-I should have done the same with your OP because you already decided to ignore the epistemology that really matters and instead present fringe supernatural claims as if it is science or legit philosophical conclusions.I'm inclined not to respond to this because you've already decided without looking at my argument, that the argument is in direct conflict with the epistemology of science, and therefore must be false. — Sam26
-Strawman. I am only pointing out that you are ignoring the current paradigm of Science and our current scientific frameworks on the subject. NOTHING is settled in science, even its principles (of Methodological Naturalism)...but you will need Objective evidence to change anything, not hearsay.First, you act as though the science of consciousness is settled, which is incorrect — Sam26
-I don't mind people sharing different beliefs, what I do mind is when they share their own facts and they ignore our current established epistemology.It's settled for some, but it sure isn't settled for others (other scientists), and still others are on the fence. — Sam26
_Correct. Pseudo Philosophical interpretations on consciousness are not acceptable arguments. People having an experience they can't understand ... doesn't make magic (floating minds) true!The only thing that matters are the arguments (the logic), are they good inductive arguments or not. The epistemology of science is mostly based on logical (mostly inductive) reasoning based on the data (data here is used in a very broad sense including mathematics), and the observations (sensory experience) of various experiments. — Sam26
-Correct, but when two claims compete on explaining the same phenomenon, Science is the way to go, more systematic, more methodical and its doesn't make up invisible entities to explain the phenomenon.However, epistemology is much broader than just science, i.e., I don't need science to confirm many of our knowledge claims. — Sam26
-You literally stated that you are going to arrive to a conclusion while ignoring the most methodological and systematic facts available to us....that is irrational. Your epistemology SHOULD include everything that is available us and remove those which do not meet the highest standards of systematicityI can use an inductive argument to reason to a conclusion without any use of science, and know that the conclusion follows. — Sam26
-Yes you explained it and it is wrong. You ALWAYS should work with the best available epistemology either it originates from science or not. NO , NDEs haven't been verified objectively There are cases where we can't explain the phenomenon (and the answer is "WE don't know) but most of the cases are easily explained without invoking magic. What is suspicious is, during a controlled setup we are unable those testimonies.I explain this in my thread, and in my videos. I also explain in this thread how it is that we can have NDEs that are verified objectively, i.e., corroborated or verified testimonial evidence. — Sam26
-Sure but that is not an excuse to accept supernatural claims. Our standards of evaluation should be equally high and we shouldn't accept Magic as an answer. We are not going to change the Scientific Paradigm of Methodological Naturalism for a Death Denying ideology of flying minds not being contigent to biological brains with an expiration date.It's true that science generally adds to the certainty of our arguments, but it's not as though we can't know things apart from science. — Sam26
No there isn't any. There are data with really bad and unfounded interpretations on non scientific principles(supernatural) and that is not science.By the way, there is scientific data that supports much of my argument. There is science being conducted all over the world on this subject. However, — Sam26
-IF your conclusion was sound, then science would've accept it. The problem is not that your conclusions are a product of a non scientific methodology, but they are in conflict with what we know and can verify about how the world works. We don't observe Advance properties manifesting in reality out of thin air. We have done the same error in the past again and again, making up magical entities to explain a phenomenon. ITs not wise to keep repeating that mistake.However, I don't have to rely on science to reach my conclusion, even if it helps. — Sam26
-The issue is with your principles. Supernaturalism NEEDs to be demonstrated before being used as an answer. Advanced Properties don't just emerge in nature, they are contingent to physical functions.Also, there are no other videos like mine, so to assume that my videos are like other videos is just false. My video takes an epistemological approach to the subject based on different methods of justification. — Sam26
-The argument is over 35 years ago. The evidence on conscious states being the function of the brain is overwhelming. We have technical applications and surgery protocols and diagnostics and medicinal protocols that are designed to treat the tissue of the brain for all mental "mulfunctions"...none of them are designed to tread minds in space.Anyone who takes the approach that you are taking isn't serious about challenging an argument. It's more likely that they are just giving a biased opinion with the words science and epistemology thrown into to make it sound intellectual, but it's far from that, and far from good philosophy. — Sam26
