John and jermey, thanks for the reply’s!
John: Haven’t seen that article before, I’ll read through that now
Jeremy: interesting, I never thought about attacking the theory on its own grounds but that does make sense. In terms of EM, there really can’t be such a thing as “memory” correct? I mean without propositional content of thought what would you be remembering?
I had the thought today, given EM claims there is no intentionality, therefore no information, and that we cannot, in principle, plan to do anything, how would they account for communication or the “illusion” of communication. For example, if I text my friend to meet me at a restaurant at 7 tonight, he replies yes, and we both meet there at 7, what exactly is happening on the EM account? We can’t even say we sent signals or information to each other’s brains on EM, so would this just be a coincidence that we both showed up there at 7 like we “planned”? Obviously this isn’t a formal argument, but for me, certain practical day to day examples really highlight how absurd the theory is.