So then he doesn't get specific. Which sounds something like in there neighborhood of vague to me. Anyway, I have Mind in Life. I hope to get to it soon.in my view he doesn't wrestle with the question of ipseity, the nature of subjective awareness as such. — Wayfarer
I think we have at least a couple of major differences. Going back to an earlier conversation, I can definitely look at something, and be aware that I'm looking at it, at the same time. I can talk about my awareness of looking at it, and anything else about it, and I will still notice if something blocks my vision of the thing, moves it, throws paint on it... I wouldn't see it move or change if I was not still looking at it while discussing my awareness of looking at it.We have much in common physiologically speaking. I seems to me that the greatest divergence consists in the ways we each interpret the general nature of experience. — Janus
You and I seem to be very different. :rofl: This isn't the first time our conversation has made me think of things like aphantasia and anaduralia. I don't know which of us lacks this or that ability that the other has, but we experience life very differently.↪Patterner I don't know about you, but all my feelings seem physical, visceral, bodily, to me. Even mental associations, such as I may experience when reading, looking at artworks, listening to music or thinking about someone I love, evoke feelings I can only understand and describe as bodily. — Janus
I believe that's what Nagel means. I think "There's something it's likes to be a bat" means "There's something it feels like to be a bat." But not a physical feeling. At least not only physical feelings. Do you have a feeling of your own existence aside from your physical body? Yes, we feel when our skin is torn. But we have a feeling about pain. We feel different ways about different people. We feel a certain way about one genre of music, but differently about another. We have feelings about specific pieces of music. I have very strong feelings about various instrumental works be Bach, Beethoven, and others. The last half of Layla, by Derek and the a Dominoes is a good example. We feel certain ways about political issues and moral issues. We feel love and hate. Many different feelings and types of feelings. And it all combines into what it's like to be me.Does it just mean that the animal feels something then? — Janus
I believe that's what Nagel means. I think "There's something it's likes to be a bat" means "There's something it feels like to be a bat.". But not a physical feeling.Does it just mean that the animal feels something then? — Janus
I don't know enough about ChatGPT to know if it's a good example of the idea that's only half-baked in my head. I'm wondering what you mean by "playing with language". How does that come about? Can we program a computer to do that? If so, does that mean it's self-reflectively aware? Even if it doesn't claim to be? If it needs to claim to be, but doesn't, what is it about us that makes us claim to be, despite the fact that we aren't? What extra programming would we have to give the computer?ChatGPT doesn't play with language in the sense I mean. It is programmed to sample vast amounts of relevant language and predict the most appropriate sentences to any question as I understand it. It doesn't claim to be self-reflective either. — Janus
Not necessarily. I don't think subjective experience and self-reflective awareness are the same thing. If there's something it's like to be the entity, to the entity, then all the physical things and processes that make it up are not taking place "in the dark". I couldn't guess what level of complexity is needed for that subjective experience, but I wouldn't assume it doesn't happen until self-reflective awareness comes about.The idea of things going on "in the dark" may be an incoherent idea. Do things go on in the dark for animals if they cannot be self-reflectively aware? — Janus
I don't understand how this works. If we program computers to play with language in this way, if ChatGPT does it, would it falsely believe it is self-reflectively aware? It seems like pretending to be conscious.Are we really self-reflectively aware or are we just playing with language? — Janus
Well, all you say is certainly right. However, can you look at that paragraph of yours that I quoted and write it on paper, or type it, while doing fairly simple math? Something along the lines of 673x8. Or 435+62+787. It seems to me the things you are taking about are related ideas. One thing building on the other. But there's no connection between writing those sentences and sound math problems. Thinking entirely different types of thoughts is more difficult, and possibly impossible beyond a certain level of complexity.Having a multitude of different thoughts at exactly the same time, is exactly what a complex concept is. Consider a relatively simple complex concept, like "right angle triangle". That concept consists of "triangle", which is itself complex, and also "right angle" which is complex. So there's a number of different ideas tied up in understanding "right angle triangle". Now consider "Pythagorean theorem". This consists not only of "right angle triangle", but a bunch more ideas about the relationships between the lengths of the sides of that type of triangle. It appears that to adequately understand "Pythagorean theorem", a person must be able to have all these ideas in one's mind at the same time. — Metaphysician Undercover
I plead the 5th.Hopefully, not whilst driving.
