Rum wrote:Please - before replying in any automatic knee-jerk fashion, do reflect for at least a few seconds.
If 'I' think a thought and try to identify the 'I' that thought the thought I cannot do so. The thought exists it seems to me, however I can't identify the thing, object or entity that 'had' that thought.
Most people of course, without blinking, would assume that the thing that experiences thoughts, sensations, happenings, phenomena in general is the 'I' that I am talking about - some central thing that is fundamentally and irreducibly 'me/'I''.
I don't think it exists. Do you?
This is Buddhist stuff, but I think it is also atheist stuff.
http://neuro.psychiatryonline.org/cgi/c ... l/16/4/509
(A) Athymhormia and Disorders of Motivation in Basal Ganglia Disease
Michel Habib, M.D.
(B) Descartes Error
Antonio Damasio
(C) The Grand Design
Hawking/Mlodinow
In (A) we see that it is not our thoughts which animate us, but rather the deep emotional response regulation of the brain. The thoughts are created as part of the mechanism. If you damage the right part of the limbic loop then you become an emotionally flat inert empty headed doormat. If you are externally stimulated you can think and move, and report that in the inert state there are no thoughts.
In (B) we see that the idea of a rational decision is a myth. The brain just doesn't work that way. Damasio speculatively theorizes that a mechanism he dubs somatic markers is how the brain responds and "decides". Conscious representations are processed by the limbic system resulting in the somatic emotional response.. His patients who have lost that connection can't make effective life decisions when left only to rational thought, even though they test normal cognitively. Descartes was wrong.
In (C) there is a passage where Hawking/Mladinow state it in a very interesting way. "Recent experiments in neuroscience support the view that it is our physical brain, following the known laws of science, that determines our actions, and not some agency that exists outside those laws. For example, a study of patients undergoing awake brain surgery found that by electrically stimulating the appropriate regions of the brain, one could create in the patient the desire to move the hand, arm, or foot, or to move the lips and talk. It is hard to imagine how free will can operate if our behavior is determined by physical law, so it seems that we are no more than biological machines and that free will is an illusion."
In other words, as in (A), the experience and thought of "I want to move my foot" is a physical mechanism created by a physical process. No one has ever found an "I" inside a head. But the thought is not an illusion or extraneous, for the brain obviously needs the mechansim of the conscious representation of what's important to it in order to respond, regardless of how mysterious the fact of it being conscious might be.
Hawking/Mlodinow have an answer. "... since we cannot solve the equations that determine our behavior, we use the effective theory that people have free will. The study of our will and the behavior that arises from it is the science of phsychology." That's not too far off, but I would say this. The effective theory that we describe as the free-willed intentional agent is not a theory of the "I thinking". It is an effective theory of the brain and we don't have an option to use it or not. There is no "I thinking" to decide to use it or not. The brain needs to respond to biological machines and life forces which are so complex that there is no practical rational model of prediction. So the brain represents the things that particular process tends to do in any given situation as an agent model of intention, and "will". The tiger across the clearing has low blood sugar and it is drooling at the mouth and it sees me. There is no actual self-caused agent inside the tiger biological machine, but our brain says that tiger agent "intends" to eat me out of it's own willed choice and it works because I get my ass out of there. Some neuroscientists think that because the self agent seems to be a late addition to the party, that it is basically just the other agent applied to one's own biological machine. We are self aware, not as some magical act of the gods, but simply because our brain creates a self agent in our conscious experience for whatever reason (usually attributed to our extreme social nature). Psychology is not a physical science.
So what does one do with this. Obviously we are stuck with our agents and can't live without them. But we should see that rationalism is a crock. There is no rational "I" making the world a better place by having good reasons for what "I" do or think. Life inside the mechanism is irrational.