Yes, and that's a definite bias.Isn't that almost a kind of prejudice? You don't act like us, so you must be a mere object or a mechanical undirected process? — Yohan
Right, I haven't asserted they are. They are a different mammal, running on cells, however complicatedly linked. ThisThe issue with dogs is considering them machines but not considering humans as machines. There was a hard line in science, even, with mammals as machines but not humans. Then it started to erode in the 70s. Even words can be, if one wanted, seen to be forms created by biochemical machinery, products of machines. — Bylaw
is just as problematic for human intelligence. Words get produced, movements get produced by machines.Chemotaxis is the directed motion of an organism toward environmental conditions it deems attractive and/or away from surroundings it finds repellent. Movement of flagellated bacteria such as Escherichia coli can be characterized as a sequence of smooth-swimming runs punctuated by intermittent tumbles. Tumbles last only a fraction of a second, which is sufficient to effectively randomize the direction of the next run. Runs tend to be variable in length extending from a fraction of a second to several minutes.
As E. coli cells are only a few microns long, they behave essentially as point sensors, unable to measure gradients by comparing head-to-tail concentration differences. Instead, they possess a kind of memory that allows them to compare current and past chemical environments. The probability that a smooth swimming E. coli cell will stop its run and tumble is dictated by the chemistry of its immediate surroundings compared to the chemistry it encountered a few seconds previously. — https://www.cell.com/current-biology/comments/S0960-9822(02)01424-0
Bylaw, could you perhaps search for Leon Rosenfeld, in his scathing remark to Niels Bohr's "On the Constitution of Atoms and Molecules". — Caldwell
They have managed to get people to confuse corporate generated research and conclusions with science. Here's an example. If you go to somewhere like sciforums or any other 'place' where people, including scientists, belief (current) scientific practice is the only route to knowledge, you may well (and I have) encountered people saying things like if (some form of Alternative Medicine) worked, it would be part of regular medicine. Which, implicitly, assumes the independence of the FDA, the objectivity and openness of research, the inablity of corporations to create the conclusions they want, how the incredibly high price of meeting FDA protocols requires patentability, the lack of current paradigmantic biases, the power of corporations and organizations like the AMA to attack and suppress entities they consider threatening their markets, pharmas power in relation to media and likely other things I am not thinking of at this moment. Often alternative medicine products cannot be patented (despite corporations trying to patent things like the NEEM tree). For example.If you could somehow explain to me how corporations influence or change science -- besides the enterprising part or profiteering -- that would be great. — Caldwell
I've read the OP and a few of your other posts and I am not quite sure what your position is. So, I may miss the mark.While I don't deny this corporate reality, this is not what a true cycle theorist points to in their criticism of science. Maybe this comes as a surprise. Although, I agree that it does indirectly affect science. — Caldwell
That is what we are facing when we are engaged in some sort of discourse against, or together with, the end-of-science theorists. Rule number one -- exactitude. If science were religion, a crippling doubt because we'd forgone causality and opted instead towards probability, is unholy. — Caldwell
Another source of complaint is the tendency to reduce everything and anything to equation. One that could possibly fit on a surface of a thumbnail. — Caldwell
Well, he certainly argued that. He also argued that transcendant forms are the foundation of reality and that democracy is wrongheaded. He also was a rationalist, as opposed to an empiricist, which can be seen in his claim about wisdom. He was a dualist who believed in an immortal soul. Now some or perhaps none of these beliefs bother you be he seems to have considered his arguments effective on these, including his about wisdom (or was that one a claim). I am not sure he unmasked anyone claiming to have wisdom (a description of his positing which includes the assumption that his argument holds) as being a sophist in the pejorative sense. He certainly had that position. Whether his various arguments and claims hold water is another can of fish and perhaps a claim to his authority might no longer be so strong for many modern people basing their beliefs on science, for example.Socrates in Plato's dialogues unmasks those who claim "wisdom" as not being wise at all — 180 Proof
That's not relevant. I am not claiming that Buddhists have an academic expertise or relation to the religion.I used to know some Buddhist people, and some of them go to the universities and study the theories and principles of buddhism. They are a very few minority of people who then seek to become lecturers or teachers in the schools and universities. These are a tiny number of minority people among the vast number of buddhists. — Corvus
It's generally rebirth not reincarnation in Buddhism.They believe in eternal reincarnation after death, because that is just what buddhism is famous for. — Corvus