It's more likely that they are just giving a biased opinion with the words science and epistemology thrown into to make it sound intellectual, but it's far from that, and far from good philosophy. — Sam26
I am looking for a way to not dismiss NDEs as they seem to be emotional experiences and the Parnia experiments involving upward facing numbers are less emotional in nature. — TiredThinker
What you're doing is using scientific theory to lay out what we mean by words like "existence." Wouldn't it be better to just look to how we actually use the words? — frank
-What Einstein thought is irrelevant, what he managed to prove, that's what counts. You shouldn't use Einstein thoughts in a fallacy (false authority figure). Einsteins Philosophy is not special.Einstein's thought experiment depends on it being at least logically possible for a person (or one dimensional point if that helps) to exist in a void. — frank
I think we are drifting away from a meaningful conversation. I avoid vague language because it doesn't produce anything meaningful. When you say "void" you need to define what you mean. What void means to you?Logical and metaphysical possibility often informs the way we use words. This means that as long as there is no logical contradiction in the idea of a void, it's going to make sense to talk about it. — frank
Knowledge is nothing more than an evaluation term. We declare a claim to be "knowledge" when it is in direct agreement with objective facts and it with demonstrable instrumental value.And knowledge is based on what? — javi2541997
Can you cite a paper on this. — Andrew4Handel
-No, someone can be consciously or unconsciously aware of something and react unconsciously to that stimuli. Its one thing to be aware of your and your environment and an other to direct your conscious attention to a a stimuli and reflect on it i.e. Many people drive to and from work without being able to recollect taking conscious decisions on how to get to their destiny.Awareness is opposed to the unconscious. — Andrew4Handel
OBjects are not Selves. The term self is an abstract concept humans use to refer to their mental existence.I would say that all objects are selves in the sense of possessing a coherent unified identity that can be preserved. — Andrew4Handel
Our existence(self) is one of the aspects of the world we experience.What about the existence of ourselves rather than finding knowledge on external world? — javi2541997
-well you can not study your self without taking in to account your environment. We are the product of the external world.I don’t think that external world is necessarily the main point or cause of every philosophical theory... — javi2541997
By evaluating their knowledge value. A claim is wise when it is based on knowledgeAnd how we "evaluate" conclusions — javi2541997
It always amazes me when people discount testimonial evidence, as not evidence. — Sam26
-Correct. I am not going to watch a video presenting claims that are in direct conflict with our current scientific epistemology. I am willing to read a scientific paper that challenges our epistemology through objective evidence...but not videos like this one( I am sure I have watched them before and I wont do it again).You obviously didn't listen to all of the videos where I addressed the issue of objective evidence — Sam26
-You are using Supernatural Speculations by some "Academics", not Academic Epistemology. None of those claims are part of our Epistemology in Cognitive science or Neuroscience.Moreover, I find it rich, that you talk about me not "taking in to account Academic epistemology..." which is what the soul of my argument has been about. — Sam26
-ok......well I don't need to make any arguments especially when we deal with scientific knowledge. I can send you a tone of Academic courses proving the claim in your title wrong. Can you do that? of course not...You and ↪180 Proof
should stick together because you seem to be expert at simply making pronouncements without an argument. — Sam26
-There are great Academics Moocs on the subject. Nowhere in those courses you will find scientists entertaining the claims you are presenting because no objective evidence to support them...only stories of people interpreting their experiences based on their beliefs.How about reading and studying the literature and not assuming your conclusion is true without a basis in fact. Only one person in this thread gave a decent response to my inductive argument. Most of the other responses have been mostly visceral in nature, not logical. — Sam26
The danger of this poll is that it feeds the layperson’s impression that the existence of the external world is the central issue in philosophy. — Jamal
