I see your point. But, I am not saying that simply because we cannot give a physical explanation for consciousness it must be non-physical, I am saying that mental phenomena are self-evidently not just physical phenomenon. This is the mind-brain problem. Materialists claim that mind really is just matter, but they can provide no evidence of this. It's a philosophical position so there is no actual evidence either way. I am presenting my reasons for thinking that mind is immaterial. If there are good reasons for thinking that mind is immaterial then it leaves the religous question wide open as a serious possibility. If mind is proven to be material then I would pretty much have to say case closed - religious claims go against everything we know about the universe. In my opinion, all religous claims that should be considered as possible actually revolve around the nature of consciousness, direct experience, subjective claims (i.e., things we can provide no actual objective evidence for even without bringing religion into it, so religous claims should not be dismissed outright simply because no objective evidence can be provided for thse claims.)No - this is where you start down your irrational conclusion.
Just because we can not explain something does NOT make it false.
We can not (yet) explain consciousness in terms of material, but that does not mean it is evidence for non-material.
To think otherwise is irrational.
Sarkus, in my opinion you are drawing an irrational conclusion. What your argument boils down to is this: Since evertything else we'eve ever been able to provide an expalnation for has been material consciousness must also be material.Again - an irrational conclusion.
The rational conclusion is that mental phenomena are a different type of material phenomena to matter that can be held in the hand, for example - just as a television image of a brick is material - but can not be held in the hand.
The mental brick actually has no physical characteristics whatsoever, which is why I am claiming it is immaterial. The TV brick does exist in objective physical reality, we can also give very precise descriptions about how it gets on the screen. We can't give explanations for the mental brick.
My ppoint here was actually; 1) That no evidence can be given for any subjective experiences yet we all know that they exist. This is to show that it might not be appropriate to ask for evidence for religous things since we know of at least one phenomenon that we know exists but no physical evidence can be provided for. 2) No, the abscence of evidence for materiality is not in-itself evidence of immateriality. But mental phenomenon appear to not have material characteristics which is why saying that they are in fact material is an irrational conclusion in the abscence of evidence. Mental phenomenon to be immaterial (abscence of physical characteristics) not material (presence of physical characteristics).But this is NOT, in itself, evidence for non-material - unless you think irrationally.
Strictly speaking isn't lack of evidence for evidence against. If you are going to say the way something appears is wrong you have to provide evidence. I am not saying simply that because no evidence can be provided that consciousness is material it is proof that it is immaterial. I am saying mental phenomenon appear not to be material so if a claim is going to be made that it is physical evidence has to be provided.And I have shown you where your thinking is flawed.
You are, to put it simply, using a lack of evidence FOR as evidence AGAINST.
Right. Both of these actually refer back to subjective experience. Even in the case of brain waves scientists only learned to correlate those patterns with dreams because people self reported those dreams (i.e., theres nothing that could lead someone to believe someone is dreaming by looking at those brainwaves).Several reasons:
1. I know I do.
2. It has been shown that the brain enters certain states when it dreams (REM, alpha waves etc) - which has been tested in the lab - and is repeatable.
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People claim to have religous experiences of gaining insight into the nature of self and universe. If everyone had these experiences would they just be accpeted as well?
Sarkus, let me put it this way. If someone told you there was a real brick behind the door or a mental brick which would you believe?The comparison is between something for which there is evidence and something for which there is no evidence. The analogy, in this respect, is sound.
Yes it would be if what I was saying that just because we don't have evidence that mental phenomenon are material they must be immaterial. I am pointing out that everyone knows from direct experience that there is a difference between a mental brick and a physical brick and therefore one can't simply say that it is material without evidence when what you are trying to account for is the appearance of immateriality.I don't doubt your efforts, or your sincerity in this, and apologies if this comes over as arrogant or elitist (not my intention) but your reasoning is flawed.
The mental representation strictly speaking is not material. If one is going to say that it is material they have to have a better argument thatn "It is material because everything else we've been able to show exists is material."This is where we differ - in that you think the mental representation is non-material - whereas I hold that rationally it should be considered material.