Michael Egnor on the immateriality of the mind – more





Barry Arrington links to the video of neurosurgeon Michael Egnor (left) on the immateriality of the mind. I (O’Leary for News) was at that talk.





It is much easier to talk about the mind as a “meat robot” than about the reality, especially these days, when a Twitter putdown or TED talk is all you need by way of an argument. Few will bother to seek out someone who knows why it’s absolute nonsense.





Here’s more from Dr. Egnor, neurosurgeon, on the mind and free will:





Hamlet: Did His Perplexing Neurotransmitters Cause the Tragedy? The neuroscientist working from a mechanical perspective would study the material and efficient causes of Hamlet’s act of revenge.





Yes, your brain is a machine—if you choose to see it that way





Does your brain construct your conscious reality? Part I

A reply to computational neuroscientist Anil Seth’s recent TED talk





Does your brain construct your conscious reality? Part II In a word, no. Your brain doesn’t “think”; YOU think, using your brain





Does brain stimulation research challenge free will?





Is Free Will a Dangerous Myth?





The brain is not a “meat computer”





and





AI is indeed a threat to democracy But not in quite the way historian Yuval Noah Harari thinks











Note: Curiously, a neurosurgeon of a previous generation, Wilder Penfield, came to the same conclusion. Not that you would hear much about it.





Follow UD News at Twitter!


Copyright © 2018 Uncommon Descent . This Feed is for personal non-commercial use only. If you are not reading this material in your news aggregator, the site you are looking at is guilty of copyright infringement UNLESS EXPLICIT PERMISSION OTHERWISE HAS BEEN GIVEN. Please contact legal@uncommondescent.com so we can take legal action immediately.
Plugin by Taragana
 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on December 30, 2018 03:53
No comments have been added yet.


Michael J. Behe's Blog

Michael J. Behe
Michael J. Behe isn't a Goodreads Author (yet), but they do have a blog, so here are some recent posts imported from their feed.
Follow Michael J. Behe's blog with rss.