Again, I said empirical not theoretical. See my post above to prothero, where even Christiany is much more empirical and based on experienced results - not arguments or faith. You seem to see the word empirical and assume that it means something like scientific methodology. I am talking about people basing their belief on their experiences - iow empirical. Empirical learning can be rigorously organized, intuitive, right wrong headed, effective, confusedThese are the beliefs based on no theories, empirical facts or principles, but their own intuitions, emotions, customs and traditions. — Corvus
Sure, I don't disagree. I actually think the Abrahamic religions are much more complex that people in online discussions (both non-theists and theists alike) tend to describe. It all comes down to (especially in philosophy forums) beliefs and epistemology and people using the word faith. When in fact Christianity is also a complex lives social phenomenon with empirical aspects. Nobody just sits around having faith. They feel better when they pray. They feel better in community. Rituals give them experiences that they like. Many find strength to break habits and deal with suffering through following pastoral or scriptural advice. IOW they are pleased with the benefits.In theory that is true but in practice I am not convinced. The majority of Christians do not understand formal Christian theology very well in my experience. They know the slogans "born again", "Jesus saves", and have some vague notions about "life after death" and "heaven and hell" but their knowledge of official church doctrine or fundamental Christian theology is weak. — prothero
Well, good that we generally agree but I think faith doesn't not work for religions that are empirically focused like Buddhism and many types of HInduism. It's certain Christians and other Abrahimics that focus on this faith idea and also focus on beliefs (and arguments).(2) Religious beliefs are special type of belief, which should be classed as faith. (I personally think faith should be only used to denote firm religious beliefs. Using faith in association with any other than religious beliefs, I feel, is not correct.) — Corvus
That's the situation I find myself in. My conclusions are subject to faults and mistakes, and this is true as far as I can tell, even if i base my conclusions on the work of experts, since they are human, since I may be mistaken about what I read or how I interpret it and so on. I am a fallible creature doing my best. I don't see a way around it.So truths are dependent on justification. Justification is human action, which is subject to mistakes and faults. — Corvus
Yes, because I can't see a way around knowledge being a rigorously arrived at subset of beliefs. Who decides it is rigorously arrived at? Humans.Another point is that, in this case, the line between knowledge and belief seems fuzzy. — Corvus
My instinct is that not even one person should have a bad life as a cost of the masses having a good life. It follows that natalism is wrong.
Newton believed in the occult. Who knows what he would have thought a TV was. Well, I suppose a psychic might know. A psychic who can read the minds of the dead.Now, by way of analogy, let us suppose that Issac Newton came across a working TV set. He would, no doubt, be stunned and bewildered, but would he consider it as magic? I don’t think so. His scientific bent would result in him recognizing the TV set for what it is. — Jacob-B
In 2012, a group of neuroscientists signed the Cambridge Declaration on Consciousness, which "unequivocally" asserted that "humans are not unique in possessing the neurological substrates that generate consciousness. Non-human animals, including all mammals and birds, and many other creatures, including octopuses, also possess these neural substrates."[14]
And those replies led to criticism also. — Bylaw
Isn't that just proving my point more?
No evidence can convince you guys.
Cause you are just not ready to listen.
You just want to prove me wrong in any basis possible.
If i tell you to stop commenting, would you? Probably not, even if it meant i can have peace. — Kinglord1090
Not only that, you guys just keep saying the same things over and over again, even though I did give appropriate replies already. — Kinglord1090
I weighed in on that issue, so I clearly understood it was on the table. As social mammals with limbic systems humans are emotional. Just as much as our females have teats (giving us the category mammal, if not more so, since both sexes have emotions.)I just want to talk about one topic, which I guess people still can't seem to understand.
Are emotionless humans really humans? — Kinglord1090
Interestingly however mammals with their limbic systems tend to be the apex predators and also have, in human primates, developed the most incredible adaptions. It seems like we would need some extraordinary evidence to convince us that eliminate a part of us is a good idea.Thus, getting rid of emotions, only removes a part of what makes a human, human.
You could argue that this part is a big part, and I wouldnt oppose that opinion.
However, I believe that by getting rid of that part, we can open up space for a new part or maybe just let logic or other parts take over, which seems like a reasonable choice. — Kinglord1090
I don't think that if we eliminate we would have no consciousness. Perhaps someone else argued that. However I think having no sene of consciousness would be a loss. That would be something like dreamless sleep.Now, let us consider, that emotionless humans will not be humans, but rather robot-like creatures who have no sense of consciousness or anything.