-It depends from the claim. If a blind person describes accurately a layout of a space without having any information by a third person then you can confirm it.Or if a blind person claims to have seen briefly is there anything they could say to confirm that they did in fact see versus be told what seeing is by someone else and regurgitated? — TiredThinker
That's the best thing one can do in life! Deepity? — Agent Smith
As I already pointed out, our epistemology on god can only shed light on the Anthropological aspect of the cultural concept...not the ontological one. We don't have verified epistemology on the existence of god in reality in order to render any discussion on it "Philosophical".That's too obvious to state. Pick up an introductory book on philosophy and be informed! 180 Proof claims philosophy and god are incompatible. I beg to differ. — Agent Smith
Do you? Or do you not even allow yourself to become conscious of how you have exposed your own irrationality, so quick you are to project it onto me? — unenlightened
Science tells us that life is a struggle for survival. How does religion not fit this struggle for survival? — baker
-Revelation? that not a method, its doesn't have steps that one can follow in an effort to reproduce the result.The religious epistemological method is the method of revelation, it's top-down, not bottom-up. God, the divine, or some higher truth is revealed to people, people don't figure it out on their own and they aren't supposed to nor can they. — baker
_that could be the case if and only if religion staying in its Magisteria and didn't attempt to introduce its entities withing science back yard. Unfortunately most classical religions do that mistake and their claims are fair game for Science.Because science and religion are NOMAs, so there's no conflict. — baker
-Thats not true. Alchemy was just a bad way to do Chemistry. Alchemy failure to provide real world results rendering itself useless and irrelevant. Logic and instrumental value of the end product (knowledge) is what lead as to shape the rules of the discipline (chemistry.)The same might be said of the alchemists: that many of their beliefs were childish fantasies unrelated to reality. BUT had the alchemists given up, we might never have discovered chemistry. I feel much the same about the atheist, that they’ve given up the quest to find a deeper reality. — Art48
-This is NOT the atheistic position. You are describing the Antitheistic position but that is only a subset of a much larger category(atheism). That a category error.Of course, atheists may be right in that there is no deeper reality to be found, at least, not a reality that could in any sensible way be called “God.” But they may be wrong, too. — Art48
-Correct , the rejection of an unjustified belief is the most rational thing to doThe atheist may respond that religions have had millennia to get their act together, and have failed. So, there is much justification for rejecting the idea of God. (Or rather rejecting ideas of God, since such ideas are so varied and, at times, contradictory.) — Art48
-The reason why religions of the past or believers of the presence have failed to demonstrate objectively the existence of the God is irrelevant. The burden is on the side making the claim after all.But perhaps religions have failed because they use an epistemological method worthy of a child: someone special (prophet, God, God-man, etc.) said or wrote something, and we must believe it. Just like “Mommy or Daddy said some something, so you should believe it. — Art48
-Well their hypothesis (turn lead in to gold) was based on wishful thoughts, not on knowledge. So apart from similarities in methodology neither their standards and principles or level of the quality of their methodologies were comparable to science. After all science's methodologies are not something special, between a scientific lab and any other empirical method of knowledge. the rules of evaluations and systematic accumulation and processing of data is what differs.Alchemists used something akin to science’s epistemological method (hypothesize, experiment, no gold? form different hypothesis, try different experiment). Perhaps, if religion employed something similar to science’s epistemological method, real progress could be made. — Art48
-That's not Science's or Logic's fault. The problem lies with the nature of the religious claims. Again the burden of proof lies with the side making the claim.But how to apply science’s epistemological method to religion? A difficult question. The current draft of my thoughts is available at — Art48
-I hope not....except of course if we they are Naturalists(methodological).I was wondering if any academic philosophers visit this forum as I am interested in some content that can be provided by them. — Shawn
-That's so true! Since your mentioned Philosophy of Science( I love this category), are you familiar with Paul Hoyningen's work on the Philosophy of Science(Systematicity, the Nature of Science). If yes, could you share some thoughts on his ideas on Science not being something special but still enjoying such an epistemic success!I am somewhat saddened that the logic and philosophy of mathematics and philosophy of science categories never receive much attention or forum posts.
