So I guess, if anyone went through something like this, what did you do? What should I do? — rossii
Does this begin to clear up the issue? , . — FrancisRay
In fact scientists usually endorse three metaphysical conjectures. First, that materialism is true. Second,, that naturalism is true,. Third, that materialism is naturalistic.It's a very muddled set of views that requires entirely ignoring metaphysics for the sake of not rocking the boat. — FrancisRay
I think it more helpful to determine what someone making the argument for or against materialism or naturalism or metaphysics means. Rather than the meaning of terms, what assumptions about the world, our inquiries, and our understanding are at issue. — Fooloso4
Well perhaps I did not make my point clearly with the wording I chose. I was trying to ask you why you are only sure that there is 'overwhelming evidence' that an afterlife exists, and that's all you are sure of.Why do I think that there are many questions that we can't answer? — Sam26
So have you ruminated as to how you think the choice would be made for 'qualifies for the afterlife?' and who or what system would do, or has been doing the choosing?I don't know if all species go to an afterlife, probably not. It seems that certain animals do though. — Sam26
Your claim that the afterlife exists, was a very strong one.Why would you think that there is some burden for me to explain the nature and structure of the afterlife? — Sam26
If I claimed to you that I have overwhelming evidence that time travel into the future is available right now! Would you not expect me to provide some details of how it works and functions or would you just accept that my argument that I have personally experienced it but I cannot reveal the details or tell you what is going to happen due to a universal time prime directive (ie, those involved would kill me) speaks for itself. Would you suggest that such a claim, based on such evidence was absurd?I think the evidence is overwhelming — Sam26
I am writing a book called Stage II (stage 2) about an afterlife, but it only happens for approximately 1 in every 100 million humans. Just an interesting story (I hope,) nothing more. Where, how, why and the purpose of the stage II ascendents was fun to imagineer. Perhaps I didn't imagineer anything. Perhaps I was receiving Stage II communications, directly to my brain! :yikes:I think that space is, at least partly, an aspect of what we experience in an afterlife, i.e., as we move from place to place. — Sam26
Yep, perhaps you could write all your musing on the topic down in story form, and you might start a new religious/theosophist movement. I doubt my Stage II book (whenever I finish the f**ker) will start a new movement to rival the biggest growing new religion, 'The Jedi,' but I remain a dreamer. Perhaps your afterlife book, would be better and do better than mine.However, I do think the logic of my argument is very strong. So, it's not about robustness, but about the strength of the argument. — Sam26
I was tempted to not respond to your questions because many of the questions I've already answered several times in this thread. But I guess, one more time won't hurt. — Sam26
Indeed. But I do think there is a troubling tendency to try to divorce evolution from all intentionality. I had to spend a very long time explaining to someone reviewing a paper I wrote why it is that natural selection, as applied to corporations, languages, elements of states, people groups, etc. can absolutely involve intentionality. It's like, somewhere along the line, to avoid mistakes about inserting intentionality into places it doesn't belong, a dogma was created that natural selection necessarily can't involve intentionality. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The choices made are often bad ones or unfortunate ones or are purely based on instinctive imperatives, rather than intellect, and so many individuals don't survive. There is no intent in that system, random happenstance and a measure of fortune/luck, that individuals made the correct 'instinctive' move, in a given scenario, is a matter of probability and circumstance and not intent.Obviously, people choose who they mate with based on intentional decisions though. Many animals are also picky about who they mate with. They also only mate if they survive and they only survive based on intentional choices they make. Intentional choices change the environment which in turn affects future selection pressures — Count Timothy von Icarus
Processes like self-domestication, particularly the high levels of self-domestication that humans enacted upon themselves, don't make sense without appeals to how individuals of the species make choices. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Again you yourself highlight human design and intent, taking over from natural selection in the case of cows, dogs, cats etc. From Fauna Facts:Normal domestication is an even more obvious example. A cow is, after all, a product of selection by the enviornment, which contains humans who intentionally bread it into livestock. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The underlined words are where we differ I think. Evolution is very very slow. As soon as a lifeform demonstrates intent as a consequence of being self-aware, conscious and intelligent, rather than a creature driven via pure instinct imperative only, then at that point, intelligent design reduces evolution to a very minor side show for such individuals. It then becomes much more possible that such individuals can make themselves extinct before natural selection or environmental happenstance does.Intentionality plays a role in selection, but the selection process itself is initially not intentional. It is only intentional to the degree that life develops intentionality. Once that exists though, once a lifeform is using intentional problem solving to decide how to survive and who to mate with, then evolution is necessarily bound up with intentionality. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Why do you think that is the case? It seems to me that the only question about the afterlife, you are convinced by 'overwhelming evidence,' that you can answer, is that it exists.Obviously there are questions that can't be answered about an afterlife — Sam26
