Why would you want to do that?GreatandWiseTrixie wrote: I get what make-believe is. But you aren't really contributing anything to the discussion, that is, my goal is to possess someone's body, and you haven't provided any valuable data on the subject. Your goal is to find the truth, presumably, but when I present some raw data scientists discovered about the mind, you just say it's make-believe meaning making. That is precisely the point, I want you to make me a meaning, a theory, from the data I provided.
Meaninglessness is the theory of no theory.
"So then, should I post theories of consciousness? In the brain, thoughts seem to be made up of audial signals, but highly dampened. When you say outloud your thoughts, your voice has more thickness and timbres than the floaty creamy voice in your head. Science says that when you see something, it is upsidedown, and that your brain has a sort of physical screen consisting of "pixels"...that is your brain re-renders what you see, in physical space, like a theatre a physical theatre in your mind, with the pixels corresponding to real physical space. But who watches the theatre, is it a feedback loop? For all we know you could be on another planet plugged into a radio. For example...Why am I me...and not you?"
No. Yes thoughts do seem to be made up of 'audial signals' in a sense, but that again is a meaningless distinction. I wouldn't say it has more 'thickness', try listening to your thoughts in meditation, you may be able to experience them more clearly and 'solidly'.
"Science says" a lot of shit, according to a lot of people who aren't scientists, or a lot of scientists who aren't philosophers.
There's a common thing everyone's doing. They have faith. They have beliefs. They have theories. They have a story. They are basically a broken record repeating what they've heard from a source they deem reputable, hearsay.
Belief in god, hearsay.
Belief in your upside down pixelated story, hearsay.
You hear it, it sounds good, you say it.
Meaninglessness is the theory of no theory.