Perhaps the law on the use of mobile phones whilst driving shows that even the Government accepts the difficulty in carrying out two acts both requiring different thoughts at the same time. — RussellA
Indeed. I'm sure it can be done to at least some degree, even if not to that which people generally assume. There's definitely a lot of jumping back and forth very quickly taking place.In practice, it seems that humans have great difficulty in having two different thoughts at (exactly) the same time. — RussellA
I'm sure at least some degree of muscle memory is involved in singing. Even with speaking. Neither as much as playing an instrument, though. Having played the piano for many years, I'm very familiar with it. An aspect of Mozart's extraordinary musical abilities was doubtless due to it. He is said to have composed pieces while performing other pieces. I would imagine that was possible because his muscle memory was so complete he wasn't thinking about the music he was performing at all. Which would free his mind for thinking about other music.The singing could have been employing a "muscle memory" rather than active thought, allowing you do carry out another task that did require an active thought. — RussellA
I did not try writing what I was speaking so that I would not be wondering that very thing. I also suggest both things be of longer duration than one word.I tried writing "four" whilst speaking "four". The problem was that it took me four times as long to write "four" as to speak "four", meaning that it was difficult to know whether I was thinking about writing the word at the same time as I was thinking about speaking the word. — RussellA
Neither the title of the thread nor your OP mention God or religion. I thought the idea would be to discuss the concept of omnipotence. I didn't know you are only interested in discussing God, and how omnipotence fits a particular religion's needs. I have less than no interest in such a discussion. But we are all entitled to discuss what we want to discuss. This is your thread, so have at it, and enjoy! :grin:You must come up with at least some premises which are objective i.e. omnipotent being(s) as God in the traditional religions, which we know of in their properties of the deities. — Corvus
I don't have to prove my logical inference any more than you have to prove yours. There is no reason to think an omnipotent being cannot choose to ceasr to exist.That is my logical inference. If you think it is not correct, then prove it. — Corvus
Talking about non-existent deities, and the characteristics people made up for them, is going to get you exactly the same place. Any ideas we come up with for our hypothesized beings are as valid as the ideas people in the past came up with for their hypothesized beings.Talking about a non-existing hypothetical being with omnipotence is not really going you get you anywhere. — Corvus
Do you have any support for this idea?If a being is omnipotent, then the being cannot die. If being can die, then it is not an omnipotent being. — Corvus
Of course that's what I'm talking about. I have literally said I'm talking about a hypothetical omnipotent being. I said it twice, in fact.You seem to be talking about an omnipotent being which doesn't exist. — Corvus
I try to test this on myself from time to time. For example, I just wrote "Four score and seven years ago" while singing Yesterday. I sang continuously. There were times when I stopped writing after one word or another, but I kept the song going, and started writing again.However, if you have ever taken a look at how this multitasking actually occurs, you'll see that there is constant switching of which act receives priority.
— Metaphysician Undercover
That is exactly what I am saying, attention is switched between events, first one, then the other. But not at the same time. — RussellA
Yes, that's the real question. I'm just saying you can receive conflicting feelings from your finger simultaneously. I wonder if, if the ice and match are close enough together, it might feel as though the conflicting feelings are coming from the exact same spot.I can have the thought of coldness, and can then have the thought of hotness, but the question is, is it possible to have a single thought of both coldness and hotness at the same time. — RussellA
That's having contradictory feelings in your finger at the same time, not having contradictory thoughts at the same time. If one part of your finger is touching an ice cube, and you hold a match to another part of your finger, then you would be feeling hot and cold in your finger at the same time.If it were possible to have two contradictory thoughts at the same time, then I could feel pain in my finger and not feel pain in my finger at the same time. — RussellA
If you did not exist, then you would not be writing that post. Perhaps you were created in a lab. Or you are a computer program. Or you are an eternal being that has always existed, and you erase your memory every so often in order to remain sane.If I had not been born, then I would not be writing this post
I am writing this post
Therefore I was born — RussellA
I am not talking about any God/god/deity at all. I am speaking about a hypothetical omnipotent being.Omnipotence is just one of the alleged properties of God, and before we could discuss about omnipotence, it would be clearer, if you let me know which God you are talking about, and what type of existence your God has. — Corvus
Is the statement "The force cannot be killed, because it is not a biological bodily existence" an established fact? Perhaps a natural law? If so, I would be interested in hearing about it.From this perspective, God could be a force, which was omnipotent. The force cannot be killed, because it is not a biological bodily existence. Could it kill itself? How can it kill itself, when it is impossible to be killed? — Corvus
