We both agree on this point! there are some folks who believe that there is no reductionist explanation for consciousness. These folks seem to be willing to accept less intellectually rigorous "explanations," which I consider to be "holistic" hypotheses of consciousness. These holistic hypotheses range from religious/philosophical arguments, such as de Chardin's notion that consciousness "emerges" at a certain level of material "complexity," to the more "scientifically plausible" notions of folks like Rose who assert, with little justification and verifiability of their claims, that quantum physical principles can explain how consciousness "emerges" from brain structure. Rose and de Chardin may be onto something, but neither has given us an intellectually satisfying answer to the problem.
I remain hopeful that someone will be able to come up with a satisfactory explanation. As I said earlier, anyone who does come up with such an explanation would deserve our highest praise, no less than the praise we have for such great scientists as Newton, Darwin, and Einstein.



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Place all of these individuals across from a biochemist and you won't find one of them that has a powerful construct to attack or take down the position of the scientist. At least, a coherent construct or vantage point. To me, science is flawed and does have weak points, I'm not sure anyone at this point has the best argument to expose those flaws, though vaguely, you, me, and other members here are aware of some of those blights. I would venture vaguely to say that when it comes to "meaning" and other existential questions, the floor under science disappears.
