Neuroscientific Evidence: Irreducible Mind (Part 1)

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 4 ต.ค. 2024
  • Does neuroscience show consciousness emerges from a brain? We show a wealth of data suggests the opposite. The mind does not appear to be reducible to matter.
    Don't forget to help us create more videos! We need your support:
    / inspiringphilosophy
    / @inspiringphilosophy
    Due to there being too many sources, I had to make a google doc to include them all:
    docs.google.co...

ความคิดเห็น • 1K

  • @InspiringPhilosophy
    @InspiringPhilosophy  4 ปีที่แล้ว +267

    This is a new version, because I decided to cut out a section after a supporter raised some good objections. If you want to see want convinced me and Kyle Alander to stop using this one specific argument, see here: th-cam.com/video/BNhUj1op5do/w-d-xo.html

    • @timgoodwintv
      @timgoodwintv 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      What part got cut out?

    • @joshuavan8391
      @joshuavan8391 4 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      @Tim Goodwin the part about how psychedelic drugs reduce brain activity but increase richness of experience.

    • @anthonycallender6492
      @anthonycallender6492 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      This question is off-topic. There are so many people with different views in general (God, soul, science, etc) but a lot of people are convinced they know that what they claim to be true, is objectively true, even though this is also evident in people with opposing views on a certain topic, they are truly convinced their "investigation" is unbiased and objective just as the other person with the opposing view. DO you think this is an epistemological problem or more of a cultural, sociological, or maybe a psychological problem?

    • @philippaul6039
      @philippaul6039 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I've never actually heard you say it so I'd like to ask you directly. Are you a Christian? If not what are you? I ask because I've seen similar channels that say there's good evidence for God but then deny Christianity.

    • @delcioalves4556
      @delcioalves4556 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Many thanks.

  • @JHohenhauser
    @JHohenhauser 4 ปีที่แล้ว +561

    Bruh, you re-uploaded something because you admitted you were wrong and corrected your statement.
    God bless you, IP. You are a model for all apologists.

    • @karozans
      @karozans 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      What was he wrong about?

    • @calebp6114
      @calebp6114 4 ปีที่แล้ว +13

      @@karozans Here's what he said - This is a new version, because I decided to cut out a section after a supporter raised some good objections. If you want to see want convinced me and Kyle Alander to stop using this one specific argument, see here: @

    • @AcidAdventurer
      @AcidAdventurer 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@anahata3478 they might lend one to dismiss materialism, but it seems to me that psychedelics are the strongest experiential argument that the mind is emergent. I've always believed strongly in the primacy of the mind over the brain, but psychedelics are the only thing that's ever make me seriously question that belief. No matter how much you might want to quit tripping, no amount of focus and mental control will change that. Just like no amount of mental effort will make you trip without consuming any necessary substance

    • @blaqshiep4920
      @blaqshiep4920 4 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      @ nathan nicholson before i experienced a psychedelic experience due to an intuitive ritual, id be right there with your completely sound rational theory. However, it is wrong. You can have a psychedelic experience with no substance. Youre being a little too black and white in all of this.

    • @AcidAdventurer
      @AcidAdventurer 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@blaqshiep4920 truth is black and white. If I'm wrong, I'm wrong.

  • @carolcrone9387
    @carolcrone9387 4 ปีที่แล้ว +480

    This blew my mind, although my brain was unaffected.

    • @AithenTheJokerr
      @AithenTheJokerr 4 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      Carol Buckles HAHAHAHAHA

    • @afreshcoatofpaint
      @afreshcoatofpaint 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      😂

    • @thelachstar4294
      @thelachstar4294 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      This, this is great

    • @AndrasDNagy-bs5dc
      @AndrasDNagy-bs5dc 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      spot on. However, this video can not blow your mind repeatedly very often, which fact shows that your brain was affected indeed.

    • @TernaryM01
      @TernaryM01 4 ปีที่แล้ว +12

      @@AndrasDNagy-bs5dc That's because you're presupposing that it is the brain that causes your mind to not be blown anymore.

  • @subterraneanhomesickalien1344
    @subterraneanhomesickalien1344 4 ปีที่แล้ว +237

    This is basically an academic essay in a video format. Look at the amount of research he has done. Truly amazing.

    • @naishjam
      @naishjam 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      Unfortunately it isn't, and he hasn't done any research. Research identifies gaps in the current state of knowledge and produces empirical data or theories to fill those gaps. To do this, though, one needs to correctly understand and represent what prior research says. He is taking papers which effectively say that there is a feedback loop in the brain between decision-making, behaviour and neural correlates, and he is claiming that proves that the mind is independent of the brain. It doesn't. It proves exactly what the papers say they show, which is that there is a feedback loop between decision-making, behaviour and neural correlates. Nothing more, nothing less.
      Waving your hand at scientific research and interpreting it however you like is not science, and is not research, not is it academic rigour.

    • @naishjam
      @naishjam 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@austin3789 That's not what I said at all. I'll restate my point more clearly. He is misrepresenting what the papers he's read is valid and drawing conclusions from things they don't say. It is valid to draw conclusions from the work of other researchers. It isn't valid to misinterpret what other papers have said and then draw conclusions from your misrepresentation.

    • @subterraneanhomesickalien1344
      @subterraneanhomesickalien1344 4 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      James Naish For research essays, you’re allowed to draw inferences from research findings and data to form your conclusions. There is nothing wrong with that. That is what most researchers do for lit review (at least in Psychology). He is simply phrasing the researching findings in a way that supports the premises of his video. It’s not misrepresenting at all.

    • @naishjam
      @naishjam 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@subterraneanhomesickalien1344 I think this says it all: "phrasing the researching findings in a way that supports the premises of his video". If you can't see what's wrong with that statement, then therein lies the issue.

    • @subterraneanhomesickalien1344
      @subterraneanhomesickalien1344 4 ปีที่แล้ว +15

      James Naish Oh, dear, you've misunderstood me. I didn’t say that he manipulates the research findings to support his findings. While writing a research essay, you have to organize your research findings and report and phrase them in a way that establishes a connection between those findings and your research question and hypotheses. Then, point out the agreements or disagreements between the findings and your hypotheses, and present your own interpretation of the results, considering the strengths and weaknesses of the the original interpretation from the literature. That is exactly what Michael did. I don't see anything wrong with that. Almost all psychology research papers I read are done like this, especially research in cognitive psychology.

  • @sunblaze8931
    @sunblaze8931 4 ปีที่แล้ว +305

    This dude is literally amazing. He makes these great videos, and he admits when he’s wrong and corrects his mistakes.

    • @SuperArtifical
      @SuperArtifical 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @Kenton Bowers woop woop

    • @brucewachta4102
      @brucewachta4102 4 ปีที่แล้ว +8

      It's a shame there aren't more like him the world would be a better place.

    • @the_hanged_clown
      @the_hanged_clown 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @French Frys evidence?
      edit: I had the wrong impression of this creator, and French Frys here was kind enough to correct that impression. I highly encourage everyone here to follow the link they have provided directly beneath this comment.

    • @the_hanged_clown
      @the_hanged_clown 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @French Frys oh wow, hey thanks mate. I knew you knew what you were talking about the second Rationality Rules popped up. had no idea this guy was even religious, let alone all that other nonsense.
      thanks again for the warning!

    • @the_hanged_clown
      @the_hanged_clown 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @French Frys also sorry if I've disappointed you, you seemed very prepared to argue your position if I were you I'd be a tad bummed out rn lol

  • @existentialcatharsisvibe1709
    @existentialcatharsisvibe1709 4 ปีที่แล้ว +110

    One thing i really admire and respect about michael is that he makes no lame excuse or story when he make mistake. He accept it,and even ready to walk extra mile to correct it. I salute You. God bless you and your family

  • @grantshearer5615
    @grantshearer5615 4 ปีที่แล้ว +70

    I concluded that the brain (much like the computer that is so so similar) is an interface system. Just as we use computers to interface with programs and enter commands, our spirit uses our brain to experience through our body, and give it commands.

    • @AS-ms9nx
      @AS-ms9nx 2 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Exactly

    • @pureone8350
      @pureone8350 ปีที่แล้ว

      What about people who receive brain damage and go mad?

    • @grantshearer5615
      @grantshearer5615 ปีที่แล้ว +22

      @@pureone8350 you ever tried playing with a really bad connection?

    • @R3l3ntl3sss
      @R3l3ntl3sss 9 หลายเดือนก่อน

      This is almost 100% correct. The only thing you missed is that the mind is it’s own consciousness that we can influence. The mind is in control of the brain. The mind will do everything in its power to keep you from knowing this. Life does not happen to you. Your just an observer, enjoy the ride.

    • @Montu96
      @Montu96 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@pureone8350Late reply, but real physical things are subject to laws of entropy, metaphysical things like the soul are beyond the limits of physics, so to speak.
      So, in a sense, if a Person has a genetic defect, or a damaged brain, or some physical or mental disability, the soul is still pure and fine, but the soul's experience in the Universe will be through a body that is disabled either physically or mentally.
      Now, why would a soul choose to go through such experience? I don't know. Maybe it's Karma like the Hindus say, or maybe it's the free will of the soul, or maybe it's some divine plan of the lord. Who knows.
      We don't have an answer. But, as Human Beings in this World, we can definitely try to help those who suffer with any form of physical or mental disability, it's not like every living person is disabled.