Being omnipotent, I would think the being could assume any type of existence it wanted, at any time it wanted, and still be able to do whatever it wanted at any moment. Assume the form of a grain of sand for a million years. Then human form for a billion. Then the form of a cluster of galaxies for a few minutes. Then a solar flare. A rainstorm. On and on. I would think the important aspect of the being at all times, regardless of the form it assumes, is it's omnipotence.First, we need to make clear which God we are talking about, and then what type of existence the God has, before going on to talking about the other properties of God. — Corvus
I do not. Nor do I believe that story actually took place. I also don't believe the Marvel story of the Beyonder.The bible says he is the almighty God, and he has demonstrated some miraculous events in the bible, but do you have any evidence to support that story? — Corvus
I would say this depends on the particular belief system. For example, the Bible says man was made in God's image, and that Adam and Eve hid when they heard the sound of God walking in the Garden. So it is possible some people believe God was in human form. In Marvel comics, the omnipotent being known as the Beyonder put himself in human form. I don't know of a reason an omnipotent being could not be in human form. Do you?But then is God in bodily existence just like humans? No, my reasoning tells me it isn't. If God was a biological bodily existence, then s/he will get old and die just like humans. — Corvus
Yes, I did. I am no longer saying they are invalid, and have not said it in several posts. Can we move on?You definitely said they are invalid. Hence this talking is going on now. — Corvus
Ok, they are not to be clarified, they are to be verified. How do you propose to verify whether they are right or wrong? What is the method of achieving verification? Would it involve saying why you make these assumptions? Or saying anything whatsoever beyond making the original statements? Or is stating the assumptions the beginning and end of the verification process?Why should assumption be supported or clarified? Assumptions are made so they could be either verified to be right or wrong. — Corvus
Can you support this? I an not familiar enough with beings of force and spirit to know why they cannot die/cease to be.force and spirit is outside of the boundary of physical death. — Corvus
Can you clarify this? I don't know why an omnipotent being could not kill itself. If its idea of "winning" is no longer existing, could it not make that possible?Omnipotence means that it is powerful to win, resist or make anything possible. If omnipotent being could be killed either by itself or others, then it means that the omnipotent being was not omnipotent — Corvus
You need not supply the reason why your statements are valid in the first place, but I must supply the reason why they are not?you must supply the reason why they are invalid. — Corvus
Correct. Free will means, regardless of what actually happened, whether the cup of coffee was picked up or not, it could have gone the other way. Unlike a pool table, where, once in motion, the balls can only end up in one exact arrangement, due to the laws of physics. The same with all the air molecules in a room. We know statistically how they will behave. But we can't calculate even one molecule's position one minute into the future, because there are more factors involved than we are capable of keeping track of. But all of those factors determine where each molecule will be in one minute, and there is no possibility that they can be anywhere else.At 1pm a person has the thought to reach out for a cup of coffee.
Free will means that at 1pm that person could equally have had the thought not to reach out for the cup of coffee.
— RussellA
Free will is not about the thoughts, it concerns the acts. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't see any reason to assume this. We can't know such things about a being of force and spirit. And we don't know that death cannot come to non-physical things.But if the existence of God is non-bodily existence such as force or spirit, then self killing would be impossible, because force and spirit is outside of the boundary of physical death. — Corvus
I imagine killing an omnipotent being would be more than somewhat difficulty. I don't know why an omnipotent being couldn't kill itself.How can one kill someone who is omnipotent? Omnipotence means that it is powerful to win, resist or make anything possible. If omnipotent being could be killed either by itself or others, then it means that the omnipotent being was not omnipotent, hence it is a paradox to believe that omnipotent being could kill itself. — Corvus
This is not the same as:Surely if a being is omnipotent, then he can reincarnate himself too. — Corvus
I do. If there wasn't, we wouldn't perceive the same thing. No matter how we test or verify it, we see the same thing. The reason is because we independently perceive the same thing outside of our minds. That's the function of our perceptions. Why would we have these gelatinous orbs that seem to let us know what is out there, a conclusion which all of our scientific methods of studying confirms, if that wasn't what's going on? We can philosophize about it all we want, but that's what's going on.Do you know there's a realm lying beyond yours and other persons perceptions that's analogous to those perceptions? — ucarr
I had hoped for some specifics. If what consciousness seems to be is an illusion, what is it really? What is the explanation for the existence of the illusion? How do the physical properties of matter and laws of physics give rise to the subjective experience of the physical processes that they are obviously acting out, as opposed to those physical processes taking place without the subjective experience (as Chalmers says, "in the dark")?Anyway, I think I've explained my position about as well as i can, — Janus
As it's in this world, it's obviously not otherworldly.It certainly doesn't seem otherworldly to me — Janus
Since there is no physical explanation for consciousness, it's possible consciousness is not physical through and through.and this world definitely seems physical through and through. — Janus
The physical is certainly an essential ingredient.From a neuroscientific perspective it does seem to be a physical process. — Janus