that what we mean by "real" and "reality" only has meaning in relation to everyday human experience. I think that's a metaphysical position, so I wasn't looking to see if it was right, but if it is useful. — T Clark
We have the opposite desire of wanting to make the world ever more like our rationalising model of it. — apokrisis
We arrive at the scientific method with its formal theories and instruments designed to reduce the material world to a data set. — apokrisis
And a new kind of self has to emerge to be able to live in such a world. For this world to make sense, we need to remake ourselves as that kind of intelligence. — apokrisis
Metaphysics is about seeking the logical structure that could produce a reality in some self-creating or self-necessitating way. — apokrisis
We don't actually have to collapse to claim to make an observation. We just give nature no other choice – when it comes to the state of a switch – that it registers the digital fact of being either on or off. It returns either a 0 or a 1. — apokrisis
It would take a lot of training to think more contextually, structurally, or holistically about causality. — apokrisis
And in a more general sense, we become the kind of minds that see their worlds in that particular kind of light. — apokrisis
So you have to live in that world, but you can't speak its language. Frustrating. — apokrisis
So now we are only saying that if we constrain quantum indeterminism to the point it has to answer a yes/no question, then - not particularly magically or weirdly - we get a yes or a no from our device. We have forced the world to act in a mechanical fashion. It has given us a classical reply – even if this reply failed to constrain all the other things we might have chosen to measure in the same mechanical fashion. — apokrisis
It is only human intelligence that allows it to construct a mechanism of measurement which will limit a quantum potential to such a degree that a device reacts in some black and white way. An event is recorded. — apokrisis
So the whole collapse thing is an artefact in this view. It is tied to human acts of measurement which involves the physics of flipping switches – a physics that itself exists only at this atypical moment in cosmic history, and only due to the fact that humans have invented this whole system for turning reality into numbers on dials. — apokrisis
All the players are tightly constrained to stay within the maths, but allowed to be free as they like with their ontologies. — apokrisis
This doesn't look like a deadend. It looks more like a serious conversation about the most difficult of things. — apokrisis
That is now the least supported version of Copenhagenism. — apokrisis
is how actual measurements can get made when the observer is also part of the system. — apokrisis
You still don't know where to place the epistemic cut – the division between the observer and the observed – in a generally agreed sense. — apokrisis
We should now know just where to look to find the intersection between classical observers and their quantum realities. — apokrisis
So it is just science doing its thing of following the evidence. Which is what makes it easy to distinguish from crackpots doing their thing. — apokrisis
Mind independence is simply what "real" means. What is your problem with this definition? — hypericin
I can add nothing to your moral understanding, and only wish you and him well, whatever you decide to do. — unenlightened
It will not work for a soldier, who must be prepared at times to put his own health and life at risk, — unenlightened
After all, my arguments apply to us all, and there are billions of us and only one God, so the odds are at least billions to one. — Bartricks
My point is that moral absolutes are evil because they encourage abiding by rules rather than using your own conscience. For example, how many people perpetuate evil policies with the bland excuse of "I was just following orders" — Yohan
I don't see how you can remove everything humanish from a truth which is a sentence in a human language — Pie
The very idea of some stuff on the other side of everything humanish seems (humanishly) "mystique nor metaphysical." — Pie
I suggest that the beliefs we can be most confident about are those that it makes no sense to deny...because denying them is incoherent — Pie
Why not kill Joe? What have you got to lose? — Yohan
The rule is, that the mind reverses everything. So that everything the mind believes is exactly the opposite of the way things really are. — Yohan
sane people are less happy than insane, and "real" people duped by reality. — Yohan
I will take my foot off the pressure build, as requested by dimosthenis9 — universeness
I typed, I didn't write :rofl: SORRY! I couldn't resist — universeness
2. In order to keep my insanity I must pretend sanity.
3. In order to maintain my falseness, I must pretend to be honest. — Yohan
I don't think that helps as the word 'always' means at every moment in time, past, present and future which could make 'truth is always subjective,' an objective truth and thus absolute. Also If 'truth is always subjective' is itself subjective then it may not be true. — universeness
Well, I am intrigued by his hypothesis and that of his partner Stuart Hameroff. Did you view my thread on the topic? Consciousness, microtubules and the physics of the brain. — universeness
. I do think phenomena such as superposition, entanglement and quntum tunneling are likely to be employed within human consciousness despite the current unpopularity of Penrose and Hameroff's hypothesis. — universeness
But if QM is a fundamental part of the universe then it seems intuitive that it would be part of human consciousness. I have to temper this however as cosmologists are forever warning of the dangers of using intuitive thinking when trying to understand the workings of the universe. — universeness
I do raise a small eyebrow of interest towards those who posit a universe in which humans may be components of a future 'universal mind,' a kind of panpsychist style emerging existence — universeness
Yes, I understood this to be the entire point of your OP. For me, what you are describing as absolute truths translates to "fundamental beliefs". — Pantagruel
Whatever the name, those things which are essential to one's being. — Pantagruel
we stake our existence on the veracity of what we choose to believe — Pantagruel
It is also my view that every thought that has ever formed in the brain of any lifeform which has ever existed or ever will exist is a consequence of the ways in which quanta can combine or interact and all such quanta is of and exists within the universe. In accordance with the OP, I would be prepared to label such a statement as one of my personal absolute truths. — universeness
The only absolute truth is there are no absolute truths' is just a propositional logic statement it is no evidence at all, than absolute truths don't exist. — universeness
Your question makes no sense as I've pointed out. My — 180 Proof
My existence" does not require "proof" or to be demonstrated as a truth – "absolute" or otherwise. — 180 Proof
That said, imagine a scenario in which information is being transferred. — Daniel
Now, I want to apologize for the very vague language, I guess I am trying to generalize as much as possible, which might be a huge mistake; nevertheless, I'll do it once more just for the fun of it and say that a relation cannot occur between the exact same thing(s), and the possibility for variation must exist before a relation can take place. So, even if things exist, if they do not change in any of their properties relative to each other simply because they cannot vary (they cannot adopt other conformations other than their ground conformation) and hence cannot be affected, there won't be a relation between them. — Daniel
a relation cannot occur between the exact same thin — Daniel
Yes, I undestand what you mean. You could also call that an "absolute reality". But see, discussions like these, based on concepts like "truth" and "reality", are like walking in a mine field. There are a lot of traps. Or like walking on ice, where you can easlily slip. — Alkis Piskas
And the proof that this knowledge is subjective --i.e. there's no absolute knowledge-- is that during all that time until today and for the days to come, this knowledge has changed, is chamging and will change: new theories are added and old ones are modified or even vanish. — Alkis Piskas
. We can only use the word in figures of speech like "I'm absolute on that", "with absolute certainty", "I have absolute faith on him" and so on. The more examples come to my mind, the more silly they sound to me! :grin: — Alkis Piskas
So you doubted you were posting your response to my post when you responded? You were unsure you were doing so--perhaps because you were uncertain you were typing on or using whatever device you used? Or is the fact you responded, and used whatever you used to do so, examples of absolute truths?
Do you doubt you're reading this, or that there is something to be read? — Ciceronianus
So it seems to me that, while we can't know if what our senses are producing are the reality or an illusion, we can at least be sure that there is something eluding us — Jerry
then evidence is evidence of the naturalistic role of consciousness — Pantagruel
Do you really think that if we're not absolutely certain about something we're uncertain about it, i.e. that we can't rely on it, that we're doubtful about it, that it's unknown? — Ciceronianus
I wonder how you live if that's the case. Are you God, or perhaps a good friend of His, to invoke absolutes? — Ciceronianus