  • @johnnyshah7332
    @johnnyshah7332 ปีที่แล้ว +76

    Very intelligent explanation. I was suffering from depression and tanataphobia (fear of death) but your videos helped me change my life and look at th world with a different non materialistic view. You should make a case video on blind ppl from birth having lucid verified NDE's.

    • @steveplay0940
      @steveplay0940 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      In his video 5 about afterlife and NDE, he mentions the case of Vicky who was blind from birth and saw in the NDE

    • @_malinx_
      @_malinx_ 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

      @@steveplay0940 Nde's are stupid LOL but i agree that our consciousness is immaterial and we have a mind

    • @mothin4678
      @mothin4678 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      ​@@_malinx_Maybe, maybe not
      Some are certainly bs, and are completely incoherent
      But some seem to be coherent

  • @KTChamberlain
    @KTChamberlain 4 ปีที่แล้ว +171

    What is a mind? Don't matter. What is matter? Never mind.

    • @asmolpieceofapplepie8465
      @asmolpieceofapplepie8465 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      bro IP should see this!

    • @134t7
      @134t7 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      being open minded? Nah! Seeing different perspectives? Of course not! Typing a up a little phrase to make you seem smart? *YAS QUEEN!*

    • @miguelEguzman
      @miguelEguzman 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Early simpsons reference? Or life in hell? Either way, good one.

    • @KTChamberlain
      @KTChamberlain 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@miguelEguzman It was early Simpsons reference pre-1989.

    • @miguelEguzman
      @miguelEguzman 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@KTChamberlain ah. Thanks. It was both, but I was wondering which you were referencing. Same guy wrote both. Only the characters changed.

  • @jeffphelps1355
    @jeffphelps1355 4 ปีที่แล้ว +101

    IP is the terminator of apologetics.

  • @johnlawlessmusic
    @johnlawlessmusic หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    I truly appreciate the time and energy you spent on researching this. I find that I periodically return to these videos to re engage with elements I may have forgotten - maybe annually or so. This video series should be compiled into a book or perhaps made into a singular documentary that can be shared with an even wider audience!

  •  4 ปีที่แล้ว +370

    Unlike some atheists who create videos filled with logical fallacies and never correct them IP will remove his videos correct them and upload it again. 👍

    • @InspiringPhilosophy
      @InspiringPhilosophy  4 ปีที่แล้ว +93

      Thank you

    • @ramilurazmanov
      @ramilurazmanov 4 ปีที่แล้ว +17

      With more logical fallacies😅

    • @FStan-co8vv
      @FStan-co8vv 4 ปีที่แล้ว +65

      @@ramilurazmanov I guess you dismiss the entire video as being a god of the gaps argument, but may I ask what other fallacies did you detect?

    • @thankyouand3260
      @thankyouand3260 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@ramilurazmanov exactly :-D :-D :-D :-D :-D He is good at making videos, but bad at logic.

    • @FStan-co8vv
      @FStan-co8vv 4 ปีที่แล้ว +37

      @Corvus Morve There are lots of atheist youtubers who constantly throw straw man arguments and ad hominems.

  • @Drp_br_
    @Drp_br_ 4 ปีที่แล้ว +114

    Oh yes!
    A man who owns up to his mistakes!
    Especially for a Christian.
    Good job man! I salute ya!

    • @UltraInstinct509
      @UltraInstinct509 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      what he made mistake in?

    • @ea-tr1jh
      @ea-tr1jh 4 ปีที่แล้ว +11

      @@UltraInstinct509 IP wrote in a pinned comment that he retracted this video because he realized that one of the points he brought up in it was wrong, so he edited that part out and reposted it.

    • @jokinghazard4022
      @jokinghazard4022 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @French Frys considering none of those are true probably not

    • @jokinghazard4022
      @jokinghazard4022 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @French Frys the bible isn't immoral, God isn't a "thug"

    • @Drp_br_
      @Drp_br_ 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      French Frys your bloody Evilbible.com info

  • @ppmp9937
    @ppmp9937 4 ปีที่แล้ว +65

    SO HAPPY I DISCOVERED YOUR CHANNEL!!!! we have a Soul! It is beyond brain!

    • @REDPUMPERNICKEL
      @REDPUMPERNICKEL 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@saammahakala You seem to think that 'conscious' is a something, that 'Soul' is a something and that 'form' is a something.
      It seems to me quite obvious that all three of these are pure abstractions or conceptions. I say pure because there is no actual materially existing objects to which the words refer or can refer.
      To assert that suffering is an illusion means you don't know what illusion means or what suffering means or what it means for a being to be conscious or some combination of all three.
      It seems to me your whole comment is meaningless gibberish.

    • @REDPUMPERNICKEL
      @REDPUMPERNICKEL 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@saammahakala It seems to me that if too many can't distinguish between the contents of the world around them and the contents of their own imaginations or the imaginary constructs implanted in them by others, then there's a good chance no good will come from it.
      And it's the good that I want, not just for me, but for everyone.
      Sure these imaginary notions may have served humanity well in a time when nobody knew anything about the whys and wherefores of the world around them.
      That time is past.
      Time to wake up now!
      Time to become educated by the facts so assiduously discovered.
      Time to stop murdering people by flying planes into buildings
      just because some believe that is what their imaginary god commands.
      Seventy two virgins in paradise is an unlikely reward for murder.
      You might even call it crazy to expect it.
      Are the contents or your imagination so very different?

    • @justaguywithaturban6773
      @justaguywithaturban6773 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@REDPUMPERNICKEL
      You’re trying to debunk the immaterial with material, this will only lead you to a hamster wheel. Time to wake up and connect with your spirit and escape the fake illusion of materialism

    • @REDPUMPERNICKEL
      @REDPUMPERNICKEL 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@justaguywithaturban6773 How on earth did you get the notion that I am of the materialist persuasion?

    • @Mystery16623
      @Mystery16623 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Yes :)

  • @marcutrie6494
    @marcutrie6494 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    I've never grown tired of these essays. You've nailed the professional format.

  • @ponchia.2886
    @ponchia.2886 4 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    This is one of the best videos I´ve ever seen, full of studies, books and solid arguments. Awesome channel!!

  • @joshuavan8391
    @joshuavan8391 4 ปีที่แล้ว +28

    God bless IP. Your work is an inspiration. I am eagerly awaiting and update from the Dr. you contacted.

  • @wallsofjerico9516
    @wallsofjerico9516 3 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    A bad lsd experience left me messed up and you have helped my friend God bless you 💙💪

    • @pdxnikki1
      @pdxnikki1 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      God bless you, luv!

  • @sheenaalexis8710
    @sheenaalexis8710 4 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    I just found your channel this evening, 5 hours later....I'm really enjoying your content! Well done.
    I was already a believer in soul...I love this topic.

  • @rocketman2628
    @rocketman2628 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Also I just want to say that you kept your word when you told Matt that you would adjust your view if new evidence comes up. To me that is true honesty and I have upmost respect for that.

  • @avivastudios2311
    @avivastudios2311 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    You are the greatest apologist I have ever listened to. Never change.

  • @Devdevbruh
    @Devdevbruh 2 ปีที่แล้ว +8

    If a computer needs electricity to run but you unplug the computer, the computer (the body) will stop working but the source of electricity (consciousness) will always exist in nature.

    • @rizdekd3912
      @rizdekd3912 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      But the electricity isn't the algorithms the computer can run because it is supplied the electricity. IOW, yes, something exists that allows consciousness and, like electricity, it may well be something based on or emerging from the physical world.

  • @1JAMINben
    @1JAMINben 4 ปีที่แล้ว +14

    Hearing about alters lacking sight in a sighted body is interesting; it sounds like the idea of Aristotle and Aquinas saying that the soul itself has the power of sight, hearing, etc...

  • @TheMichaelNT
    @TheMichaelNT 4 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    This is amazing timing lol I've been wrestling with these topic for a few weeks now. Cheers

  • @mypocketsecurity1788
    @mypocketsecurity1788 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    I actually have OCD, I can confirm that CBT and ERP have in fact altered the way I respond to stresses around me. Things that were previously automatic (subconscious) reactions, I have changed.

  • @mcawesomeytyo3312
    @mcawesomeytyo3312 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Thnk you, I was currently losing faith in spirituality and God, but your scientific explanation offers relief for me

  • @HighShepherdLopes
    @HighShepherdLopes 4 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I think the argument against atheistic theories of life and consciousness while necessary to defend our position that humanity is something more, but there's also an increasing need to defend our faith in the face of the growing new age movement, where spirit is believed, but it's origins are rejected fiercely.

  • @CharlesCherryWatercolors
    @CharlesCherryWatercolors 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    This is one of your best videos yet. Great job!!

  • @Btn1136
    @Btn1136 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Woah... the title of that paper is “Sight and Blindness in the Same Person”.
    Imagine approaching an academic journal trying to get that published.

  • @Geert305
    @Geert305 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This video series is pretty good. Especially to show relatives and stuff.

  • @Hoi4o
    @Hoi4o ปีที่แล้ว +2

    This reminds me of the writings of the church fathers. The orthodox christian view is that the human being consists of both soul and body (immaterial and material), and that is why death is unnatural as per God's intention for us, and also why the resurrection of all is not just an arbitrary act by God, but a necessity. The neurological explanation of internal focus also proves the importance of daily prayer. It literally helps us orient our minds towards what is good and true by rewiring our brains.

  • @drywski
    @drywski ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I have no doubt that an honorary doctorate is in your future. God bless you.

