Put simply, an AI has to be given instructions that, inter alia, includes instructions to override these instructions. I don't think this is possible because imagine I include a line in the code of such an AI that goes: Override all instructions. — TheMadFool
Even if there seems to be choices (for surviving, entertaining, relationships with others, and even killing yourself), there really isn't. It's either follow the game (obstacle course with some choices there), homelessness, hack in the wilderness, or die. — schopenhauer1
And all the days of Adam that he lived were nine hundred and thirty years, and he died. — Genesis 5:5
In some spiritual systems, there is the notion of karma, which is the law of cause and effect, or 'as you reap, you will sow'. This involves our own experiences in the process of causal chain. The way I think that this could work is that our own subconscious processes experiences in such a way that our guilt and other emotions come into play in drawing experiences towards us. — Jack Cummins
So, I wonder about the role of our own consciousness in what becomes manifest in life. Intention affects our behaviour, but I do think that it may go beyond this and intentionality and thought may have more dramatic effects, involving layers of the subconscious. — Jack Cummins
Yes: Because in the case of someone being forced to play a game, there is a life they’re missing out on. There is a consequence to them being kidnapped by the villain. Not so if they never existed. — khaled
This.There's arguments and there's arguments. Quarrels and lines of reasoning — Banno
I haven't seen any sensical counter-arguments to Efilism. — RAW
Because she still wants to learn some words and dialectical intercourse before finishing her book. This site makes you know people and philosophical talk. A small but substantive part of her book cares about this wonderfull endavour. Besides physics, the brain. economy, biology (Lamarckian style), art, western globalization, cosmology, gods, etc. Eetc. I can tell you! Her question to the god of wisdom would probably be: WHY? — LaatseMaal
Isn't the imbalance between the 2 at the core of it, the observation that the negative, the suffering is 1. far greater / numerous 2. sensationally far stronger, 3. durationally far longer than the positive? — RAW
Velocity is measurement of two positions. The positions of particles change. But that goes hand in hand with two different times. But which of the two is fundamental? — Philofile
But then, if practicing philosophy helps to solve problems and to communicate with others, isn’t it a helpful tool towards approaching what we mentioned? — leo
You think animals are used only to eat them or as a tool? — TenderBar
There ought to be another law about "Godwin"... — Wheatley
Many stupid people engage in war. No war is started by a stupid person though.I said something about stupidity. Hitler wasn't stupid. Neither was Mao, nor Stalin. So I'm asking the question, if 'stupidity' is the enemy of the good, then how come these obviously dreadful human beings weren't just stupid? — Wayfarer
But our minds aren't so malleable that you can just believe anything are they? You can't be a masochist by choice for instance. — khaled
Is it like that because you think it's like that? Or is it actually like that? — khaled
Our belief is based on what we perceive. But what we perceive is also based on what we belief. — Hermeticus
A tool transcends the physical limits of an organism, allows an organism to do what their bodies can't. For example, a tiger can use material at its disposal to do more than what its claws, fangs, and strength permit, that would be tool-making. — TheMadFool
Tool making? Attacking/defending/foraging/etc. can be vastly improved with tools. Granted that some animals know how to fashion tools, Caledonian crows are capable of meta-tools, but none have learned it from humans. In fact, it's the opposite; as you said, — TheMadFool
Ok but my point still stands! No animal has been documented to have learned life-lessons from a human. — TheMadFool
much of the phronesis (practical wisdom) our ancestors had about plants, animals, nature's rhythms, so on, has been irretrievably lost. I wouldn't be wrong in saying that in some respects, a modern person knows less than a hunter-gatherer forebear. — TheMadFool
Well, no. Human level language equips us to transcend instinct, for example it enables us to consider "what if" questions, it allows us to consider alternatives, it allows us to pass on knowledge obtained through that kind of thinking and thereby to build on progress made by others. — Daemon
Birds, especially. — James Riley
Animals may not study our behavior the way we study animal behavior but a lot of animals certainly adapt to humans and use humans for their benefit.What I find intriguing is the learning ability of humans. Our intelligence enables us to study animal behavior and then adapt their life-skills for our benefit. No other animal I know of does that, right? — TheMadFool
What is it that makes language so useful? — Wheatley
In a way legitimizing drugs. — TheMadFool
Did Aldous Huxley take a page out of Indo-Aryan culture. What if, what Huxley predicts already happened, a failed social expermient lost to history? — TheMadFool
There will be byproducts, some beneficial, others harmful beyond imagination. It's impossible to predict what the future holds. What now? — TheMadFool
The burger is a joke about how materialism would see the origin of mind. But this is not our take on it. I thank you for your critique and will introduce the word modern materialism in the connection with the burger to make the distinction more clear. Our own point of view is that the world is more a form of idealistic monism. Since materialism and idealism are both forms of monism there was potential for confusion here, I haven't thought about it. — FalseIdentity
Of course, there are those nasty intellectually picky people that doubt things can magically appear out of nowhere. A further disadvantage of the theory is that if things can come from nowhere then maybe they can go back to nowhere too. — FalseIdentity
To explain this better let's first imagine that mind and matter are in reality the same. Then become aware that mind and imagination are infinite. If the world is made up of just thought there is nothing like non-thought and hence a true void is impossible.
To understand this better imagine a mind containing every world you can dream of. And not just as thought but as real matter like you know it. — FalseIdentity
How do we get this theory? What's the basis of it? So far there's nothing in here that backs up mind=matter, so this comes off as some kind of fantasy origin story.Our theory is that directly before the big bang the source mind, God's mind voluntarily reduced and simplified itself. It shrank to the most simple and most easily understandable form available: a point. Call what remains a splinter of god. It is a catastrophe because the splinter lacks almost all of God's infinitely rich thoughts and complexity. — FalseIdentity
1. That just like any other phenomenon in the history of histories of human civilizations -- science is cyclical. No one can stop this as a natural occurrence. Length of time is not an indication of success, if you get my drift. — Caldwell
What do you mean by that? Science is a concept. A framework for building knowledge. You can "defeat" scientists, people who advocate science - but the concept itself is untouchable.2. That violence can defeat science. There is a tipping point after which, it's just all decay. — Caldwell
Is that what you understand as decay then? Again, I don't see that at all. Worship, belief without justification and blind indoctrination existed before science and have been declining as the scientific method evolved.Not at all. That is not the decay we are talking about here. Worship, belief without justification, and blind indoctrination? — Caldwell
My only point might be that what is good for an individual in their quest for happyness, can create a problem for a world that needs to deal with reality.The religious you might agree are not dealing with reality and it shows at the voteting both --think Trump, and the many many hate groups who vote for him, including the religious right wing. You might consider another drug. — boagie
Your point here about the adoption of a myth, an unlikely method alone to find truth, simply to obtain existential comfort, is a betrayal of your intellectual integrity. — boagie