spooky2
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I want to emphasize a thing which Lakeman already approached. There is a sort of predominant scientific view, often named as the opinion of the "scientific community". And this is, simplified and channeled through the media, the brain-religion.
I am, at least through my academical education, a member of the scientific community, but I can only shake my head about this naive and childish worldview which some of my "colleagues" are uttering. Obviously, when someone has gotten the diploma in physics, this one feels to be competent as well in philosophy, and most of the media seem to share this opinion. Probably because it's much easier to repeat the common phrase "you are your brain" than to think about if this makes sense at all. It doesn't.
First, I have no clue what my brain does. Nonetheless I'm able to think.
Second, there are correlations between what we experience and activities within our brains. But correlations are not causations. Most natural scientists, when it comes to the brain, forget their proper education and declare experiences to be caused by activities within the brain. When confronted with the question how this mystical causal process is taking place, to transmute chemo-electrical activities into experiences, they fly to another phrase: They avoid causation, and start to identificate these physiological activities with experiences; because it spares them to explain how this causation would work; but this then is nothing else but mysticism in the bad meaning. To explain a correlation by an identification negates the correlation, as how can there be a correlation between one and the same thing? Some of the smartest of those scientists see this impossibility and therefore deny any correlation; saying our experience is an illusion, and there are only physiological processes. And this then is the end-point: Total delusion with a scientific diploma. As when experiences would be illusions, then their scientific work, together with it's objects, would be illusions, too.
Third, the brain is one of many objects in the world. When someone says that the world is nothing but a representation within the brain, then it is to ask how this one then could know anything about the world? Then the brain itself, and all theories about the brain would be themselves nothing but a representation, an image, within the brain. Therefore, we only could conclude either that there is no brain (or that we don't know anything about it and it's just an empty term), or that the brain is the brain. Congratulations!
Spooky
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