  • @luizcarlosrviana3724
    @luizcarlosrviana3724 4 ปีที่แล้ว +15

    Here is a computer science argument against the possibility of reducing the mind to the brain:
    1. The brain is a machine.
    2. If it were possible to reduce mental phenomena to the operations of a machine, then there should be an algorithm which tells whether any given machine is thinking or not.
    3. If some machines think, then thinking is a nontrivial semantic property of machines.
    4. If thinking is a nontrivial semantic property of machines, it is impossible to tell (undecidable) whether any given machine is thinking or not, as there is no algorithm which does that. (Rice's theorem)
    Therefore it is impossible to reduce the mind to the brain.
    You should check out Rice's theorem

    • @AndrasDNagy-bs5dc
      @AndrasDNagy-bs5dc 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      the word "reduce" is annoying here. We do want to understand the unknown. We try to reduce it to simple known models which may explain more of it if compared to not modeling it at all. This however means not that the current model would really help to describe the wholeness of truth about how consciousness works in the brain. Our existing models are just not very good models, unfortunately. Which means we just don`t know how the consciousness of the mind works in the brain, but we can know that it works in the brain without understanding how it works in there.

    • @metalbotanist6730
      @metalbotanist6730 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      So because we cant discern between thinking and non thinking machines the mind cant be reduced to the brain? The theorem is full of holes imo, but even if it wasnt it dosnt make sense.

    • @marcosgalvao3182
      @marcosgalvao3182 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@metalbotanist6730 it's a deeper problem , matter can't be conscious , consciousness is not just complex structure of matter , the ideia "make it complex and it will think " make no sense at all .

    • @СергейМакеев-ж2н
      @СергейМакеев-ж2н 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Wait, so how do you justify your second premise?
      I agree that it's a nontrivial and (probably) semantic property, and _because_ I know what Rice's theorem is, I find premise 2 utterly implausible.
      It is definitely possible to reduce adding numbers to the operations of a machine, yet there is no algorithm to correctly determine whether a given machine is adding numbers or not. Even a question as simple as "If I ask this machine what's 1+1, will it answer 2?" is undecidable.

    • @metalbotanist6730
      @metalbotanist6730 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@marcosgalvao3182 Really? Look at how children grow up, the more their brains become complex, the more their personality becomes. Or hell, look at dogs and humans and differences between our brains, and consciousness, and theirs.

  • @mcawesomeytyo3312
    @mcawesomeytyo3312 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Trying to find consciousness in the brain is like trying to find the driver in the car’s engine

  • @toddel321
    @toddel321 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Awesome video. People need to know this.

  • @sparklesparklesparkle6318
    @sparklesparklesparkle6318 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I love you IP your videos have improved my quality of life and you're content is pure benissimo

  • @junelledembroski9183
    @junelledembroski9183 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Love your channel IP!

  • @anthonydiaz2185
    @anthonydiaz2185 6 วันที่ผ่านมา

    This was fascinating, and the evidence that came from DID patients made my jaw drop.

  • @AlOfNorway
    @AlOfNorway 4 ปีที่แล้ว +17

    A great and informative video about consciousness, mind and brain.
    Thank you for making a video like this as science is too slow to admit its own paradigmatic ignorances and blindspots.
    Had a tough time arguing for this view during my neuroscience master (take my advice, don't try it).

    • @anthonygreico9735
      @anthonygreico9735 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      You have a masters in neuroscience and still maintain belief in a soul?

    • @AlOfNorway
      @AlOfNorway 3 ปีที่แล้ว +5

      @@anthonygreico9735 call it what you will: consciousness, soul, mind, universe, life, god etc. Your pick.

  • @bijoythewimp2854
    @bijoythewimp2854 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I love this series so much. That I am nothing down this video on my note book so that I can learn and provide a better defence

  • @andrewheffel3565
    @andrewheffel3565 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I am an immortal spirit housed within my body. My body will die, but my spirit will continue forever.

  • @kwameoluwasomi
    @kwameoluwasomi ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I used to think we all knew, deep down, that we were more than just our brain activity... yet I've spoken to so many people who are convinced we're just that.
    Madness.

    • @rizdekd3912
      @rizdekd3912 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Why refer to our brain activity as just brain activity? The brain is a phenomenal achievement whether it evolved or was designed by a creator. Why couldn't a creator design a physical brain that would produce consciousness? It seems almost denigrating to speak of the brain of humans any many other animals as 'just' brains.

    • @kwameoluwasomi
      @kwameoluwasomi ปีที่แล้ว

      ​@@rizdekd3912 I'm not quite saying brains are lacking, I'm saying consciousness is so far 'beyond' that I am here seated in my body, driving it while wondering about eternity. I mean THAT'S what we're talking about here, with consciousness. Me saying my brain hasn't produced a whole being unto itself, entirely separate from the body it sits within, is no condemnation of my fleshy design because consciousness is not just my body being aware of itself... it's ME being aware of MYself.
      I don't even have the words, it's an infinite conundrum. Just as he's not at fault for creating bodies as fragile as ours, I wouldn't fault God for creating brains that don't produce consciousness - I don't expect that to be boiled down to a feature of the brain.

    • @rizdekd3912
      @rizdekd3912 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@kwameoluwasomi The part that confused me was your ending with the term Madness. Perhaps I misinterpreted what you were implying.
      There is a disagreement about the origin and nature of consciousness. And those who contend the brain itself produces or is the origin of consciousness may be wrong. But they're not 'mad' to deduce that the brain does that. Consider the following circumstantial evidence.
      1) as brains develop, so too does consciousness. Best I can tell, it's not a 'not conscious one minute and suddenly a fully developed consciousness the next minute' but rather a slow process that develops sometime between conception and some point early in the life of a conscious creature.
      2) if and when the brain is affected by drugs or damage, so too. often, is consciousness. That would be valid evidence that the brain actually produces consciousness just like we deduce wood produces fire due to chemical reactions when ignited. IOW, yes, some outside influence causes wood to ignite, but once ignited, it may burn by itself for some time. And for consciousness it seems to be produced by living brain cells which themselves were produced by the machinations of the physical genetic code from parents.
      3) Intuitively it seems most think the brain is essential, because I rarely encounter anyone who ever assumes anything physical/material without brains is or could be conscious. If I were to pose that 'trees' or 'streams' may be conscious because brains don't produce consciousness, I'm sure some would view that as madnesss. But why? If brains don't produce consciousness then something else does...whatever it is...why could not streams and trees be conscious?
      4) I have every reason to suspect many other animals down to and including insects are also self aware and conscious of the world around them. I contend it was necessary for survival to be able to do that that so a body with numerous parts (muscles, joints, limbs, organs) could act/move in unison toward a chosen goal...ie find food/eat, avoid predation, mate, etc. That is why I think it is happening in and due to brain matter. So it's not something that is 'out there' for someone to measure by attaching some sort of meter/scope/imaging device, but rather if it is to be studied it will have to be at the cellular level. And annoyingly it will have to be among and within living cells, so destructive techniques to study the chemical reactions are likely to end consciousness.
      5) If consciousness is not of physical origin, one must come up with an explanation for how it receives info from our cells with which to form its perception of the world around us and how it in turn manages to influence the physical part of us, deciding to do things based on what we're conscious of. IOW, how does the nonphysical that cannot be detected by instrument/meter communicate with our physical cells which communicate our decisions to our muscles that allow us to enact our decisions? If consciousness is chemical reactions within and between brain cells then it is easy to see how it would, in turn, influence our, and other animals, behavior.

  • @FStan-co8vv
    @FStan-co8vv 4 ปีที่แล้ว +31

    Are you going to discuss the relationship between evolution and the birth of consciousness in humans? Looking forward to the next parts!

    • @davidgumazon
      @davidgumazon 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      He won't. Humanity already had failed. Their mind and brain is a waste of time. "Birth of consciousness in Humans" BS! We're lump of cells and just deal with it!

    • @utopiabuster
      @utopiabuster 4 ปีที่แล้ว +54

      @@davidgumazon ,
      Interesting how little your "lump of cells" think of you.

    • @TryHardCryHarder
      @TryHardCryHarder 4 ปีที่แล้ว +58

      @@davidgumazon This sounds more like depression than a logical deduction at work.

    • @demetriusmiddleton1246
      @demetriusmiddleton1246 4 ปีที่แล้ว +20

      @@TryHardCryHarder it is nihilism.

    • @dosmastrify
      @dosmastrify 4 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Your evolutionary presuppositions are showing

  • @MonisticIdealism
    @MonisticIdealism 4 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    *Premise 1:* If consciousness is reducible to physical phenomena, then identifying physical phenomena identifies what it is like to be the subject, _for_ the subject.
    *Premise 2:* Identifying physical phenomena does not identify what it is like to be the subject, _for_ the subject.
    *Conclusion:* Consciousness is not reducible to physical phenomena.
    This argument is valid since it takes the form of _Modus Tollens_ so the only question is if the premises are true. If the qualitative and subjective aspects of conscious experience-how consciousness “feels” and the fact that it is directly “for me”-were exactly the same and similar in _every_ detail to the brain, or its processes, or whatever physical phenomenon you're trying to identify the mental with, then _by definition_ once you've identified the physical phenomenon that's all you need to identify what it is like to be the subject, _for_ the subject since they're literally the same thing. But this is clearly not the case: "third-person studies" of the brain, or any physical phenomenon, does not give us the first-person subjective aspects of conscious experience, and that's not possible if reductive materialism is true. This is a contradiction in reductive materialism which means it's impossible for reductive materialism to be true, so this is no gap that can be plugged in by someone in the future. This is a fundamental inconsistency in reductive materialism.