What can be done about that? — Shawn
-What "fractal" means to you. Fractal is a label we use on structures with specific characteristics.Chemisty and Geometry are tools we use to descibe qualities of these structures.If the universe is a fractal of repeating patterns on ever larger scales, for example: hierarchies, cycles, the golden ratio, structures that we see throughout human academic disciplines - the study of things and/or nature, in essence, if physics and chemistry is geometric, then, it should also be synchronic. Right? — Benj96
Define Geometric and synchronic please.if physics and chemistry is geometric, then, it should also be synchronic — Benj96
I think abiogenesis is compelling because it blurs a fundamental distinction: that between life and non-life, or at least, makes it appear less fundamental. — Wayfarer
What philosophy of mind claims is IRRELEVANT. You will need to study Science, not philosophy in order to understand the ontology of an emergent biological property like Consciousness.Since life only begins at the molecular level, there is no need to search for life on all the scales below.
Since the philosophy of mind addresses consciousness as an entity in its own right, it fails to present it as an (emergent) consequence of life. — Wolfgang
_correct.The observable phenomenon is the brain activity and its apparent connection to what we consciously do at the conscious level. — Ludwig V
Unconscious self is a label of an observable phenomena.(organisms acting unconsciously to preserve their well being and survival).The description "unconscious self" is a decision about how it is appropriate to consider the phenomenon. — Ludwig V
-I didn't provide any justification. I only presented in bullet points the two different types of "Self". The justification of the above classifications can be found in Cognitive Science literature and in Moocs available to anyone who is interested in knowing and talking about the properties of the Mind.so it needs more justification than it is getting here. — Ludwig V
-More appropriate than our current scientific epistemology ? I will be skeptical on that.Other descriptions may be more appropriate. — Ludwig V
_I don't really understand what your point is and how this is relevant to our Scientific Epistemology of the brain...Care to elaborate?. I would prefer to say that the various calculations take place, without committing to the idea that anybody is doing them. — Ludwig V
Yes, you are in very good company focussing on the facticity or fictionality of "the God claim". That is exactly what I am pointing to myself. As long as your issue is that, you will never understand something like this:
My song is love unknown,
My Saviour's love for me,
Love to the loveless shown that they might Lovely be. — Samuel Crossman — unenlightened
If you catch your self asking the above question.....you are alive.Are we actually alive/real?
Properties of matter are responsible for a computer calculation.That is true for our mental properties. They are a product of the material world.I wouldn't say that the calculation performed by a computer was material, even though it is the result of a physical process. Indeed, it seems to me to be rather misleading. — Ludwig V
That is a description of an observable phenomenon. The quality of helpfulness follows.Well, if that is helpful to cognitive science, it would be churlish to quibble. — Ludwig V
-Well maybe you meant "a metaphor. Metaphors can be interpret literally or not.It's an analogy, that you are taking literally in order to try and undermine. — unenlightened
-Well in my opinion, the issue lies with the God claim . God claims are not based on objective facts accessible to everyone for evaluation.This is why a philosopher cannot find god; he cannot make a commitment to anything, but must always be weighing and evaluating and reasoning. It's a very good recipe for thinking, but a very poor one for living. — unenlightened
Let me outline a simple reason why a philosopher might not find God.
It is at the simplest a confusion of faith with belief.
If you ask a fan of Ipswich town FC. which is the greatest football club, they will tell you it is Ipswich Town FC. If you ask them about the next game, they will tell you that Ipswich will win. And if you point out that Ipswich almost invariably loses and often come bottom of the league, they will be hurt, but not dismayed. To be a fan is to be a loyal supporter and keep the faith in good times and bad times. To be an Ipswich fan is not wrong as a matter of fact, nor is it even a matter of fact that Ipswich will lose their next game.
It is not that the facts do not matter; the win is all important, and the loss is a heavy blow, but faith covers them both and amplifies them both. Faith is what makes these things matter at all. I am not a football fan, and I couldn't care less about Ipswich Town FC. I can therefore afford to be philosophical about their chances. But the only people who care about my analysis, are the Ipswich fans.
