A state is just some arrangement of things designated as noteworthy by humans who want to talk about it. The state of my refrigerator, for example, isn't anything over and above how I feel about the quantity and quality of food stored therein, how well it's meeting my preference for keeping things the right temperature, what I think about the smell, and etc. You can talk about a state of something affecting the state of something else, but that's just shorthand for talking about the things themselves interacting in whatever way produces the observed result; no states need be invoked at all apart from being a handy communication tool.
Well, I certainly disagree. What most people usually mean by state is something that's independent of our possible observation of it, just like when we talk about the Moon we're talking about something that's supposed to exist even when we're not looking at it. You may think differently, but I'm using English words and I use them according to the main use of them by English-speaking people according to the dictionary.
Obviously, when we discuss a specific state of matter, like the Moon is for example, then we are selecting a particular state for attention. But that doesn't suggest in any way that the state in question is dependent on our paying attention to it.
So, when you say:
It's not a "group of neurons" but "the state of a group of neurons".
It's not exactly false, but when unpacked it leaves a lot to be desired. When you use the state of the brain as a synonym for consciousness, you're using a shorthand designation of
things in relation to other things to refer to a phenomenon that includes quite a bit more than that when experienced firsthand.
Well, you certainly haven't unpacked anything yet.
I'm using the word state in line with dictionary definition of the word "state":
A condition or mode of being, as with regard to circumstances: The office was in a state of confusion.
And I'm not suggesting the two expressions "conscious mind" and "state of a group of neurons" are synonymous. They are not. I'm just pointing out the obvious that for all we know they may well be the same thing, and being the same thing is an
ontological idea, something therefore very different from the idea of
words being synonymous.
It implies the feeling of vertigo, or needing to sneeze, or having to take a piss, is literally just the relative configuration of neurons when they swap parts of themselves in a specific way. We've all felt those sensations from the inside, and it still remains mysterious why that is. Merely equating them to some fact about the meat in my head is unlikely to be the whole story. I know you said "for all we know" and "maybe" in your argument, but I would contend that the likelihood of the first premise is actually very low and perhaps zero, if we're insisting that states and conscious sensations are identical only if you can define one in a way that fully captures the other.
I didn't equate the conscious mind with any fact. I am essentially assuming that the conscious mind is the state of a group of neurons. What fact is that? And the state of a group of neurons isn't anything like "
the relative configuration of neurons when they swap parts of themselves in a specific way". It means instead that the state of some particular group of neurons may be the conscious mind. There is nothing else to it.
In terms of likelihood, the fact is that we don't know, so don't make up any probability. One thing that certainly seems obvious to me is that this is the only plausible solution. There are other possibilities but they are all very, very far fetched, for example that the conscious mind somehow could "arise" from the brain. What, like some ethereal vapour arising from a swamp in bad horror films? This is just bad ontology and not made believable just because idiots repeat it without even thinking about what the phrase could possibly mean in reality.
And, to say that the conscious mind is the state of a group of neurons is saying exactly what the state in question is.
Still, it's an interesting approach that I don't see too often. One way of getting around the implication of libertarian free will, though, is to bite the bullet: yes, it could very well be that consciousness initiates action, but consciousness is determined because it's just a state of the brain, so nothing changes by acknowledging that consciousness initiates action except for the terminology. In the end it still leads to determinism by tracing the conclusion back through its own premises.
I don't think anyone one really knows anything in that respect. Determinism is really an idiotic notion. Reality definitely does whatever it does and that all we can say.
I'm not much motivated by the debate about free will simply because I'm absolutely certain it's essentially a stupid ideological debate that couldn't possibly be resolved, somewhat like whether there is a god, just even more terminally devoid of any practical reality. What interests me in that respect, though, is that all of us feel free to do what they want and indeed end up doing what they had wanted, and I take that to be what nearly everybody think free will means in reality, save for a very small number of ideologically motivated Don Quixote lunatics. And my free will is just the fact that my behaviour is most plausibly essentially determined by my brain. That's physics saying so, except for a few idiots. And if the conscious mind is just the state of a group if neurons then free will may be just the fact that what the body does is essentially what the conscious mind determines it does. Only a possibility, for sure, but there are so many things we don't know, and it's certainly better that the stupendous idiocies claimed as scientific truths by a few stultified retired scientists.
The result of this thread seems to confirm that reality is whatever people want to perceive as such. Instead of reading the argument to try and find out what was meant, most will read it inevitably by projecting on it their own inner fantasies and then argue from there. It's essentially very confused minds fighting against their own inner shadows. Both pathetic and impressive. If something can go wrong, it will go wrong.
Still, I guess this is the real world as it is. It's still fun to try and make sense of what is going on. I'm pleased with the result but I can't say anybody is helping much around here, except as punching ball sparring partner. Sorry for those who come out of here with a few bruises, I'm not free to do any different, you know.
EB