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Human Minds (HM) Descartes: HM immaterial spirits acting from the central cavity of the brain Many Contemporary Philosophers: HM computational mechanisms.

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Presentation on theme: "Human Minds (HM) Descartes: HM immaterial spirits acting from the central cavity of the brain Many Contemporary Philosophers: HM computational mechanisms."— Presentation transcript:

1 Human Minds (HM) Descartes: HM immaterial spirits acting from the central cavity of the brain Many Contemporary Philosophers: HM computational mechanisms housed in the “wetware” of the brain

2 CNS/Thermostat Control Systems 1. Adaptive 2. Complexity 3. Biology/Identity 4. Learning

3 (Adaptive) Control System Nervous system coordinates adaptive responses Overall function: adaptive interaction with environment Enables animal to detect relevant events, select responses, and be guided by the effects of the responses (feedback)

4 Complexity

5 Identity Humans seek more than biological survival Cooney suggests not simply “staying alive” setting but “identity” setting A conjunction of prescriptions that enables me to continue to be not only the kind of animal I am, but also the kind of individual I am

6 Learning 1996: Kasparov defeats Deep Blue 1997: Deep Blue defeats Kasparov

7 Brain Events & Subjective Experience Neural code: nerves & brain sites --> same sort of content/patterned impulses Neural code analyzable: spatial relations, energy, duration, frequency, etc. Subjective “transduction” of code: qualitatively different sensations (not observable or mathematically analyzable)

8 Functionalist Theory Most brain events are remarkably similar at the cellular level How to explain then the diversity of color, sound and other qualitative experience? Spatiotemporal patterning, resulting input/out relations of neurons with each other and with external environment


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