> On Feb 20, 2023, at 10:46 AM, glen <geprope...@gmail.com> wrote:
> 
> By even using the phrases "mental stuff" or "mental life", *you* are 
> implicitly asserting there are 2 things: mental and non-mental. There is no 
> such difference, in my opinion. Now, while I am often a moron, I don't deny 
> that people *think* there's a difference. E.g. when you finally get that snap 
> of understanding while running, or taking a shower or whatever, about some 
> concept you've been working on, it *feels* like pure mentation. The shift 
> just feels cognitive, not bodily. But I would maintain my stance that this is 
> an abstraction, a sloughing off of the bodily details. (The illusion is a 
> byproduct of focus and attention, which are mechanical implementations of 
> abstraction.) My stance is that, however cognitive such things feel, they 
> aren't. You wouldn't, *could not*, have arrived at that state without your 
> body, or if you had a different body.

Why is it bad to give “mental” a term, to refer to patterns of activity in 
bodies that can be distinguished by some criteria?

Surely there are cognitive activities I can engage in, that depend in essential 
ways on the particular human cortex in context, that are not produced by nerve 
nets in jellyfish.  To say that the classes of patterns are distinguishable is 
not to suggest that they are non-bodily at all.

The fact that all this is rendered in language, which is pervasively structured 
around the subject perspective (whether in relation to linguistic constructs 
for objects, or as a reporter of “introspection”) contextualizes “mental” 
references within other stuff that offers less flexibility of stance than our 
language for some other inter-object relations.  But if we see our language as 
an un-fully-seen thing, and thus a place of hazards, this doesn’t seem worse 
than any other unfinished business.  Were it not for the philosphers, I am not 
sure “mental” would even have got its distracting connotation of 
“non-corporeal”.  Maybe it would, and I’m just being obtuse.

Eric



> 
> Yes, as long as your body is *similar* to others' bodies, you could arrive at 
> a *similar* understanding, but not the same.
> 
> On 2/18/23 05:29, Eric Charles wrote:
>> On 2/16/23 23:35, ⛧ glen wrote:
>>> I don't know what you mean by "mental stuff", of course.
>> Well... In this context, I mean whatever the "psyche" part of panpsychism 
>> entails.
>> Given that I don't believe in disembodied minds, I'm with you 100% on 
>> everything you do being "body stuff". Which, presumably, leads to the 
>> empirical question of what types of bodies do "psyche", and where those 
>> types of bodies can be found.
>> You say further that: 'No. Neither the dirt nor I do "mental stuff"'.
>> Well, now we have something to actually talk about then! Dave West, 
>> unsurprisingly, stepped in strongly on the side of dirt having psyche in at 
>> least a rudimentary form, I presume he would assert that you (Glen) do 
>> mental stuff too. Dave also asserts that his belief in panpsychism /does/ 
>> affect how he lives in the world. Exactly to the extent that his way of 
>> living in the world is made different by the belief, panpsychism /_is_/ more 
>> than just something he says.
>> Steve's discussion about what it would feel like to be the bit of dirt 
>> trampled beneath a particular foot is a bit of a tangent - potentially 
>> interesting in its own right. His discussion of when he, personally, starts 
>> to attribute identity - and potentially psyche - to clumps of inanimate 
>> stuff seems directly on topic, especially as he too has listed some ways his 
>> behaviors change when he becomes engaged in those habits.
> 
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