Can you offer any conclusions from your musings regarding the nature and structure of the afterlife?And yes, I've mused over many of these questions, and will continue to muse over many other questions. — Sam26
Just because the evidence is overwhelming doesn't mean you can convince anyone or everyone of the conclusions that logically follow. — Sam26
If you had understood what I said about cogency this question wouldn't arise. — Sam26
As for my demonstrations, as you say, I've given them in the inductive argument. I guess you don't understand inductive arguments or you would've asked me this question. — Sam26
You can disagree with the argument, but the argument speaks for itself. If the argument is weak, then the conclusion probably doesn't follow, if it is strong (as I suppose it is), then the conclusion does follow. — Sam26
If the argument is weak, then the conclusion probably doesn't follow, if it is strong (as I suppose it is), then the conclusion does follow. — Sam26
Intentions and teleology are internal and essential to all forms of life. — ucarr
I think the evidence is overwhelming, so for me I know there is an afterlife. — Sam26
As I kvetched earlier, the world's obsession with the US could use some whittling down, for your sake and ours. — T Clark
But what are numbers and words? Are they forms of qualia or simply forms of human expression and understanding? How may numbers, symbols and language be seen as independent 'realities' or as aspects of human consciousness and the attempt to construct pictures or explanations of 'reality'? How do symbols function in the interplay between the numeric aspects of understanding and the hermeneutics arising from linguistics? — Jack Cummins
Well, we simply disagree on that one. I never find the argument that there are 'worse' in existence, a valid reason for excusing bad and regressive national policy. The existence of a more intense wrong does not make the wrong you do any less wrong imo.No. Trust me when I say that most people still see the UK (or just England) as a progressive economy and nation. Yes, Brexit was a mistake, but it doesn't imply that British society went backwards afterwards. There are other nations in this world that are worse than the UK, just see Latin America and Africa. — javi2541997
This is the point where I always disagree with you, but I respect your opinion. Whether the Spanish and British should "pay" for whatever is not a problem/issue of modern societies. — javi2541997
Imagine if I been told, "hey do not visit London or Glasgow because of Brexit"
This sounds stupid as hell, right? — javi2541997
it makes no sense – wastes time and effort – to wonder or fixate on where the flame goes when a candle blows/burns-out. Walking the path – living one's life (with courage & dignity as an end in itself) – is the destination, not some ... "afterlife". — 180 Proof
This sort of puzzle always interested me. — Count Timothy von Icarus
E.g. quarks and leptons are the fundemental forms and everything else emerges from this austere ontology. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Platonist-like conceptions of physics center around things being fundementally mathematical. E.g., of quarks Wilzek says "the it is the bit," as they only exist as spaceless mathematical entities. — Count Timothy von Icarus
I think that all you do with statements like this is offer succour to sophists.If you do not communicate successfully, that IS your problem. Granted: there are people who manage to misunderstand a simple phrase like "Good morning". But quite often when posters are misunderstood, it is the poster's fault, and the problems are typical of writers in general. That's why publishers and newspapers employ editors. — BC
The fact you refer to him as 'Moderator Mikie,' is (in the context you use it,) a cheap shot and a rather pathetic one on your part.Moderator Mikie's thread on religion has been troubled by unclear communication which I think is his problem. I don't quite know why he's not stating his case more clearly. Perhaps a vague concept at the beginning--God & Christianity Aren’t Special--has hobbled his thinking. — BC
If I misunderstood you, and you are not condemning religion holus bolus, then perhaps we have no argument after all. — Janus
I broadly agree. I am willing to travel down a path such as 'ok, lets assume Jesus was a real boy, then.....' etc. But it becomes rather ridiculous when we take a path such as, ok, lets assume Jesus did come alive again after being dead for three days...... Well ........ I might even take that path, if the argument was that Jesus was secretly injected with borg nanoprobes, from one of the drones (who was also using a Klingon cloaking device) from a time travelling borg cube, and that's why he became alive again.No, I just mean accepting some points for the sake of argument. We do the same things in proofs by double negation; assume x and see where that leads us. Taking a claim seriously just means not putting it on par with Santa Klaus and sports. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Thanks for that info, Any info that adds to my knowledge of modern philosophy is welcome.Things like Plato's forms, now called universals, are part of a larger class of entities in modern philosophy called "abstract objects." These include propositions (descriptions of the world with a true/false value), numbers and other mathematical objects, and some other types. They are still very popular. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Well, there are typings such as:They're even popular among physicists. Penrose has a quote to the effect of "the Platonic realm of numbers seems more real...," and you have theories like the Mathematical Universe Hypothesis, which posits that the universe is a mathematical object, or "It From Bit," that the universe is composed of information, which are quite popular. — Count Timothy von Icarus