    • @parsivalshorse
      @parsivalshorse 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The problem is that premise 1 is not known to be true. It can not be established. So there is n contradiction to reductive materialism, and thus no fundamental inconsistency. Prove premise and you would have an argument.

    • @Drp_br_
      @Drp_br_ 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      What? Are u saying he is wrong or something?

    • @MonisticIdealism
      @MonisticIdealism 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@parsivalshorse Here is the proof for Premise 1:
      From the Internet Encyclopedia of Philosophy: “The type of reductionism that is currently of most interest in metaphysics and philosophy of mind involves the claim that all sciences are reducible to physics. This is usually taken to entail that all phenomena (including mental phenomena like consciousness) are identical to physical phenomena.”
      Source: www.iep.utm.edu/red-ism/
      Definition of Identical: “Similar in every detail; exactly alike.” Synonymous with: “exactly the same, indistinguishable, undifferentiated.”
      Source: en.oxforddictionaries.com/definition/identical
      So if mental phenomena is identical to physical phenomena then it must necessarily follow that identifying the physical (which the mental is being reduced to) _must_ identify the mental since they're just the exact same thing, that's what it means to be identical.

    • @parsivalshorse
      @parsivalshorse 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@MonisticIdealism No, you got that backwards. Science is not making the claim that consciousness is reducible to physical phenomena, it just seems to be likely. Science makes no claim of knowledge on that point. Idealism claims that consciousness is NOT reducible to the physical - which is an unproveable claim, science makes no such claim.
      Your premise follows with; 'then identifying physical phenomena identifies what it is like to be the subject, for the subject' which is just a non-sequitur. It doesn't follow from the claim that science isn't making anyway.
      You continue; 'So if mental phenomena is identical to physical phenomena then it must necessarily follow that identifying the physical (which the mental is being reduced to) must identify the mental since they're just the exact same thing, that's what it means to be identical.'
      Which is rather different then what you stated in your premise 1. But if so - then what is your point? It seems just a tautology?

    • @parsivalshorse
      @parsivalshorse 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@MonisticIdealism If you could make an argument for idealism I would really love to hear it, so please present one if you can.

  • @jasminemenezes9344
    @jasminemenezes9344 2 ปีที่แล้ว +10

    @InspiringPhilosophy I came here from your interview with Matt Fradd on Pints of Aquinas, and then your debate with AP. You rock, and I'm excited to go through this 5-video series. I have a question about the evidence that points towards consciousness not stemming from the brain. Wouldn't some of these things hold true for animals as well? For example, I've seen videos of animals doing intelligent things, like a dog who helped save a child, or noticed it was raining and ran with an umbrella to its owner. I suppose that electric stimulation would not be able to activate the mind of these animals to act involuntarily either, correct? If that's the case, I don't think this evidence really supports the fact that human beings have non-material souls and animals do not.

  • @marcjuliusaguinaldo1332
    @marcjuliusaguinaldo1332 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I hope and I believe that this channel will grow

  • @TheMichaelNT
    @TheMichaelNT 4 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    I was a neuroscience major and am now in med school pursuing psychiatry, so I've been wrestling with this for a while. This video was excellent and built a really profound case for the origin of the mind being separate from the physical brain. In fact, I would say the case Michael makes is proof for such claim, but before I wholly accept it, I want to make sure I didn't miss a logical fallacy. In fact, I think the video makes the same fallacy of "correlation is not causation" that it first criticized scientists for making. According to the video, because the mind can affect the brain, the mind cannot be caused by the brain. However, I think this statement is not correct. A correct statement is: changes in the state of mind of a person is correlated with changes in the brain. The OCD patients who focused and altered their consciousness also had changes in their neural pathways, but that doesn't necessarily mean the former caused the latter, right? The paper itself even said "correlation." A physicalist (which I am not) explanation would be that the brain processes the command to focus, and then the downstream effects of focusing leads to a cascade of events that inhibit certain areas of the brain and leads to the changes seen on imaging. On the other hand, a substance dualist (which I am) explanation is exactly what the video makes. I feel like all that video did is say A correlating with B does not mean causation, but then just reverses the order and says B causes A (even though in reality B correlates with A). I would really love to discuss with yall because I really don't know if I have my logic right. I am a Christian and am on a hunt to prove that the mind is separate from the brain (and I believe this to be true), but I want some hardcore evidence for it; this video might be it, but I want to be sure! The video is very well done, but as always, gotta get your logic and philosophy correct lol

    • @fanghur
      @fanghur 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      @@anahata3478 It isn't ad hoc at all, and in fact, merely by making that claim at all, IP is implicitly begging the question. To assert that "the mind can affect the brain" and then use that as a piece of evidence that the mind can't be caused by the brain is to implicitly be assuming the conclusion that the mind and the brain are separate. It's the equivalent of saying that because the software of a computer can be utilized to make changes to the hardware (eg. changing the processing speed, etc.), therefore software isn't caused by hardware. That simply does not follow.

    • @purpose6113
      @purpose6113 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      Checkout Diehold Foundation here on youtube. You will love it.

    • @LackyAs
      @LackyAs ปีที่แล้ว

      Watches until 4:30 - oh doubting human knowledge, correlation is not causation, nothing suspicious here - watches rest of arguments for opposite side, that not even once had mentioned that correlation isn't causation, but are added with "Scientific evidence supports this conclusions" at 18:40. It reminds me of an old joke about sport competition with competitors only from two hostile nations. After competition each country had separate radio broadcasts, First country had message along the lines " We won, while they literally had last place", while second country said "We got silver during competition, while they got second to last place". As in, by totally omitting unwanted information, and saying only convincing and useful parts of truth.... A pity though, cause i found many things quite new. Personally though, I find two standpoint theories as incomplete and untrustworthy as the other, be it matter or mystical mind. I mean, localized and one unified mind according to our experiences , but no "physical area" left for signals to converge? A nice argument, but split brain experiment counterargument is either not found by video maker or not said aloud [don't know if at time of making this video he knew about it], in which the "fact" that one brain is one mind itself is disputed, and your brain could be very well multiple smaller consciousness melded into one. Thinking and concetrating affected real life activity of brain? I mean computers are capable of physicals changes of flipping bits while calculating, it wouldn't be mind boggling human brains could force part of itself to be less active. That being said, relating to Christian part, honestly speaking, in the bible itself (cause human interpretation can be shaky and unreliable), is there any direct mention that contradicts that brain can't be related to soul, i mean there is one mention that soul wouldn't die with body. But soul could act like a passive book recording your life that doesn't affect you on purpose while in material life,leaves most of thinking to brain, fused with you until death when it is set free. Well if it is the case mental clarity in brain is not guaranteed, what was free will during your life and what shallower electric response, judging what is sin or not would get hard, but given omniscient nature of god in christian belief it is not a problem.It would give "believe, not see" quite a deeper level of trust needed. But given that , It would mean that in this case since beginning of universe itself, the laws of physics were created in such a way, that it could host brains whose actions would be so identical to behavior of souls itself, that people sooner or later would discover them and would be unable to discern whenever souls exists, cause brains could scientifically solve thinking issue without mentioning soul, leaving you no choice than to test your faith... But hey, welcome to human life, full of delicious existential crises left and right whatever you are atheist or not. And to be honest science is a really, really, really good mathematical model for reality based on sensory inputs of our bodies, but still a model. There are lots of very big gaping holes that are hand waved and said to be explained later by some smarter scientist. Quantum theory and Einstain theory of relativity are at odds with each other, calculations prove our models are so stupidly wrong, dark matter is added to make sense and all that is known is that it is something that "exists". We can make reasonable guesses, but any scientifist will know that what we are doiing is nothing more than swinging math formula at observation , saying it's good enough for prove, while at the same time each and every scientific community will say to its member to try to find proofs that will negate basic knowledge and prove known theories wrong. Even newton gravity believed to be true for centuries gets replaced... Why talking about it? Cause blindly following science while believing it is 100% certain absolute truth is as stupid looking to me, science itself is about modeling reality in a way that should constantly doubt its own axioms and theories in order to try building even better models, but general population treats science as new religion without asking any questions. Especially when electric signals involve quantum level particles, and any physics fan will know that... things down there at that scale don't really want to make any sense to humans, even if dark matter is consisting of mini fairies that are capable of playing with particles like they are balls, as ridiculous as it sounds, if they don't interact with electromagnetic fields or know fundamental forces of universe detecting prove of their existence or absence would be impossible with our technology. In fact, even this brain discussion itself is such a thing, people discussing whatever it is matter or mind, while both sides of said debate are just clueless overgrown children trying to sound smart despite in no way being able to ever know the truth, just to feel good, myself included. As sad as it sounds, i am also such a clown...

  • @scottslaughter7181
    @scottslaughter7181 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    How could a series of physical events blossom into our life-filled planet? We know how. But just because we don't know how something could happen doesn't mean we won't know in the future or that we should ascribe it to something we currently know nothing about.

  • @Anonymous-jo2no
    @Anonymous-jo2no 4 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Me during the DiD part: Whoa... so Doppio/Diavolo is not so unrealistic after all...

  • @Geert305
    @Geert305 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    It is a well-founded video with much research. Well done!

