other epistemologies are no less valid means to find truth.

Logically and mathematically wrong, yes. If that’s all the ‘wrong’ that matters, so be it, but “might makes right” is a depressingly popular precept.

However, this is not so monumental a gumball for us to keep chewing, I think. Consider it rather a mere pet peeve of mine, really.

I’m not sure what ‘condience’ is (conscience?), but again, you’re only “right” according to the same rules by which the argument is invalid - you’re not really saying anything more than “that’s logically invalid”.

More satisfied than the alternatives - how dull if my frontal lobes were never be fully satisfied!

OK, that is welcome agreement enough I think. (Although, as I say, I’m still a little confused as to where the brain whose apparent “eyes” are floating near the ceiling is actually located.)

You mean the dead body and brain in the bed, yes? Or a living (ie. active) brain somewhere else?

Again, no disrespect intended - I would understand completely if you felt an urge to tell me, as a friend, that you think I have a dated dress sense or something. I retract the comment unreservedly, but hope that you can take it as a sign of friendship that I can tell you exactly what I think of you, which is a jolly good egg. :slight_smile:

I could well be wrong, but I think of the science of mind as being like a physical science, and that there will be certain atom-like or compound-like irreducible patterns (irreducible in that the patterns of neurons firing, etc., has a one-to-one correspondence with a certain mental effect, could be quite micro). But that’s just my fantasy, the second part of the metaphor. It could come down to equations and algorithms as in computer science. We’ll see.

You are right that these are all very important. My personal opinion that they all haven’t clicked yet to give us that “Ah hah!” feeling. I mean, we know how the heart works at a macro level and in many of the details. A kid can hear the scientific explanation for how the heart or kidneys or bone marrow work and in two seconds have understood the basics. The macro understanding. We can say, “The heart pumps the blood,” or, “The kidneys filter the blood,” and it makes instant sense, and it feels complete at that level. To say that “The brain controls the whole body,” or “The brain is the source of thinking,” just doesn’t click in the same way. It’s hard to say why it doesn’t. Maybe because there is no easily imagined metaphor. The heart pumping like pump. The kidneys filtering like a coffee filter. The brain whating like a what?

Yes, this is not far from what I think, although I doubt the model is digital, as I have said.

And because of that veridical NDEs are denied by skeptics (and perhaps for good reasons, but there is certainly every motivation for disproving them). FWIW, the card experiment proposed elsewhere in this thread would blow away my own worldview if negative. Let’s run it!

Yeah, the brain offal is inactive (and eaten by maggots!–and rotting!)–but then a new substrate in a different dimension continues to sustain the pattern of the person (mind and body). Actually, most of the time it’s theorized that that “new” substrate is really with the mind/body (mirrors it) and continues on after the offal is R.I.P.

Same software, different computer, I should think.

I’ll read the book. I don’t see math as being “out there” either, however. Any more than the Big Bang Singularity was “out there” or “in there.”

Sounds interesting, but no one ever claimed that every aspect of Ultimate Truth was right in front of your face or easy to discover. We know for a “fact” that the Xth digit of Pi is Y, but there is no way to subitize that or even have a good guess as to what it is.

I don’t know if there are “others” that eschew math and logic to any significant degree. I would also say that the concept of truth is intuited directly, though it can be defined without too much trouble and controvery (correspondence between representations and reality, etc.).

That brain is in a vibratory dimension that overlaps ours. In fact, the Afterlife dimension overlaps ours. According to theories.

Yeah, be honest. Always. It’s been a good debate. If you’d like to cover anything else, please let me know. Otherwise, I’m finished. Thank you!

Thank you in return.