Koyaanisqatsi
Veteran Member
Fromderinside said:Iow, we see colors because the process evolved in order to accurately model—to the best of our abilities—the "colors" that exist independently of our existence.
You attributed my words to fromderinside.
And I suppose we feel pain because the process evolved to accurately model the pain that exists independently.
Ffs, why are you trying to reinvent the wheel? This is freshman level philosophy at best.
What we call “pain” is an alert response to stimulus indicating damage to the body. Do you not understand how a Dixie cup telephone works?
You jam one of your sensory input devices into a coffee table; aka, you stub your toe. The information that you have just jammed your toe into some immovable object gets nearly instantaneously sent throughout your entire body via your nervous system. Certain parts of your brain receive that information, process it and send out its own response signals in search of more information, like “how bad is it,was anything broken, are we in danger” etc.
This in turn activates all of your other sensory input devices to check and see what can be further discovered; eyes check for what the object was and if there is blood or disfigurement; hands check for broken bones; nervous system sends repeat signals emanating from the primary damage site to localize the damage signal; etc.
This in turn triggers a shit ton of associated memories and a fear response and a dozen or so different drugs—-like adrenaline and dopamine—and white blood cells and the like.
Iow, eighty eight trillion bits of information are all processed in a nano-second into, “damage minimal; not lethal; localized to big toe, left foot.”
ALL of that process/information is categorized under the meta category of “pain.” ALL of that process/information is “internal” in the sense that it all occurs on the inside of our skin. Does any of that “internal” process mean you didn’t stub your toe? 99.9999% of the time it does not. .00001% of the time it means you’re on drugs or you have some other sensory processing malfunction.
So let’s jump to something beyond a freshman bong hit; why do you think skin—or any material substrate— is any kind of relevant demarcation point and/or why do you think there actually is something “internal” or “external”? Internal meaning what? External meaning what? External to what?
From a fundamental, “micro” standpoint, we are a glowing fog of atoms made up of something like 97% empty space. But clearly that fact is not the end-all-be-all, because at the macro level, we are not. But it’s all made up of fundamental particles, so are you just randomly assigning spatial relationships? The brain is in a skull. So? Is the skull some sort of impenetrable barrier? It is to a certain extent at the macro level but not at all to the micro level.
You can’t ignore the macro just as you can’t ignore the micro just as you can’t ignore the fact that there are likely dozens if not trillions if not an infinite number of other levels. Yes, a fish at the bottom of the ocean may in fact have such light sensitive eyes/optical processing that it appears to it that the entire bottom of the ocean is flooded with light.
Or, not, and that’s why it evolved bioluminescence to lure other deep sea creatures toward it in the darkness so that it could kill them and eat. Or, some factor of both conditions is the case in that it can see better in darkness than we can, but that still doesn’t change the fact that it exists in an objective condition that it must react and adapt to.
Do you think sonar evolved in sighted animals or did it evolve out of necessity in animals that can’t see? Does that mean sight doesn’t exist?
You must account for ALL elements, not merely discard one in favor of another.
What we refer to as “pain” is the totality of our response to a stimulus that causes damage (or the threat/potential of damage) to our body. The reactions to that stimulus all occur along a complex network of sensory information telephone wires, essentially. That doesn’t change the fact that an objective stimulus activated such a system.
Iow, we reacted to a stimulus. And....? How the pachinko game is set up doesn’t change the fact that a ball drops and hits various pegs on its way down. The ball is “external” to the pachinko game (whatever that means). So what? Why would that mean it doesn’t exist?
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