  • @b1ngnx33
    @b1ngnx33 4 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    " I am not the body, I am not the mind, I am not even the emotion. "

    • @johnyoutube6746
      @johnyoutube6746 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      You are energy

    • @dinhoantonio5529
      @dinhoantonio5529 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      *Correcting:
      You are not just the body,you are not the brain,u r spirit in a body with mind over the brain.

    • @pdxnikki1
      @pdxnikki1 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      Spirit

    • @mothin4678
      @mothin4678 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Then what is "I"?
      Ultimately "I" refers to oneself
      And oneself is not the thoughts, but the one having the thoughts
      In other words one is the mind, the conscious experiencer
      The conscious unit is what one is
      And that conscious unit has thoughts
      The thoughts are not the mind, the thoughts originate from the mind

    • @KaapoKallio
      @KaapoKallio 28 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Then what are you?
      Do you even exist?

  • @ivanmtopa2972
    @ivanmtopa2972 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    You can use your mind for you in better ways or against you in worse ways

  • @StaRMaestroS
    @StaRMaestroS 2 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Video Starts: "What are you?"
    Me: "Well that escalated to a rather uncomfortable level of intimacy rather quickly"

  • @peachjwp
    @peachjwp 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    You’ve overlooked the scientifically confirmed re-wiring of the brain, when learning to read the written word. The language area creates enhanced connections to the image form area of the brain. Neuroscientists ascribe this re-wiring to the “Domain General” operations of the brain, something I believe we could safely attribute to the MInd.

    • @pratikmohapatra2348
      @pratikmohapatra2348 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Means brain creates consciousness

    • @mothin4678
      @mothin4678 5 หลายเดือนก่อน +2

      External stimuli does affect the brain, no one is saying it doesn't
      Your example is how the mind is learning through the brain, but that doesnt imply that the brain generates the mind
      As shown before, even without any external stimuli (merely through will) one can employ neuroplasticity to reshape the brain. Which shouldn't happen if the brain was solely dependant on external stimuli
      This, together with the rest of the case implies that consciousness can't be created by the brain

  • @princebhai782
    @princebhai782 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Inner men , inner being , spirit men, consiousness , born again ,

  • @mertonhirsch4734
    @mertonhirsch4734 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Until there is a quantum-physicalist, a biochemical and an evolutionary explanation for the emergence of conscious self awareness, the strong default should be that there exists extra-materialistic reality. If materialist resign to the tautology that "only physical things can be things" then they have an utterly opaque insuperable bias.

    • @rizdekd3912
      @rizdekd3912 ปีที่แล้ว

      Perhaps it should be the other way around. Until there can be shown there actually exists 'extra-materialistic' reality that can interact with the material/physical brain, we should assume consciousness and self awareness....that seems to influence our physical movements, must be part of or emerge within the physical world. If the super-materialist resigns to the tautology that only the nonphysical can be conscious, then they have an utterly opaque insuperable bias. See, that works both ways. I'd happily entertain that there exists nonmaterial reality that influences the physical world when I see it described and demonstrated. IOW, I see no particular advantage to invoking the nonmaterial as an explanation for anything unless it is better explained by that assertion. Try to explain to yourself how this nonmaterial realm/world/state can be/produce consciousness...ie how it works, what it does, how it interacts, how it begins, does it end, define its properties at least as well as you want the physicalist to explain to you how the physical/material produces consciousness.

  • @majesticrainmaker1460
    @majesticrainmaker1460 4 ปีที่แล้ว +9

    First, and I love this series.

  • @GhostLightPhilosophy
    @GhostLightPhilosophy 4 ปีที่แล้ว +12

    I’m rewatching this series again in order to gather my thoughts on all the information. Just to ask, would you be willing to engage with panpsychism as a theory?

  • @contemplativepursuits
    @contemplativepursuits 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    How brain creates consciousness is not detected. But has consciousness outside brain been detected?

  • @VicCrisson
    @VicCrisson 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    God bless your work IP. keep moving forward with the cross

  • @estaciopimentel9530
    @estaciopimentel9530 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Where you get these images? How you do the videos? I know about the subject, you are inspiring me to make videos too, in portuguese.
    Beyond of videos of mine, I would like to put lyrics into yours and reuploud , letting your reference

  • @whoamI-xi3ln
    @whoamI-xi3ln 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I can't believe I have yet to find a comment that emphasizes your recurring use of "however" in these videos haha

  • @siquod
    @siquod 3 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Here's a thought: Nothing in the laws of physics suggests that something like a code is possible: Ordered structures can be decoded according to syntax rules and this yields information that refers to things that exist or could exist or should exist but are to be built according to the coded instructions. Codes and coded information are of immaterial categories and not reducible to the laws of physics. They obviously exist in the mental sphere, but we even find them when no mind is processing them: I'm talking about DNA and the genetic code. So if things can exist that er not reducible to matter but still carried by matter in a way we can hope to understand, perhaps consciousness is similar? Perhaps even much of what we call supernatural or spiritual is carried by physical processes as a supervenient dynamic in ways that are just way beyond our ability to understand, and not some completely other "substance". At least for the consciousness case, I can think of an experiment that is easier to test than string theory (which isn't much).

  • @nelliefayekohl8356
    @nelliefayekohl8356 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Love to learn...this is well done. Thank you for your hard work

  • @DI-wb2ch
    @DI-wb2ch 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Wow, I was so blown away, that now I’m just a brain cell.

  • @PatrickLHolley
    @PatrickLHolley 2 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Well done. I've been teaching this for a few years in my counseling practice. How could the brain create the capacity to generate mindful strategies which would then reform the structure and chemistry of the brain? Indeed. Thank you for sharing this.

  • @quad9363
    @quad9363 4 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    I'd love to see you tackle this topic in a debate sometime, would really want to see how the skeptics responda

  • @rebeccahaggard6588
    @rebeccahaggard6588 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Love your videos! Really interesting.

  • @philochristos
    @philochristos 4 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    This was pretty good. I wish you had made an argument for why physicalism entails epiphenomenalism. You appear to have just assumed it or taken it for granted in this video. The common response to these studies about the mind having causal influence over the brain involve appeals to "feedback loops," which you didn't say anything about. If the brain gives rise to mind, and that mind then affects some other part of the brain, then this is essentially the brain rewiring itself. So I would like it if you had argued this detail of your case a little more instead of just assuming that if the mind causes the brain, then it must be a non-physical substance.

    • @REDPUMPERNICKEL
      @REDPUMPERNICKEL 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      I haven't watched that part yet.
      I guess the next sentences I write will mean I have to.
      I'll get back to this comment after watching.
      Try thinking of the brain and the mind as one and the same thing,
      no epiphenomenon involved and no 'emergence'.
      The brain is the material thing, obviously.
      The mind is its behavior, less obvious but completely understandable.
      When the brain misbehaves one can see some strange things, think LSD.
      When the brain stops behaving the mind ceases being.
      When the brain behaves a certain way we call the 'owner' conscious.
      When the brain behaves a different way we say the 'owner's' sleeping.

    • @anthonypolonkay2681
      @anthonypolonkay2681 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@REDPUMPERNICKEL I'd say this is a good argument. But it leaves out alot of things. The first to come to mind immedeatly is when someone who has experienced brain death, or close to it has long, and/or vivid experiences.
      Irregardless of any chemical flooding into the brain, a mind dependent on brain function would have to be in lockstep , and dilate up, or down with it. And while that's true it does this in most instances, it does not do so in every instance. And the issue is fir a materialist mind to be reality there can be no exceptions to that rule.

    • @REDPUMPERNICKEL
      @REDPUMPERNICKEL 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@anthonypolonkay2681 "But it leaves out alot of things."
      If you truly understood what I wrote you could not have written that statement for what I wrote constitutes a sufficient foundation for understanding everything concerning the relationship between matter and the mental.
      If one's brain, operating in conscious mode, departs in certain ways from normal behaviour then this will show up as oddities in one's subjective experience, hallucinations being the most vividly illustrative, for instance.
      But note well, when I refer to the brain's behaviour, you must understand that I am referring to a vast collection of independent and interacting behaviors among perhaps a hundred billion separate brain components. If you take 'brain behavior' to be a single unified phenomenon then it's likely you will err in thinking something like 'self' or 'ghost' or 'soul'. I gather from what you wrote that that is how you're thinking.
      I think the key to understanding is to not think of 'behavior' as a 'something' just because a noun refers to it. Behavior does not exist. Behavior does not exist like matter. Think of behavior as 'being'. Thus a human 'being' has a body that 'exists'. The body is the substrate that must exist so that all the trillions of microscopic behaviors have something to be the behaviors of.
      It will take more writing to nail down the details of how brain behavior gives rise to subjectivity but I have to go to work now. I'll await your feedback on this comment's core idea and see if you want to explore the details.
      (It is absolutely necessary for you to be familiar with the basics of how neurons and synapses work before the details can make sense to you).
      (Oh, it might also be helpful if you think for a while about how my written sentences, my thoughts frozen on your screen, can, by your merely reading them, transfer my thoughts into your mind so that they become your thoughts also (and of course vice-versa)).
      Cheers, eh!

    • @anthonypolonkay2681
      @anthonypolonkay2681 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@REDPUMPERNICKEL
      I'd be willing to learn more always. But even the reply you wrote seems counter intuitive.
      You said that the subjective experience is the result of many complex parts inter working with one another. And behaviour arises from that. And thus subjective experience as well.
      I'd say that further complicates the issue of using that as an explanation of the human mind in the face of what we were discussing.
      If the subjective experiences only arise from a myriad of different parts working properly together, then any disassociation and/or dulling of those individual functions should also dull the subjective experience. Not produce something of a hyper experience.
      The lower yout brain states get the closer you should get to a state like that of a vegetative one. Not the reverse.

