Yes, but it's hard to believe them when they say there's nothing it's 'like' to experience being us, unless they are philosophical zombies.
I think it's far more likely they know what it's "like", but they're convinced it has to be an illusion on other grounds, so they argue that there is no actual subjective experience. — Marchesk
Dennett understands what Chalmers is saying and vice versa. They just don't agree. — Marchesk
can current civilization be inspired by anything at all from tribal cultures? — 0 thru 9
Still unsure what the components of 'Western Civilization' are, and if it is distinct from the equally confused concept of 'White Civilization'. — Maw
It stands to reason that some groups will have engaged in more violence prior to western influence, and some will have engaged in less — VagabondSpectre
environmental conditions can have drastic and disparate effects on simple social structures — VagabondSpectre
Well at least you didn't point me toward Howard Zinn — VagabondSpectre
Resource availability/scarcity affects so many aspects of possible and optimal survival strategies that they are beyond counting. From the perspective of thermodynamics, the more scarce energy is, the fewer possible courses of action are available which will yield a positive return. Energy economy and upward efficiency on return (not wasting energy) become very important for success along with careful resource management practices (to not overtax or squander the few renewable resources that are available). In the context of jungle and savanna hunter-gatherers who live in somewhat harsh bush environments with a low upward limit on resource availability per acre per year, having a peaceful and war-free society (the kind that leaderless egalitarianism upholds) can wind up saving a ton of potentially lost and wasted energy in unnecessary warfare. If the environment was less harsh and more bountiful, then instead of moving from place to place once resources are depleted, a more successful strategy might be to claim a rich area and settle down permanently. Many factors play a role in what cultural and survival strategies are possible and popular, but the factor of resource scarcity really should not be underestimated, and is evidently crucial for sustaining many traditional hunter-gatherer cultures. — VagabondSpectre
The stability of indigenous ways of life are dependent on steady state environments. — VagabondSpectre
a crisis in suicide rates concentrated in one or two demographics should not be used to hastily generalize the overall mental health and therefore happiness of the rest of the population. — VagabondSpectre
even the poor of western societies have more practical freedom and rights than HG people — VagabondSpectre
in the west we're less likely to die from violence of any kind. — VagabondSpectre
It's possible that skeptical American coroners are pushing down the suicide numbers in America, but the clumping possibility is why I asked for per capita suicide rates to begin with and not potentially misleading statements like how can the west be more happy if suicide is the leading cause of death. — VagabondSpectre
Whether or not the west will be able to continue existing is a bit of a complex subject, but at least until the end of oil (30-50 years) or unless rapid climate change occurs, we'll be doing fine. If we can develop a battery that can outperform a tank of gasoline then oil won't even be an issue and perhaps the climate could recover. The extraction of energy resources from third world countries would no longer be required, and given the right advancements in materials and construction, countries like China might no longer rely on imported materials. Energy and infrastructure developments (I.E, mobile/automated electric construction) could solve agriculture and food exploitation issues as well. Maybe these are pie in the sky ideas, but the problems western societies (and humanity as a whole) are facing are being given more and more consideration every day. — VagabondSpectre
The examples provided to bolster this claim that such debates are meaningless are inadequate. They do not offer an example of a meaningless debate. Rather, they offer an example of two sides working from different frameworks(talking past one another). It does not follow that such a debate is meaningless. When it is the case that two are arguing from different frameworks, then it is the case that both sides are employing meaningful, but different linguistic frameworks. They very well could be said to be arguing about different things despite using the same name. The frameworks are nevertheless meaningful. So, it is not the case that the debate is meaningless. — creativesoul
Doesn't explanatory power hold value equal to verification/falsification? — creativesoul
I would say that they understand the meaning of the word just fine. What other's disagree with is not the meaning of "consciousness" -- it's well explicated — Moliere
The words “conscious” and “consciousness” are umbrella terms that cover a wide variety of mental phenomena. Both are used with a diversity of meanings, and the adjective “conscious” is heterogeneous in its range, being applied both to whole organisms—creature consciousness—and to particular mental states and processes—state consciousness — Rosenthal 1986, Gennaro 1995, Carruthers 2000.