But universals are metaphysics not physics, yes? I find it easy to dismiss the suggestion that 'greenness' or 'chairness' or 'darkness' etc are 'universals' but from the standpoint of physics and not metaphysics perhaps something like 'motion' is a real universal property, rather than a metaphysical one. Is anything in the universe absolutely still, in all reference frames?Plenty of people have wanted to do away with universals but it isn't easy. Partly, this has to do with set theory and using properties to decide who goes in which set. But there is plenty of opposition to them too. — Count Timothy von Icarus
In that case, don't take a simplistic view, but instead a nuanced one, and condemn the nefarious purposes and not religion as a whole. It's pretty obvious that most things in human life have both positive and negative aspects. — Janus
There are no absolutes; I’m absolutely certain of it. — Mikie
It's better to offer your argument and your evidence before you state your conclusive opinions.False analogy. Irrelevant. — creativesoul
Computers are an attempt to simulate/emulate the human brain.Humans are not computers. — creativesoul
It what way? Based on what evidence?Boolean logic is not equivalent to native tongues/common languages. — creativesoul
I stated that networking is optional, not common language acquisition. Don't accuse me of a false analogy I did not make and you just made up.[/quote]Common language acquisition is not optional. So, the comparison is a false analogy on its face. That's enough, really, to dismiss the counter you offered. — creativesoul
So to you, the deaf, dumb and blind kid has no 'I' before they learn to communicate through touch?There is no "I" without common language. — creativesoul
I disagree. If I was placed here at birth and was maintained by a lifeless system until I was able to take care of myself and I never experienced or communicated with another human, in my life, then I think I would still be able to experience an 'I' identity, as different from the flora and non-human fauna around me.There is no common language without shared meaning. There is no shared meaning without a plurality of language users. There is no plurality of users without others. Hence, there is no "I" without others. There is no "I" without a belief system replete with self-identification stemming from common language use. — creativesoul
We agree on that.None of this refutes the existence of "I", — creativesoul
Well, thanks for 'trying to help me, ' in the way you suggested but I think your arguments are incorrect for the reasons I have already given.Rather, this is only meant to help you recognize that the statement "your brain functions separately/independently from mine" is false on its face. It doesn't. It cannot. It's impossible, because you cannot unlearn common language while continually using it. You cannot 'disconnect' all of the meaningful correlations that you've long since drawn between language use and other things, including the use of "I" and yourself. — creativesoul
Again, incorrect, imo, for the reasons I have already given.All this only to say that our brains do not function separately/independently from each other. Language bridges the spatiotemporal gap with shared meaning, shared belief, shared thought, shared understanding. If your brain functioned separately and independently of every other brain, you would not even have the capability to say so. — creativesoul
I said religion-related discussions, not discussions between theists and atheists. — T Clark
I agree, they are also about some of the more pernicious affects on the day to day lives of human beings in their local communities and at a national, international and even global level. Do you accept that such pernicious affects exist?That was my point - all religious discussions are not about whether or not God exists — T Clark
But that view is easily thrown right back at you. 'You think anything that shows respect for religion is good no matter how destructive religious doctrine is in the lives of many.'I'm not surprised. You think anything that shows disrespect for religion is good, no matter how badly thought out or weakly argued. — T Clark
To some extent, I think the hostility toward religion here leads to the low quality of many religion-related discussions — T Clark
It's also pretty much impossible to discuss ancient and medieval philosophy without reference to the religions of the time — Count Timothy von Icarus
Well, I'm not sure I would use the word 'impossible' but understanding what ancient and medieval philosophers and theists were saying when they were alive is certainly very difficult as they have been dead for so long, so we only have what memorialisations they left behind or what others claim they said.And I'd argue it's impossible to understand what these thinkers are saying, and engage seriously with them without taking the religious claims seriously. — Count Timothy von Icarus
At the same time, considerations of things like Heraclitus or the Patristics' conception of Logos, etc. will tend to show that philosophy still contains plenty of this flavor of speculation. I don't think you can have philosophy without it. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Many people experience thoughts as someone else's in their heads. This would be enough to doubt the 'I am.' — Tom Storm
thinking is occurring and not also the latter part therefore I am. — Tom Storm
The evidence that currently exists which refutes and/or falsifies the claim that "your brain functions separately/independently from mine" is the very words you used. Language bridges the gap between your brains. It connects them. Connected things are neither separate nor independent. — creativesoul
"chutzpah"? — BC
But in the narrow case I mean, I think it’s treating Christianity as special and is a waste of time. — Mikie
Which is also to acknowledge the culture and beliefs of the rest of the world, and thus that we shouldn’t give Christianity special treatment. — Mikie