  • @kylexinye1990
    @kylexinye1990 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I'm glad you're tackling this concept! Something I've been considering for a long time which I think is fairly important to Christianity, but not as well developed philosophically as some other arguments.

  • @Bbrits1
    @Bbrits1 4 ปีที่แล้ว +25

    Just a thought: We don’t have to prove an immaterial soul/mind/consciousness to have a Gospel whereby we can be saved. Jesus was raised from the dead and offers salvation, immortality, to every human.

    • @dragan176
      @dragan176 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      If consciousness is only the brain and ceases to exists when we die, then the idea of heaven and hell is gone

    • @rodt9779
      @rodt9779 4 ปีที่แล้ว +9

      Yeah I agree. I’m a Christian and if God does exist who says he can’t make our consciousness exist in the physical while here on Earth and exist in an immaterial fashion when we die. However, if we were to prove consciousness exists in an immaterial fashion that would completely eradicate the atheistic position. God bless

    • @rodt9779
      @rodt9779 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      dragan176 ^

    • @Bbrits1
      @Bbrits1 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @@dragan176 you are exactly right. I don't think Christianity is about heaven or hell but about bodily immortality or death. That is why Jesus Christ was bodily raised from the dead to give the Christians hope

    • @Bbrits1
      @Bbrits1 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      @Corvus Morve I don't think it should concern me because the bodily Resurrection, which has enough evidence, is evidence for the existence of God. I don't think that we have to prove God in any form other than the resurrection of Jesus, but we can if we like to.

  • @DonsADDventures
    @DonsADDventures ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Well done sir, as usual.

  • @leonidasvazouras1796
    @leonidasvazouras1796 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    It's easy to conclude all that if you don't define either of your terms...

    • @letspass3465
      @letspass3465 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Stop being lazy and look them up yourself.

  • @novusrex9809
    @novusrex9809 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Saying we are just bags of chemicals is basically denying who we are.

    • @kimbo99
      @kimbo99 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Need to know, people,
      What you really are, first. That's logical
      Laymans Gnosis-discover a second intelligence
      www.truebluehealer.com 20 mins BEGINNERS TOUR
      Vivid messaging night dreams within 7 days
      Immediate physical evidence that something has changed
      Messaging day dreams (visions?) physically verified
      Signalling music to slowly morph into an internal mentoring voice just like Socrates and Plato described
      Expect keywords names and even websites to be typed into your mindseye with info vital to YOUR personal life.
      Holy book readers will find their misunderstandings corrected by the internal mentoring voice
      Go to www.truebluehealer.com
      Do the 20 mins BEGINNERS TOUR
      All questions answered And its FREEEE
      See you back at the website www.truebluehealer.com
      Feedback It’s amazing how a 20 minute tour can cause the individual to experience a waterfall of knowledge.

  • @samcaram1287
    @samcaram1287 4 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thanks, I’ve been having doubts in my faith in God due to this issue. You helped silence those voices telling me that God isn’t real. I don’t think it is a coincidence that I saw this video today, rather God showing me something. God bless ✝️❤️

  • @deepaks1907
    @deepaks1907 3 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Brain is a filter. Consciousness is different. It is immaterial, immeasurable & eternal.

  • @vibrantphilosophy
    @vibrantphilosophy 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    First! Thank you for making this!

  • @joe_chen
    @joe_chen 4 ปีที่แล้ว +11

    Thanks IP, learned a lot. I was wondering to what extent these phenomenon occur in animals. If there is various levels of consciousness in animals, does evolution play a role? In that case, what makes humans have Imago dei if animals also have a will?

    • @rodrigorafael.9645
      @rodrigorafael.9645 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      They are the ones who wrote the book.

    • @juilianbautista4067
      @juilianbautista4067 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Hi! I realize this comment is a year (or so) old, but I think the easiest distinguishing feature we have above that of the animals is that we are ruling over them. We have been given dominion over all of God's non-human creatures. In that very strong sense, we were created in the image and likeness of God. It isn't merely the will or the personality.
      Angels have will and personality. Doesn't make them imago Dei. In fact, they don't even rule over us humans. Interesting that Paul said in 1 Corinthians 6:3, "Do you not know that we are to judge angels? How much more, then, matters pertaining to this life!"
      Side note: I don't believe in evolution. I hold that God created all the life we know simply days apart. Haha! I don't see why a materialist myth (pardon my usage of the term if you believe in evolution) should have any bearing on the immaterial reality of consciousness in animals.

  • @Venaloid
    @Venaloid 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I apologize IP, I don't mean this to sound as rude as it does, but I don't even know where to start with this. Not 5 minutes in, and I already have this much to say, so... here it is.

    2:14 - 2:20 - *“There is a large amount of data that suggests consciousness is not a creation of brain processes.”* - Two papers are flashed on screen, both of which explain how cognitive behavioral therapy changes the physical structure of the brain. I think you are citing these papers as proof that the mind affects the brain, and that the mind is therefore causally prior to the brain.

    However, we know that this can also happen the other way around, as was first famously demonstrated by the case of Phineas Gage: the brain can affect the mind. So, fundamentally, does the mind cause the brain, or does the brain cause the mind?

    Well, that’s the problem with these papers: the efficacy of cognitive behavioral therapy makes perfect sense in a materialist framework. CBT is just an example of one part of the brain affecting another part of the brain, and we know that connections between neurons get rewired all the time in response to neural activity in other areas: this is how we learn, this is how we adopt conditioned responses, and it’s how we come to make associations, consciously or not. If, for example, we witness something traumatic, and we develop PTSD as a result, that’s one part of the brain (starting in the visual and auditory cortices) rewiring another part of the brain. Or, to make it a purely mind-based thing, if you have a really bad nightmare, it can create a negative association with things in the real world, even though it was all generated in your mind.

    So, if we are just brains, then… why wouldn’t different parts of your brain be able to affect each other? The fact that we consciously identify with some of our brain activity may make it seem like “we” are making the change, but under a deterministic, materialist framework, that doesn’t matter. If we are just brains, then why wouldn’t CBT be able to change brain wiring? I don’t see how this is a problem for materialism. Saying that the efficacy of CBT is evidence of mind-brain independence is like saying that a piece of code which generates a sequence of numbers, and then uses that sequence to rewrite *another* section of its code, somehow proves code-computer independence: it clearly doesn’t: an object being able to affect itself doesn't prove that it's not a physical object.
    2:20 - Wilder Penfield applied electrodes to subjects and could make them move their arms involuntarily, vocalize involuntarily, as well as recall memories.

    *“He could not force patients to act involuntarily.”* - Um, you literally just said that that’s exactly what he did. Did you mean to say that he couldn’t force subjects to *desire* to act involuntarily? I apologize for nit-picking, but I’m genuinely confused as to how you could have written this and not noticed the contradiction.

    *“… as well as recall memories.”* - Hang on, isn’t recalling memories kind of a big deal? In the opening section of your video, you emphasized the feeling of self and the experience of consciousness, and how such things cannot be explained by or reduced to material sources. But now, you cite the research of Wilder Penfield, who was able to make people recall memories involuntarily. That’s a big deal: memory recall is not some cute little neurological quirk, like a reflex or an optical illusion: memory recall is one of the core components of consciousness: if you had absolutely no short or long-term memory at all, I don’t see how you could be considered “conscious”. And here we are, affecting memory recall with simple electrodes. It seems that you can indeed affect this aspect of a person’s consciousness materially.


    *“He could not affect their will!”* - Maybe *he* couldn’t, but peoples’ wills can be affected by other physical means: removing brain tumors can change peoples’ desires dramatically, as can injecting them with various hormones, which is to say, chemicals: chemistry can affect a person’s will. We can also affect peoples’ emotional states with ECT and TMS, both of which are physical stimulations of the brain that are used to treat depression, which, among other things, can reduce the patients’ will to kill themselves or to self-harm. Depression can also be treated by implanted electrodes, which, patients report, fundamentally changes their outlook on the world.


    3:13 - 3:140 - Penfield believed that the mind could not be accounted for by the brain.
    4:00 - 4:04 - *“No proof for a physical basis for consciousness has been shown to exist.”* - Even if we accept this statement whole cloth, we could say the exact same thing about whatever kind of supernatural thing you would propose as the basis for consciousness: no proof for a soul or a body-independent mind as the basis of consciousness has been shown to exist. Just because we can’t explain something does not mean that the explanation must be non-physical, whatever that would even mean. That is arguing from ignorance, which, ultimately, is all this video does.

    4:05 - 4:15 - *“The main problem is correlations between the brain and the conscious mind are expected to exist, even if consciousness doesn’t reduce to brain activity or functions. On substance dualism, or idealism, we would expect correlations in the brain, with consciousness.”* - Why? If the mind is causally prior to everything else, then why would our minds generate a structure that correlates with thoughts that we don’t act on? That seems entirely superfluous and thrown in ad-hoc to account for the fact that we observe brains. Surely, if our consciousness is distinct from, yet somehow driving our bodies, then we’d expect to have no brain or nerves at all, just blobby appendages that carry out our will, with no need for specific parts like muscles or nerves. If idealism is true, then why would our minds generate anything beyond a simple, homogeneous blob for our bodies, if even that? Why is there all this extra crap inside our bodies? And why would our minds all seem to agree on the existence of this weird “brain” thing inside of us that doesn’t actually act to carry out our will the way an arm or a leg does?