So if you are not a fan of god, you will always miss out on the excitement, and think yourself very wise. — unenlightened
My take on that would be that "the philosopher shouldn't seek God until he has access to objective epistemology pointing to the existence and ontology of God(s).The philosopher is not seeking God and so to say the philosopher will not find god is like saying the doctor will not find the bomb — Agent Smith
This is an observation that we have verified. First of all we must clarify that energy is NOT a substance or an entity or an agent. ITs a label of a process observed in nature where this quantitative property (ability to do work) is transferred to physical elements or systems . The conservative quality of this property allows it to be dispersed in different forms but the total sum of them will be equal to the initial "load" of work of the system.Energy as something that cannot be created or destroyed is a huge assumption to make — Benj96
-Those (why questions) are irrelevant questions which are not addressed by the Descriptive Nature of Science. Asking why energy exists is like asking why the Universe exists. "Why" questions are fallacious, teleological questions. Intentions and purposes are not intrinsic qualities of Nature but qualities projected by beings with goals and needs. We tend to see agents in nature so we tend to ask why a natural phenomenon occurs. Science doesn't allow such assumptions in our hypotheses.As it allows not to establish where it originates from, why it occurs at all. — Benj96
-Again "Energy" is not the name of an entity or a substance or an agent. Its the label of an observable, quantifiable phenomenon caused by a process. ITs not a "vague generalization" for the existence of an invisible "cosmic battery" but a Law like Generalization of the ability of Quantum Glitches(fundamental particles) to produce work and form structures which in turn produce different forms of work and structures.And it being basically the fundamental constituent of all material as well as all interactions, is virtually indefinable. Something that is fundamentally everything cannot really be further defined/restricted in character/properties beyond this vague generalisation. — Benj96
We don't presuppose those properties. Our observations reveal them to us. There is a huge difference there. The "eternal" nature of energy can only be verified within the local representation of our universe. We can assume that a preexisting unknown type of cosmic field preexisted which gave rise to the energetic field that we call universe. Since we don't have any observations available outside our universe there is no way to put such assumptions to the test or to justify an answer.And yet we do manage to subdivide it and characterise specific types of energy, despite the fact that they can convert from one form to the next. But only because of its presupposed eternality and ability to create anything (sensations/objects/happenings) in existence. — Benj96
-I think your understanding of what energy is.. is based on our common "bad language mode". As I already explained the term "energy" in science is not an ontological claim of a substance or an entity in existence. Its just an observable phenomena where fundamental particles in fields have the ability to "carry" work resulting to the creation of structures and evolving processes.For me, energy is as about as close to magic as science gets. It's both invisible and visible, can be felt and also not felt at all, can take any form whatsoever, we have no idea where it comes from initially or why, and yet we gloss over that so that we may use it as a basic principle of science. — Benj96
-I understand. In Philosophy gods are represented by far more vague concepts. Natural process like Energy, Consciousness , Mind,etc are often used to satisfy our need to answer our "why" questions (why we exist, why things are the way they are). This is done by converting the label of a process (i.e. Consciousness/the ability of a biological brain to direct its attention to environmental/organic stimuli and to reflect upon them by using the rest of its mental abilities like symbolic language, memory, previous experience, reasoning, pattern recognition, etc) to an entity and then declaring to be a powerful one.When i search for meaning in a concept of God I'm not referring to some big bearded fellow floating in the clouds. Of course not. It's more nuanced than that. I'm simply suggesting that we don't yet have verification of whether consciousness is a fundamental force that began with the universe or why it is possible for it to emerge from substance (the hard problem). — Benj96
That is a fallacy of composition. The label Universe includes many more things that do not have the property of awareness. We can only be a direct example of a system being able to display this specific property within the universe. The universe is not an entity, but its a process, the total sum of different processes giving rise to systems and entities. Only a fraction of those systems and entities (us) have this ability.(awareness).Many people leave the door open to a god theory to explain such a profound dynamic as this. The fact that us, as parts of the universe, are a direct example of the universe being aware of itself. — Benj96
