AB,
I was talking from basic first principles.
No you weren’t. You were actually talking from a frankly bizarre set of unqualified assertions you’ve crafted over the years to post-rationalise some superstitious beliefs you want to be true but cannot otherwise justify.
Memory is not a natural phenomenon. You cannot just presume it to exist.
In the absence of any reason to think otherwise, yes you can to a degree of reasonable certainty. Why on earth would you assert otherwise?
The same is true of perception.
Wrong again - see above.
Reactions are a natural occurrence.
So far as reason and evidence indicates,
everything is a natural occurrence.
For a reaction to be recorded in some form of memory, you first need the reaction to be perceived as a reaction.
Not true. An event can be “recorded†as you put it whether or not it's perceived.
As I explained previously, reactions cannot perceive themselves.
You didn’t explain, you
asserted – and with no supporting justification of any sort at all.
Once an element changes state, its previous state does not exist.
But the memory of it does.
For a reaction to be perceptible, the change from one state to another state needs to be detected from an outside agency which can have awareness of the previous state.
Depends what you mean by “outsideâ€, but there’s no reason to presume perceiver and perceived aren’t part of the same deterministic continuum.
This is the conundrum:
When a reaction occurs in material elements, it will generate other reactions.
These chains of reactions will certainly produce end results, but at no point in the chain of reactions will previous states exist. Awareness of these previous states is needed for conscious perception to occur. This is essentially the root of the hard problem of consciousness.
No it isn’t - the hard problem of consciousness means something else, and again you’re completely screwing up the relationship between a prior state of events and the memory of it. The sandwich I had for lunch is no longer a sandwich, but I can remember it as a sandwich; the banana a chimp had for lunch is no longer a banana, but the chimp can remember that bananas taste good.
The only feasible way I envisage for conscious perception to occur is to have a time independent reference from which changes in state over time can be detected.
Yes, that probably is the only way you can envisage it – presumably because your incredulity relies on various of the false premises you’ve tried here. Yet again though, that you can’t or won’t understand something that’s explicable with reason and evidence nonetheless just tells us about the limits of your cognitive ability, but
not about the truth of the matter.
As you’ve had the argument from personal incredulity fallacy explained to you several times only recently by the way, why have you just collapsed back into it yet again?