    I can agree that idealism would predict a correlation between desiring to raise your arm, and your arm raising, but why would this be the case for your brain, which just sits there? Why would an idealist expect there to be any correlation between our internal monologue and a structure that doesn’t actually carry out any willed actions in the way that raising your arm does?

    For thousands of years, people had no idea what the brain did. For a long time, many people actually believed that the seat of consciousness was the heart: after all, it’s fairly centrally located, it has large vessels that it could send signals through, and you could feel its activity, whereas the brain… just, kind of sits there, not really “doing” anything. If idealism is true, then why would these humans have even had brains at all?

    In fact, with regard to arms, I take it back: why would our minds generate arms at all? If we desire to lift something, then why wouldn’t we just lift it Veggie-tales style, where it just kind of floats in front of us?
    4:38 - 4:46 - *“In fact, researchers have pointed out, even if the brain creates consciousness, our current methods and technology are incapable of detecting it.”* - So, because we can’t detect consciousness, the most reasonable conclusion is that consciousness is non-physical? What about dark matter? Is that also some kind of spiritual woo because we can’t detect it? Or is it simply a gap in our knowledge?

    • @InspiringPhilosophy
      @InspiringPhilosophy  4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      1. I don't have time to flash every paper I use in the video on the screen, those were just examples.
      2. In turns out the case of Phineas Gage is mythologywww.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/how-think-neandertal/201310/the-biggest-myth-about-phineas-gage
      But I will address reports of brain damage in part 3. You only damage the soul, not the mind.
      3. "CBT is just an example of one part of the brain affecting another part of the brain,"
      - I addressed that more in the latter part of the video and cited more papers to back up my point. You are jumping the gun here and not getting to that section of the video. There is no evidence mindful attention is just the result of another region of the brain, as neuroscientist John Eccles shows, which I get to later in the video.
      4. "but under a deterministic, materialist framework, that doesn’t matter. If we are just brains, then why wouldn’t CBT be able to change brain wiring?" - Again, I get to that later in the video on the section of mindful attention. There is no evidence they cause is another region of the brain. Eccles explains with direct observation of top-down causation.
      5. "Um, you literally just said that that’s exactly what he did. Did you mean to say that he couldn’t force subjects to desire to act involuntarily?"
      - No, and I elaborate on what this means. You cannot control the will of a person.
      6. " And here we are, affecting memory recall with simple electrodes. It seems that you can indeed affect this aspect of a person’s consciousness materially."
      - You keel equating consciousness with information contingent upon consciousness. I point out tis distinction in part 2: th-cam.com/video/-PX1RuXU4_o/w-d-xo.html
      7. "but peoples’ wills can be affected by other physical means: removing brain tumors can change peoples’ desires dramatically, as can injecting them with various hormones" - That is not controlling the will that is adding or remving desires, which are epistemically different. Again, I explain the distinction in part 2.
      8. "we could say the exact same thing about whatever kind of supernatural thing you would propose as the basis for consciousness: no proof for a soul or a body-independent mind as the basis of consciousness has been shown to exist. "
      - I don't know what supernatural means. That is a meaningless word since we cannot define what is the boundary of natural. I don't think anything is a basis for consciousnesses. I am an idealist-Consciousness is fundamental, and if you watch the whole video and part 2 I lay out evidence consciousnesses (or the mind) is not emergent and is distinct. You are just commenting too early in the series and not letting me lay out my case. I mean, don't you think you should at least finish the whole video first?
      9. "Just because we can’t explain something does not mean that the explanation must be non-physical"
      - I address this more in part 2 when explaining the hard problem. There is no reason or shred of evidence to suggest the brain can create consciousness.
      10."Surely, if our consciousness is distinct from, yet somehow driving our bodies, then we’d expect to have no brain or nerves at all." - Of course not, the brain is the brain that is a function of a conscious mind. It is the extrinsic appearance or avatar of the what a conscious agent looks like in reality, by encapsulating consciousness into on spacial temporal existence. You must look like something in physical reality, and have a physical manifestation. The brain is not the complete agent but a representation of what you and your soul appear as within a physical reality. As Donald Hoffman has argued, it is sort of like a user-interface symbol of a conscious agent, like the icons on your computer are symbols or representations of applications. What appears on your screen is just an extrinsic appearance of underlying code, but I won’t drag the icon to the trash can as that can damage what I need to do on the computer. Likewise, If you change or damage the brain which is the extrinsic appearance of consciousness and the soul within space-time of course you are going to affect how an agent operates in space-time. Damaging the brain modifies how the mind operates when it has been limited and focused to temporarily only operate within space-time.
      11. "If idealism is true, then why would our minds generate anything beyond a simple, homogeneous blob for our bodies, if even that? Why is there all this extra crap inside our bodies? " - That seems like a straw man. Why not just make all characters in video games as homogeneous blob? Why make them complex and unique in appearance?
      12 ."Why would an idealist expect there to be any correlation between our internal monologue and a structure that doesn’t actually carry out any willed actions in the way that raising your arm does?"- It is the intrinsic appearance of what a desire being carried out looks like.
      13. "So, because we can’t detect consciousness, the most reasonable conclusion is that consciousness is non-physical?" - Again, you need to watch the whole video and part 2. In no way am arguing from that paper alone. It is just one aspect of a cumulative case.

    • @Venaloid
      @Venaloid 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      ​@@InspiringPhilosophy - I'm sorry, but this whole thing still seems like a collection of distinctions without differences. I started to write a longer response, but I think it can be boiled down to something like this:
      If your “soul” is your personality, thoughts, dreams, emotions, memories, desires, goals, etc, then what is your "mind"? What is your "consciousness"? And, most importantly, what is your "will" if it is *not* your desires, goals, etc? What is the ontological difference between your "will" and your "desires"?
      If we *were* able to control a person's "will", what would you expect that to look like?
      And if a brain is the intrinsic appearance of what a desire being carried out looks like, then why do we have have limbs which allow us to carry out our desires, not to mention the nerves and muscles inside them? Why don't we just make things float to us, VeggieTales-style?
      To be blunt, and to not go down every possible rabbit hole here, this seems like a huge exercise in ad-hoc reasoning to account for the fact that we observe muscles, nerves, and brain damage that can fundamentally change who a person is. I see no reason to accept the idea that "the mind" (whatever that even is at this point) would generate any of these things.
      This kind of reminds me of "The Non-Existant Earth Theory: violates the observation that when you look around at stuff, you see stuff." www.smbc-comics.com/comic/flat

  • @jimbert50
    @jimbert50 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Okay, the conscious mind can affect the brain. But the brain can also affect the mind. Look at various kinds of brain damage that cause mental disabilities. So I'm not convinced by that argument. The only thing that can be said is that we don't understand it. It is far from settled.

    • @anthonypolonkay2681
      @anthonypolonkay2681 3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      True. But one is purely accidental. Not of the brains own doing. Having traumatic brain damage isn't something the brain did intentionally. However the instances of the mind rewriting the brain are 100% caused by the mind.

  • @riverofthewood
    @riverofthewood ปีที่แล้ว +2

    @17:45 "If personalities are a creation of the physical neurons in the brain, they should be an effect of the physical makeup"
    They are. When you have different "personalities", it's because different circuitry is active at different times. The differentially activated circuitry is what causes the different function and different experience.
    You can experience something similar by taking psychedelics. When we chemically alter the function of the brain, your experience of your perception changes. It's not the "mind" driving the change in perception; it's the chemicals.
    This whole video is basically one long argument from incredulity. "We don't understand this complex thing completely yet, so it must be god"
    We do understand the plasticity of the brain. When you focus your effort on a thing, it increases the electrical activity in the regions of the brain affected. And when you repeat the electrical activity a lot, it generates this chemical cascade of transcription factors and then your neurons start making the proteins to make the synaptic connections. These processes are understood in great detail.
    There's a great deal known already that this video does not seem to be aware of.

    • @riverofthewood
      @riverofthewood ปีที่แล้ว +1

      And no, neuroscience does not provide evidence for a "soul". That's wishful thinking on the part of religious scientists, but I guess the snipe hunt will continue.

  • @someguy4405
    @someguy4405 4 ปีที่แล้ว +13

    “The consciousness should not causally affect the brain.”
    You’re acting like they’re separate objects. The mind is everything the brain does.
    Just like the body self-modifies and grows in different focused ways depending on what it does and has to use, so does the brain. This is actually evidence of the mind being the function of the brain, not otherwise.

    • @metalbotanist6730
      @metalbotanist6730 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      The mind changing the brain is literally the brain changing itself.

    • @ea-tr1jh
      @ea-tr1jh 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@metalbotanist6730 lol what?

    • @ea-tr1jh
      @ea-tr1jh 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Your comment is literally the definition of circular reasoning. You assumed your position to prove it.

    • @metalbotanist6730
      @metalbotanist6730 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@ea-tr1jh All the evidence points to the mind coming from a brain.

    • @Btn1136
      @Btn1136 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      Metal Botanist this is part 1 of a 6 part series... he’ll get there. Then draw your conclusions.

  • @tshred666
    @tshred666 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I would argue the best example of the mind being irreducible is eusocial insects. Their brains are incredibly simple and primitive, yet ants have been shown as passing the mirror test.

