ShadouXarcanuM
Bluelighter
you cant be a god as gods doesn't exist....
Precisely.
you cant be a god as gods doesn't exist....
^ I tend to agree...
We have trouble even finding a definition for the concept of "immaterial" consciousness, yet some of us still insist on it! It's rather silly.

A person commits a crime. He then develops permanent amnesia. He has no recollection at all who he is, nor what they have done, or why they have done it. And they never will.
-Should he still be charged with the crime? Even though he possess brain and
mind, the memories of having done wrong are no longer present.
Intangibility- Oops! The Grand Architect of the universe might have left some keys to the back door that are transient but exclusively on the "outside".
Surely there is a mathematical value and literal place for absolutely everything, but it really does appear that some keep on falling just out of sight. (That last scientist? His hindsight was 20/20! I have proven to the other humans a slightly smoother and larger defunct bag of cause and connections around myself!)
^ post up, That argument is kind of limited by the reality of perspective, I must say. If we could trade lenses, we would all just sit here and say "Holy shit!!"
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Not only should it be legal, it is currently cool as hell in TX.
These are all questions to consider when determining consciousness, and whether consciousness is material or immaterial.
For is energy not matter? Is thought energy? therefore, is thought not matter as well?
A well known source of energy is heat. We've all seen fire, but what about heat? On a hot day you can see it rising from off the asphalt. Can you grab it? Knead and squish it between your fingers? But its there nonetheless.
Some materials are unseeable, while other materials are seeable, but untouchable.
Can a person truly give a definite meaning to what material and immaterial are? Or would material and immaterial hold as mutable in existence?
Fuck I could go on forever, which is why I'm taking my material ass off this immaterial post lol think people the truth is inside.
damn im outta weed. FUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUU
Matter is usually made up of electrons, protons and neutrons on bound together to make an atom.. energy is not..
Fire is a chemical reaction which results in heat and light.. heat is not fire.. just a product of it.. But I don't really get your point..
This can be illustrated by looking at the relationship between the TV set and the TV program. The situation here is much clearer, since it involves a system that is human-made and incomparably simpler. The final reception of the TV program, the quality of the picture and of the sound, depends in a very critical way on proper functioning of the TV set and on the integrity of its components. Malfunctions of its various parts result in very distinct and specific changes of the quality of the program. Some of them lead to distortions of form, color, or sound, others to interference between the channels. Like the neurologist who uses changes in consciousness as a diagnostic tool, a television mechanic can infer from the nature of these anomalies which parts of the set and which specific components are malfunctioning. When the problem is identified, repairing or replacing these elements will correct the distortions.
Since we know the basic principles of the television technology, it is clear to us that the set simply mediates the program and that it does not generate it or contribute anything to it. We would laugh at somebody who would try to examine and scrutinize all the transistors, relays, and circuits of the TV set and analyze all its wires in an attempt to figure out how it creates the programs. Even if we carry this misguided effort to the molecular, atomic, or subatomic level, we will have absolutely no clue why, at a particular time, a Mickey Mouse cartoon, a Star Trek sequence, or a Hollywood classic appear on the screen. The fact that there is such a close correlation between the functioning of the TV set and the quality of the program does not necessarily mean that the entire secret of the program is in the set itself. Yet this is exactly the kind of conclusion that traditional materialistic science drew from comparable data about the brain and its relation to consciousness.
Entheogenic..
We don't fully understand how it can arise from matter and energy but the evidence suggests it does.. There is NO evidence to suggest that consciousness is anything other than matter and energy but ALOT of evidence to suggest it is.
Fire is the best analogy, i think.
Those words really do not help the philosophical conundrum. The phrase "Consciousness is matter and energy" says zero and explains nothing, sorry. Its exactly equivalent to saying "Everything is something." null and void.
Conscious IS matter & energy? I would agree, ala Chalmers, that Consciousness can only be understood as some basic property of either matter or the space-time continuum like time, mass and energy, so in that sense I agree.
Any other explanation just inevitibly ends up in a circular definition like "Its the brain experiencing itself" that has ZERO actual meaning if you actually analyse the semantics.
Consciousnes "arises"??? So where does this mysterious product of "arising" self-awareness, subjective experienced QUALIA arise AT? WHERE DOES IT EXIST? WHY EXACTLY SHOULD A BUNCH OF NERVE CELLS OR ELECTRICAL PROCESSES HAVE A "FEELING" OF WHAT IT IS "LIKE" TO "BE" IT? DOES A ROCK, A TREE? What EXACTLY *IS* IT? There was not an explananation in Plato's time and there is still exactly ZERO actual explanation today that is not just arm waving.
Despite so many people wanting to feel more psychologically secure by WISHING the problem away, the fact is is IT IS IN FACT A HUGE SCIENTIFIC AND PHILOSOPHICAL MYSTERY... such pat reassurances are silly.
READ THIS PLEASE:
Facing Up to the Problem of Consciousness
http://consc.net/papers/facing.html
1 Introduction
Consciousness poses the most baffling problems in the science of the mind. There is nothing that we know more intimately than conscious experience, but there is nothing that is harder to explain. All sorts of mental phenomena have yielded to scientific investigation in recent years, but consciousness has stubbornly resisted. Many have tried to explain it, but the explanations always seem to fall short of the target. Some have been led to suppose that the problem is intractable, and that no good explanation can be given.
To make progress on the problem of consciousness, we have to confront it directly. In this paper, I first isolate the truly hard part of the problem, separating it from more tractable parts and giving an account of why it is so difficult to explain. I critique some recent work that uses reductive methods to address consciousness, and argue that such methods inevitably fail to come to grips with the hardest part of the problem. Once this failure is recognized, the door to further progress is opened. In the second half of the paper, I argue that if we move to a new kind of nonreductive explanation, a naturalistic account of consciousness can be given. I put forward my own candidate for such an account: a nonreductive theory based on principles of structural coherence and organizational invariance and a double-aspect view of information.
BY: David J. Chalmers
Department of Philosophy
University of Arizona
Tucson, AZ 85721
See also
en.wikipedia.org/wiki/David_Chalmers
fragments.consc.net
consc.net
As well as Physicist Roger Penrose:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roger_Penrose#Physics_and_consciousness
If you take all the mechanisms in the brain and replicated the chemical and electrical relationships between them in a laboratory. You would have created a conciousness artificially.
All you are basically saying is that science doesn't fully understand how matter and energy can become consciousness.. That doesn't mean that matter and energy isn't all there is behind consciousness. More research needs to be done, fair enough. It doesn't mean consciousness is some other dimensional soul type phenomena or anythin else, other than, cells, energy and chemicals.