there a cause having the effect of T Clark leaving the room?
Perhaps not, like the instantaneous decay of a uranium ato — jgill
And I say "no." And you say "it's obvious." And I say, "no, it's not obvious." You are arguing that cause is real and obvious. My only argument is that it is not obvious. We're not getting anywhere with this. — T Clark
It is not the only approach, not even close. — Constance
What happens is science's views become derivative, and primacy goes to it the Cartesian center — Constance
You can deny there is such a thing, which is fine; but you have arrived at a foundation for discussing things philosophically: phenomenology. — Constance
Physics is now derivative, and this means its explanatory basis as a science with all of its paradigmatic historical progression, is held to be reducible to affairs at a more basic order. — Constance
Not fantasy. More real than real, if you like: the intuitive horizon that is presupposed by science. Hard to talk about, really, unless you read about it. — Constance
You haven't provided any logical argument — T Clark
Do you mean that every event has a cause? — T Clark
You're still wrong — L'éléphant
t wasn't obvious to Russell. It wasn't obvious to R.G. Collingwood in 1943. We're not the only ones. — T Clark
He actually made his arguments based on and with reference to his understanding of modern physics at the time. Take a look at his argument — T Clark
Let me explain this to you. Just saying "it's self-evident", "it's obvious", "it's a priori knowledge", "it's nonsense", or "it's undeniable" is not an argument — T Clark
Wrong. — L'éléphant
Still sounds mad I'm afraid, or just incorrect: the matter in the computer was created in the big bang, same as the matter in our grey matter. — Daemon
Do you really think a brain is a mirror to nature? — Constance
He went further. He said the idea of cause in physics is meaningless. — T Clark
You don't realize that what physicists do rests upon an intuitional givenness — Constance
That sounds mad. What do you mean? — Daemon
There are many unconscious bodily processes, does consciousness happen in them? — Daemon
So if you did make a mechanical functional equivalent to a working brain, you could be making something that could feel pleasure and pain. Would we really want to do that? You could be making a being that felt nothing but agony — Daemon
The whole organism is not a necessary condition for consciousness. You can remove quite a bit of an organism before it loses consciousness. — RogueAI
Agreed, but a program that can pass the Turing Test and is begging not to be deactivated because it's conscious should certainly give people food for thought. — RogueAI
As well as reaching out and bending space to your will — jgill
Does science passively give knowledge and information about a world outside of the knower — Joshs
Are philosophers missing the forest for the trees? — Agent Smith
book I'm reading plausibly suggests it may happen in the upper brain stem rather than in cerebral cortex — Daemon
The denial of movement ex nihilo is the strongest intuitive insistence the mind can make. — Constance
I don't know what the universe being created means — Constance
Your posts are for the most part garbage — Banno
What's the latest on the JWST? Will it radically transform our understanding of the universe, ourselves — Agent Smith
. I dont find the idea of physical objects to be all that useful anymore for quantum physics, biology or psychology. It’s a relic of an older era. — Joshs