  • @laljohn3026
    @laljohn3026 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Inspiring as always 👍

  • @Comboman70
    @Comboman70 4 ปีที่แล้ว +7

    Loved the video. Some questions: How many souls can one have? Does each personality = 1 soul? Could this mean we can have more than 20 souls with just one brain? In the studies shown by v.s. ramachandran, would the person have multiple souls that are both interacting with a specific side of the brain?

    • @delgande
      @delgande 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@mathewsteven demonic possession?

    • @animalcart4128
      @animalcart4128 2 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@delgande Whoa! That's a stretch buddy.

    • @mothin4678
      @mothin4678 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I think the soul may convert into multiple things, we do not know it, we can't study it.... yet at least... but if it's something that's not conditionated to the laws of physics or anything physical. What stops it from converting and modifying itself?

  • @mytwocents7481
    @mytwocents7481 2 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    About the OCD therapy, the claim is "Consciousness and thoughts changed and modified the brain." But when the therapist talks to the patient, he can't communicate directly with the patient's consciousness. The brain is involved too. Talking to the patient activates the patient's brain so any improvement he experiences can be credited to that brain activity just as much as to the patient's consciousness and thoughts.

    • @mothin4678
      @mothin4678 5 หลายเดือนก่อน

      One thing is external stimuli and another is internal stimuli
      It isn't the talk of the therapist that is reshaping the brain, that was tested before. And it didn't produce the same results
      You can't just throw all of this data by saying that since the brain is involved then it implies that the brain is what is changing itself

  • @Stefan1971HH
    @Stefan1971HH 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Do these observations make reports of Near Death Experiences more plausible, where people allegedly had a still (or even better than usually) working mind while being clinically dead?

    • @naishjam
      @naishjam 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      The problem as I see it with Near Death experiences is they only become a challenge once we can prove that the timing of the experience coincided with the state of being clinically dead. How do we even begin to test whether that is the case or not rather than, say, people having the experience at the moment they emerge from the state of being clinically dead? Until we've established that, we don't actually have a problem on our hands.

  • @peterdobson3435
    @peterdobson3435 2 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    It is clear that the human brain does not fully develop until 25th year of life. Yet, there are many young kids with intellectual abilities way beyond age 25. That means that the concept of mind being an emergent property of the brain simply does not track. If it was only an emergent property, then it is reasonable to expect that the mind would develop directly proportionally to the brain, but we just don't see that kind of thing in the real world and gifted children are a prime example of that. This shoots the emergent property out of the sky.

  • @Epiousios18
    @Epiousios18 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Der Materialismus ist falsch. (Materialism is false) - Kurt Gödel

  • @matthewoborne1649
    @matthewoborne1649 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    you can be a really good person or a really bad person and a stroke can change that. It often does. Brain injury can change what people think and feel and what they are perceived as. If our characteristics werent tied to a brain they would not be so easily changed.

    • @danharte6645
      @danharte6645 3 ปีที่แล้ว

      That's not strictly true as you've overlooked the more likely explanation that a brain injury will undoubtedly cause deep emotional and psychological distress within sufferers.
      Emotional distress often cause people to both consciously and subconsciously re evaluate their previously held priorities thus explaining any potential personality changes.
      Furthermore, where a brain injury that causes loss or limit to physical function, its most likely to illicit varying degrees of frustration that can manifest In many different ways emotionally, ultimately leading to what we perceive as a personality change.
      This can also to be observed in the psychological effects of most unpleasant trauma.
      Many victims of traumatic crime such as burglary or assault are often understood to suffer bouts of depression and anxiety often become either withdrawn, aggressive or both.
      This strongly suggests that any likely personally changes within a brain injury victim is caused by emotional damage also

  • @izzymosley1970
    @izzymosley1970 2 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    One piece of advice to anyone who tries to debunk anything just back up your claims with evidence because without evidence we have no reason to believe you I've been reading through this comment section and all the comments that I've seen disagreeing with this video haven't backed up any of their claims.

  • @rognex
    @rognex 10 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    Today or tomorrow we all will realise with religion as well as with support of Science that we are "PURE CONSCIOUSNESS", all other things are material only.

  • @roblovestar9159
    @roblovestar9159 4 ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Your explication of the "Binding Problem" is largely based on a 2013 study. The field has developed since then. You might want to read the Wikipedia entry. There are numerous theories on how this might work, and a 2018 paper that sheds more light on the subject...

  • @sketchstuffs
    @sketchstuffs 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    You can't see how the software functions by measuring the circuit board pathways with a multi-meter. The soul is the software, our brains are the hardware.

    • @metalbotanist6730
      @metalbotanist6730 4 ปีที่แล้ว +2

      Can you prove the soul exists?

    • @pM-wl1cn
      @pM-wl1cn 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I like this analogy but without the computer the software is dose nothing..its just a CD

  • @conscienceaginBlackadder
    @conscienceaginBlackadder 2 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    The factually sweeping assertions of materialism by Carl Sagan were arrogant + wrong

  • @goaheadmakemyday7126
    @goaheadmakemyday7126 3 ปีที่แล้ว

    In reference to the point at 2:47, stimulating the parts of the brain associated with volition has been done before. Here's an excerpt from a 2017 study called "Volition and Action in the Human Brain: Processes, Pathologies, and Reasons";
    "Stimulation of distinct cortical areas in neurosurgical patients sometimes produces sensations described as “urge to move” a specific body part...This sensation occurs without any movement of the corresponding effector, but when higher current levels are applied at an “urge site,” the corresponding effector will often move"
    When high current levels were being applied to the "distinct cortical areas" mentioned in the quote above (which specifically are the supplementary and presupplementary motor areas of the brain) the patients would not only feel an urge to move but would actually end up moving physically. For anyone interested I'll provide the link in case I've taken something out of context.
    www.jneurosci.org/content/jneuro/37/45/10842.full.pdf

    • @InspiringPhilosophy
      @InspiringPhilosophy  3 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      This type of research was addressed in part 3 th-cam.com/video/OIJiAhRd4jI/w-d-xo.html

  • @TheMichaelNT
    @TheMichaelNT 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Highly recommend yall read Am I just my brain by Sharon Dirckx; it's quick and short book that basically goes through everything Michael did. She has a PhD in neuroimaging

  • @EsaelPaggin024
    @EsaelPaggin024 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    All these comments about Michael admitting he was wrong and correcting his mistake... what was the initial mistake??

  • @parsivalshorse
    @parsivalshorse 4 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    You seem to rely entirely on the notion that adding 'just' to something makes a big difference to its value. For example, I could say that the Mona Lisa is made from paint and wood. Or I could say that the Mona Lisa is JUST paint and wood as if by adding 'just' I somehow reduce the beauty or significance of the Mona Lisa. Are we made from molecules? Well yes we are. But if you say are we 'just' molecules - does that reduce us in any way? Well of course not.
    By the way, that neuroscience can not explain something is not a 'problem', it is just a simple fact that science does not claim to understand everything, it is not a evidence for idealism.

    • @AndrasDNagy-bs5dc
      @AndrasDNagy-bs5dc 4 ปีที่แล้ว +3

      exactly. So much damage has been made by denouncing scientific reductionism and materialism, just because it is not able to provide a satisfactory explanation of one of the most complex phenomena which exist in the entire universe. We may never ever get a perfect explanation for consciousness, but this is how it is. Facing the limits of our understanding should make us humble, not ignorant.

    • @ramilurazmanov
      @ramilurazmanov 4 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      I'm glad that somebody else sees how the author is using different fallacious arguments to back up his point.

    • @FStan-co8vv
      @FStan-co8vv 4 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      Using your logic, idealism and other similar positions can be instantly dismissed as being "God of the gaps", because you start from the assumption that consciousness MUST be entirely based on matter, and every shred of evidence for idealism will be dismissed as being an argument from ignorance. You are basically saying "we don't know the origins of consciousness, but deep down we know for sure it's all reducible to matter, therefore, every alternative explanation that invokes the immaterial is a god of the gaps argument".

    • @parsivalshorse
      @parsivalshorse 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@FStan-co8vv Thanks for the response Florin. Yes, you are correct - it is indeed a 'God of the Gaps' fallacy. You said: 'Using your logic, idealism and other similar positions can be instantly dismissed as being "God of the gaps", because you start from the assumption that consciousness MUST be entirely based on matter, and every shred of evidence for idealism will be dismissed as being an argument from ignorance.'
      No Florin, it is a 'God of the Gaps' fallacy, because that is the argument IP is making. They can be instantly dismissed as God of the Gaps fallacies because that is what they are - not because I start from the assumption that consciousness MUST be entirely based on matter - because I do not make that assumption.
      You then say; ' You are basically saying "we don't know the origins of consciousness, but deep down we know for sure it's all reducible to matter, therefore, every alternative explanation that invokes the immaterial is a god of the gaps argument".
      No Florin, I don't know that for sure and have never claimed to.
      Every alternative explanation that invokes the immaterial is identified as a 'God of the Gaps' fallacy, because that is what a 'God of the Gaps' fallacy is. That is literally what it means - when you take a gap in human knowledge and insert God as the explanation.

    • @FStan-co8vv
      @FStan-co8vv 4 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@parsivalshorse Do you think there's any argument for God's existence or for idealism that can not be dismissed as an argument from ignorance?

  • @JimCvit
    @JimCvit 3 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Ok so a person who thinks they're the opposite sex could actually rewire their brain to match their physical body? This is all mind blowing to me. No pun intended