GrahamH wrote:SpeedOfSound wrote:Little Idiot wrote:
Hold on a sec, I didnt say my model accounts for 'all the experimental evidence of NS', where did I say that? And if I were to do so I would not be claiming that I could explain all the experimental evidence, I dont know what experimental evidence there is, so I cant logical claim to be able to explain it all.
http://rationalia.com/forum/viewtopic.p ... 93#p400693
Little Idiot wrote:GrahamH wrote:
Does your 'model'

account for all the evidence of neurology? Or do you claim it doesn't need to, because "it's all mental"?
Yes my model accounts for neurology.
Wibble and squiggle out of it now.
LI doesn't need to account for all of neuroscience right now, but he does have to account for some of it. Neuroscience doesn't have to account for every aspect of mind right now, but it does account for a lot of it. I don't recall LI accounting for any of these oddities of the mind/brain.
You may recall some of the past agrument I present are based on odities of the mind and brain, to show the 'external' world is not identical to the 'experienced' world.
Even the seemingly most basic question is unanswered. Why do we have brains at all? The idea that the CNS externalises experience could be reasonable as far as accounting for sense organs. But what are brains for? Indeed, what is chemistry for? We don't experience it directly. We can only access it via science. We can envisage any number of worlds where there is rich experience but no chemistry and no brains, if 'its all mental'.
Because the physical world is consistent. If we had cotton wool in our heads, the physical world would be inconsistent.
For what ever reason, our physical world is consistent down to very very fine scales of detail, and out to very massive scales of detail.
By way of analogy consider Second Life, or any other computer simulation of a world. Avatars have eyes, and the player/observer 'sees through them', but they don't need retinal neurons or optic nerves or brains in the simulation to do that.
We all agree its a virual world, and dont look inside our Second-Life heads to see whats inther, we know the answer already. Its not a consistent world to the same level as our.
Consider dreams. We experience an externalised world without using our eyes, retinas or optic nerves. If 'its all mental' we don't need these chemical/mechanical organs in order to experience.
Doesnt this go against your position, not mine?
How do we 'see' in dreams without physical eyes? Obviously this proves eyes are not required to see, but some kind of awareness is. Otherwise we would not be aware of our internal virtual world.
So, LI, what are brains for, in your model? If we can sort that out we can start to discuss how your model accounts for any aspect of neuroscience.
Brains are the CPU of the CNS, the whole show needs to be collected and processed in order to work. The brain does what a CPU does; processes data.
An advanced intellect can consider fairly the merits of an idea when the idea is not its own.
An advanced personality considers the ego to be an ugly thing, and none more so that its own.
An advanced mind grows satiated with experience and starts to wonder 'why?'