What is wrong with that? — Kinglord1090
It is very unlikely that any animal lacks consciousness.There are a load of organisms that live on this planet who arent even capable of having thought or consciousness, — Kinglord1090
I don't appear to claim that. Which is you saying and claiming things about what I think and precisely why I started responding the way I did with 'you' and 'you' that you think is bad form. You responded to me as if I was a certain kind of theist presenting arguments for the existence of God. And you repeatedly told me, explicitly and implicitly what I thinking.You appear to claim material existence of things not ideas and also not material. — tim wood
There's the real, which can also be called the natural. If there is a God, God is not supernatural, but part of the real, part of nature or all of nature, perhaps. Both theists and non-theists have run with the idea of the supernaural, sometimes taking it as synonymous with the transcendant. Like we have for naturalists a monism. Nature is all there is. But theists are dualists with a natural and a supernatural. And, yes, some, read some, theists go along with this. But other theists do not. You have phenomena that have been verified via, science say, and you have other phenomena that have not. These latter need not be supernatural. They might not exist or they might, but in neither case need they be supernatural, just phenomena that have not yet been verified. Rogue waves and elephant long distance communication were not supernatural phenomena when they were not verified to the satisfaction of the consensus of scientists, for example. They were purported natural phenomena that did not fit with then current models in science. The people who believed in these phenomena, though often labelled irrational then, were not irrational, even though the phenomena were not verified at that time to a consensus of scientists.With some difficulty I translate this as: not supernatural=natural; not natural=not real. — tim wood
Those were not parts of some syllogism. I was pointing out that what is not currently verified now, in science, need not be a phenomenon that is in some special ontological category. It could be,as elephant communication turned out to be, quite natural.Someting about what some people thought about elephants, followed by your if there is a god, then it is natural or real. Which hpypothetical syllogism is easy enough to grant. — tim wood
I understood that question.Which you did not answer. I then made the mistake of asking you a simpler question, which apparently you did not comprehend:
I know the difference between an imaginary gold coin and a real gold coin. Do you? — tim wood — tim wood
Where did I assume that true for me is true?So I'll ask that: when you say something is true, what do you mean? It appears you mean that you buy it as true-for-you. But news flash, true-for-you is not true. — tim wood
People without emotions would not be people. We are social mammals that have limbic systems. Further people without emotions wouldn't have goals. They would be capable, I suppose, of trying to find water when thirsty. IOW some primitive desires cold be argued to remain, though even then they would have no fear and no aggression.Since, people without emotions are likely to only have the 2 fundamental goals, they wouldnt work towards anything else. — Kinglord1090
Evolutionary theory is specifically and clearly non-teleological. You saidIts not non-sensical to think about evolution in this way at all.
There are thousands of years of research put into this by scientists from all over the world.
I am pretty sure that the name Darwin would a ring a bell in everyone's ears.
He theorized 'The Theory of Evolution' and his theory has been used for more than a century now.
So, saying that these attributes are wrong would be saying that all scientists and the research formed for over a century is also wrong. — Kinglord1090
Now perhaps you weren't really thinking of what words you were using, but you are talking about emotions being intended for something. But that is confused. Emotions arose, if one is thinking within evolutionation theory, through natural selection and mutation, etc.If we look at evolution, we can easily see that emotions were never meant to be a part of organisms.
means nothing in context. It comes off as an attempt to put me in my place somehow. If I say something, correct I would add, that evolution in evolutionary theory is not teleological, this actually means I have heard of Darwin and understand something your wording implies - but does not necessarily entail - you are confused about.I am pretty sure that the name Darwin would a ring a bell in everyone's ears.
It just isn't.Denying someone's identity is tantamount to genocide — K Turner
This is going to take a long time. People gender each other from an early age and are gendered. It's at a level of learning much like grammar. IOW it is automatic. Like ducking when something is flying at your head. Certainly some people making mistakes may have conscious or unconscious intentions to not do what the other person wants. But in general, it can easily be something that we learned and made automatic. Imagine after driving for 20 years you get in a car where third gear is reached by some very odd movement with the stick. Pretty much everyone is going to mess up their clutches and that's with the threat of death in the air. Gendering habits occur much younger than those habits. They are deeply built in. I think a benefit of the doubt is in order. I mean, express irritation if you feel irritation. I am not saying everyone just has to suck it up. But this is very basic cultural habits and people are going to make repeated mistakes. And some of those people my even be much stronger allies than others who make the shift more easily.How much does the continuous usage of the incorrect pronouns suggest a large amount of transphobia and xenophobia within society, even if the circumstance, is unintentional, but continuous? — Bradaction