-Well those three steps should be included only if we demand our conclusions(or questions) to be wise.IF not then by definition our conclusions can not be wise...hence they can not be part of our philosophy.I think if philosophy can question its own tenets: epistemology, physika and metaphysics as you pointed out - as in how to define them, what falls within each definition, why they exist as components, are there more components we haven't considered, where they come from, how they may overlap, I'm not so sure everything needs to satisfy all three to be considered worthy of philosophical endeavour. — Benj96
- First of all we shouldn't start by accepting the assumption we are trying to demonstrate. Second equally important is....in order to equate the Universe with god we should demonstrate their shared properties. Most people claim that god is a thinking agent. If you accept that claim you will need to demonstrate that this property is shared by the process we identify as a universe.If one is to consider the universe itself as a "God" and then figure out how to caracterise/understand or explain that, surely philosophy which is not external to the universe, must be applicable to the universe? — Benj96
Sure, but there is a difference between declaring claims as knowledge without any objective evidence and verifying actual knowledge!In the end it is still a love of knowledge. Is the particular subject of said knowledge so important? — Benj96
Perhaps you're totally right and there is such cases as pseudo philosophy. Subjects that ought not be broached by the subject. But I have not yet encountered a major topic that hasn't be brought to the attention of this forum to seek insight, or just for general speculation. — Benj96
In science, what we understand as "supernatural" is a phenomenon that either ignores or breaks natural laws by displaying non regular characteristics or allows the emergence of high level features without being contingent to fundamental low level mechanisms.What do we mean by supernatural? — Benj96
Natural phenomena are contingent to Natural processes and they don't go against rules of Nature.What's the definition of something supernatural verses natural. Are all things that occur in nature natural? — Benj96
No. Invisibility is an irrelevant property. Energy is an abstract concept that describes the ability of Natural phenomena have to produce work. Different types of energy are observable and quantifiable and we don't have to register their characteristics by processing the visible spectrum of light(visible).Is energy supernatural because it is invinsible/indestructible for example? — Benj96
-Actually all those things allow us to Philosophize. What most people forget is that Philosophy has a goal which is defined by the word itself (Philo-Sophia). Our love to gain wisdom is what drives us to Philosophize in the first place. In order to produce Wisdom we need to reflect our thoughts upon our current accepted knowledge. We can not accept a claim as "wise" without knowing its truth value. Wisdom and Knowledge go hand in hand (Science and Philosophy).Philosophy is about thought, thinking, reasoning and defining, ideas and concepts. — Benj96
-I can agree with that statement. By using the knowledge we get from science or any other empirical and methodical study we can philosophize on any subject....but that doesn't help us learn something about the truth value of a religious claim. Religious claims come without any verified epistemology so our starting point is arbitrary , product of our superstition at best. We don't have a solid epistemic platform to begin our philosophical quest.That can be applied to literally anything; be it art, psychology, history, economics, maths, science and of course spirituality, religion and consciousness. — Benj96
Yes it has...but that shouldn't be used as an excuse to introduce pseudo philosophy in the discipline. A topic excludes itself from Philosophy when it is unable to tick the three basic steps of a Philosophical inquire (defined by Aristotle).Philosophy has the largest scope of any discipline. The minute you restrict or exclude topics from philosophy you already presuppose too much and cut yourself off at the knees. — Benj96
In order to explore their nature you will need to do Science , not Philosophy. If we have zero epistemology to compare, then the discussions can never be philosophical.Of course they can be. We can explore whether they are indeed intangible, or supernatural, we can do comparative discussions. We can ask why people ask the question in the first place. We can define the elements of a question. Offer possible conclusions. Philosophy does not prohibit. — Benj96
Philosophy has done that for many centuries. The failure to gain any epistemology on the subject is what fueled Natural Philosophy, Methodological Naturalism and Science.Without any epistemology in hand there is nothing there to say on the subject that could elevate it to a philosophical level.We can define the elements of a question. Offer possible conclusions. Philosophy does not prohibit. — Benj96