Literature DB >> 8236065

Drawing the boundary between subject and object: comments on the mind-brain problem.

R Rosen1.   

Abstract

Physics says that it cannot deal with the mind-brain problem, because it does not deal in subjectivities, and mind is subjective. However, biologists (among others) still claim to seek a material basis for subjective mental processes, which would thereby render them objective. Something is clearly wrong here. I claim that what is wrong is the adoption of too narrow a view of what constitutes 'objectivity', especially in identifying it with what a 'machine' can do. I approach the problem in the light of two cognate circumstances: (a) the 'measurement problem' in quantum physics, and (b) the objectivity of standard mathematics, even though most of it is beyond the reach of 'machines'. I argue that the only resolution to such problems is in the recognition that closed loops of causation are 'objective'; i.e. legitimate objects of scientific scrutiny. These are explicitly forbidden in any machine or mechanism. A material system which contains such loops is called 'complex'. Such complex systems thus must possess non-simulable models; i.e. models which contain impredicativities or 'self-references' which cannot be removed, or faithfully mapped into a single coherent syntactic time-frame. I consider a few of the consequences of the above, in the context of thus redrawing the boundary between subject and object.

Mesh:

Year:  1993        PMID: 8236065     DOI: 10.1007/bf00997269

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Theor Med        ISSN: 0167-9902


  1 in total

1.  Church's thesis and its relation to the concept of realizability in biology and physics.

Authors:  R ROSEN
Journal:  Bull Math Biophys       Date:  1962-12
  1 in total
  3 in total

Review 1.  The tacit-explicit connection: Polanyian integrative philosophy and a Neo-Polanyian medical epistemology.

Authors:  S R Jha
Journal:  Theor Med Bioeth       Date:  1998-12

Review 2.  Complexity, communication between cells, and identifying the functional components of living systems: some observations.

Authors:  D C Mikulecky
Journal:  Acta Biotheor       Date:  1996-11       Impact factor: 1.774

3.  Electromagnetism's Bridge Across the Explanatory Gap: How a Neuroscience/Physics Collaboration Delivers Explanation Into All Theories of Consciousness.

Authors:  Colin G Hales; Marissa Ericson
Journal:  Front Hum Neurosci       Date:  2022-06-16       Impact factor: 3.473

  3 in total

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