(Oh, and feel free to punch him if you think that will help). — Baden
This is much more accurate than you can imagine. I'm really working on it. It can be entertaining and even occasionally endearing, but it's generally limiting.I think he's just one of those old school dudes who has problems expressing emotion. — Mongrel
think you've missed a moral dimension. Robert seemed to want to name God as unjust. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Simplicitude is French for simplicity. — Bitter Crank
Anyway, my old Collins Dictionary offers either 'simplicitude' or 'simplism' - both having the same meaning so hopefully I'm saved from having to fall on my sword! — Robert Lockhart
These differences may be at the heart of the misunderstandings surrounding the existence of, or how to interpret, certain sorts of intuitive evidence. — The Great Whatever
This is really an over-read of what is occurring. Aphantasiacs most certainly can experience things. — Hanover
Well, I never said they couldn't, so I'm not sure of the relevance. — The Great Whatever
What is so absurd that we might find out that there's a large divide between people, some of whom can experience and some of whom can't? — The Great Whatever
I wouldn't expect them to behave the same, and in practice, no computer can make it past a few minutes under a Turing Test. If you're asking hypothetically whether they could behave the same, which is to ask whether there could be a computer that so mimicked human overt behavior that it was indistinguishable from a human with internal experience, I don't see why not. That is just to posit a p-zombie.Would you expect someone with no experiential states to behave overtly the same as those that have them? — Michael
Since I answered in the affirmative, this question is inapplicable. However, hypothetically, had I answered as you'd have assumed I would, my response would be to agree with you. If certain overt behaviors are necessarily linked to certain internal states, then obviously they are dependent upon one another.If not, is that because experiential states are the only things that can cause such behaviour or because experiential states necessarily emerge from the only things that can cause such behaviour (e.g. particular brain activity)? — Michael
But that seems such a straw man. Why would anyone suggest that overt behavioral differences are critical when assessing the significance of internal states? It would suggest that a quadriplegic with no muscle control whatsoever, but who has fully intact mental function is no different than a dead man. That I cannot act on my thoughts does not makes my thoughts not matter.Of course, this question only really matters if your claim that "there's a world of difference between having limited internal experience and entirely lacking the ability to experience" refers to a world of behavioural differences. — Michael
As we get better at sussing out phenomenological differences, more of them may become part of common knowledge. What is so absurd that we might find out that there's a large divide between people, some of whom can experience and some of whom can't? — The Great Whatever
The hyper-modern post figurative school would see only two pieces of juxtaposed steel on a street imposing a barrier to pedestrians and mentally noted that oddity. This school is notorious for its silence, as it shuns the use of symbols or sounds as an inappropriate figurative representation of reality. To write about it is to write about something else.They're inanimate objects, with no concerns at all. — Wosret
You can spit you some rhyme.Neither by connotation or denotation, only by location. — Cavacava
If presentism were right, then mental events in the past time did not exist. — quine
Presentism will delete your every experience occurred in the past. — quine
And then a picture of his profession-rattling book (which came out of his PhD dissertation): — Bitter Crank
There are some things worse than death, such as torture, and Jefferson regarded life in the prisons of the time to be of the same order. Which it was. — ernestm
Isn't this like asking what "set" means in the general, not in the particular, and being unable to offer the same meaning for "set" in the examples of:
1. Andy Murray won every set
2. He set the table
3. The set of all odd numbers has the same cardinality as the set of all even numbers
4. The Sun set at 8:00pm. — Michael
Speaking of dignity, are we. Good bye again, this time for good. — ernestm
Is it the case that I have an obligation to act towards X in a certain way solely because X has a "right" to be treated in a certain way? That would require quite a multiplicity of rights. Perhaps I should act in a moral way for reasons which don't require that I assume the existence of rights which cannot be infringed. — Ciceronianus the White
I think it's more appropriate to say we should or should not treat another person a certain way, rather than he/she has a "right" to be treated or not treated in a certain way. — Ciceronianus the White
If it isn't a quandary, what right do the women in Saudi Arabia (for example) have to be treated equal to men? A. there is no enforcement mechanism, and B. there is no higher good demanding such equality.There is no quandary presented, though, unless you think it necessary that the creator or governor of the immense universe thinks, or has somehow mandated, we creatures living here have certain "rights" or has granted us such, in order for there to be moral conduct. — Ciceronianus the White
This strikes me as a very non- Mormon comment. I'd expect their response to be that you've chosen to misinterpret the meaning of the trinity.As has been mentioned, in Christianity, the Trinity (God, Jesus, and the Holy Spirit) is considered to be one being with three different 'faces'. As you said about Mormonism, some denominations of Christianity choose to interpret the Trinity as three separate beings. — Javants
Could the same not be true about polytheistic religions, without being explicitly stated? In other words, all the Gods of that pantheon are, in fact, just the different personalities of the same God, which are being perceived as different beings. — Javants
Those cultures which are not monotheist don't believe in God, do they? — Metaphysician Undercover
