atfyfe
atfyfe t1_j2cplyb wrote
The mind isn't so much in the brain, the brain is more like a projector. Consciousness is the show, the brain is just the underlying physical machine that's generating it.
But if you break the projector, the show stops.
atfyfe t1_iug888a wrote
Reply to comment by Klai8 in ELI5 Why are airport ceiling so high? by TrShry
Do you have any favoriate airports? The Istanbul airport is amazing.
Also, any thoughts on this YouTube video about airport design? - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kil-slXgVys
atfyfe t1_j2e2j6t wrote
Reply to comment by Ellie-Bright in ELI5: How did we realise the mind is in the brain? by theembryo
Not everything has a location. Where is time? Where is the possibility that WW2 didn't happen? Where is red? (if I destroy all the red things in the universe, have I destroyed red itself or just all the red things?) Where is the number '2' or multiplication? Where is the fact that masses attract or the fact that the rule that nothing can go faster than the speed of light or any of the physical laws? They govern physical objects, but they are physical themselves. I can't kick gravity.
Everything does seem to depend on the physical, but it doesn't appear to be true that everything is physical. In philosophy we say all these things at least appear to 'supervene' on the physical.
There are some philosophers who argue that everything is physical (eliminative physicalism), but that view has been losing support in favor of the view that everything depends upon the physical (non-reductive physicalism).
So the mind exists, but it isn't the sort of thing that has a location - just like numbers, physical laws, possibilities, time, etc. It's a part of the world, but not a physical part even if it's existence seems to depend on the physical (i.e your mind stops existing once your brain does and depends on your brain).
See: https://iep.utm.edu/supermin/
Typed on my phone, pls excuse typos.