To say "Nietzsche believed that the height of humanity was achieved through socialism" is just plainly false. Or to say, "Plato argued that the mind is a blank slate upon which our empirical senses impinges" is also plainly false. — Moliere
I'd just say there's a difference between verification and meaning, as well as verification and falsehood -- so there is no conflict in saying that certain statements are not verifiable yet are either meaningful, or true, or false. — Moliere
Because consciousness is the feeliness of the world -- that it feels like something. Awareness is another aspect of the mind people tend to use "conscious" for, but it's not what's being talked about. — Moliere
My suspicion is that the words will mean -- they are not nonsense -- and that the meaningfulness of the debate will be similar to the 5th postulate: It will be relative to a philosophical attitude, a community, a set of beliefs, or some such. So what is important to some is not important to others, and vice versa, primarily because of other beliefs that are being held as true or at least viewed as desirable to retain. — Moliere
Population growth eventually puts a strain on resources, which inevitably leads to competition and aggression. — VagabondSpectre
Overall physical health is something that the west performs better in than anywhere else. Longer lifespans and lower child mortality rates does really say it all. — VagabondSpectre
It does not actually follow that if suicide rates are lower a society is more happy; reasons for suicide can extend beyond the presence of happiness; the suicide of some doesn't necessarily represent widespread unhappiness in the overall population; living in the bush in and of itself may alter the nature and perception of suicide (you can disappear and never be seen from again and nobody would know what happened; being depressed for an extended period of time in the bush could increase the likelihood of accidental death or failure to subsist, thereby reducing the possibility of suicide, etc...). — VagabondSpectre
If any of the citations you've provided speak of suicide I apologize for missing it, if so and otherwise, can you direct me to any reliable data assessing mental health statistics in hunter-gatherer societies? — VagabondSpectre
The west is decidedly better at enduring and achieving change; we've downright mastered it. — VagabondSpectre
This is just factually inaccurate. Suicide is not the leading cause of death for any age group, at least in America (the most readily available statistics): — VagabondSpectre
At least some of the Yanomami violence is inherent to its culture, and an increase of violence in response to uncertainty and competition seems to be a component of that culture. — VagabondSpectre
I'm actually examining the first examples I encountered by following the google search you've linked it me to. — VagabondSpectre
Regarding pillaging/unsustainability, etc., we're on the path toward stable technology and renewable energy, and it's not as if every non-western nation has been thoroughly pillaged in order to pay the west's bill. The west does also produce wealth and could plausibly continue existing without exploiting third world nations. — VagabondSpectre
Come on! Unicorns aren't hard to understand, anymore than drgaons or wizards are. They're just fictional creations. That doesn't make them meaningless. — Marchesk
Now an Invisible Pink Unicorn has an inherent contradiction in what sort of thing it's supposed to be, so that falls under the umbrella of incoherency, which was the point of the term (to parody incoherent religious concepts). Just like a four sided triangle is an incoherent concept. But a triangle in a time travel story isn't incoherent, it's just part of a fictional story. — Marchesk
Is that somehow different from saying that consciousness is an illusion? And don't they understand the meaning of the word in responding like this? — Moliere
What metric do you use to determine that a child has learned how to speak? Is there really some set of criteria you apply, or do you just understand the words being said? — Moliere
Surely it's possible to be misunderstood. If you said consciousness was awareness, for instance, then in the debate on conscioussness you'd be using the term incorrectly. — Moliere
Just because there is the possibility that someone doesn't understand a term, but only the grammar, doesn't mean that everyone using said term is in the same situation.
Consider the 5th postulate of geometry. The same would hold there. All that one would have to do is append a "not" in the appropriate place, and yet could get by without understanding the 5th postulate of geometry. — Moliere
I like now & then to quote Ramsey:
I think we realize too little how often our arguments are of the form:-- A.: "I went to Grantchester this afternoon." B: "No I didn't." — Srap Tasmaner
I'd say as long as both sides can articulate the other's then the propositions that two people are using to debate have meaning. So in the case of consciousness I can say what it would mean to believe in property dualism, eliminative materialism, epiphenomenalism, and panpsychism -- I know what the propositions are, and I know why I would argue for or against each of these. — Moliere
if two people arguing understand one another, and can articulate each other's position -- then it's just true that the debate is not nonsense. — Moliere
consciousness is the fact that the world feels like something. Pizza tastes like pizza, and not nothing, or carrots. Brahms has a certain quality of sound. We experience the world and experiences feels like something. — Moliere
To be wrong in the debate would be to take a false position. So an eliminative materialist will commonly say that such feeling is an illusion of the mind, or some such. If consciousness is an illusion of the mind, has no reality outside of this, then we'd say that all the sorts of beliefs that attempt to explain consciousness are false. — Moliere
If two people can disagree while being able to explicate the position of who they disagree with then that's a good indicator that the terms are being used the same. — Moliere
Better already exists as a comparison in language. There's no problem saying that MJ or LJ are better than the average player. You will get consensus on that. And better here means superior statistics, MVP awards and all-star selections, championships, and a general recognition of rare ability while watching a player play the game. — Marchesk
And so then people are free to choose what criteria they wish to use.
This isn't a matter of better being meaningless, it's rather imprecise and opinionated. — Marchesk
The Hadza happen to be semi-nomadic hunter-gatherers, and so are Eskimo, but if I've not addressed hunter-gatherers specifically enough then it's your fault for not naming a specific group with which I can do an apples to apples comparison with a contemporary western society. — VagabondSpectre
Living in an egalitarian environment isn't the same as having more freedom or being free from coercion or being free from violence, it more or less means that no individual has extra power or authority. The Hadza abide and enforce their own cultural institutions through third-party punishment where the most common means of preemptively resolving a possibly violent conflict is for a band to split and form separate camps. — VagabondSpectre
You generally require a group to survive in regions such as the Hadza occupy, and survival necessitates daily hunting and foraging, which makes all individuals beholden to the norms of Hadza groups. — VagabondSpectre
The fact that the Hadza have a territory large enough to permit the splitting of groups is a necessary environmental reality which allows for the violence avoidance of group-splitting in the first place. Resource scarcity or overpopulation which could threaten this mechanic might lead to catastrophe. — VagabondSpectre
it is indeed a myth that hunter-gatherers are completely free from the ubiquitous human problems of violence and injustice — VagabondSpectre
I recommend reading the article by William Lomas as it very directly addresses the issue we seem to be having: I'm not adhering to the old school primitive savage stereotype that portrays all hunter-gatherers as violent and backward; I'm rebuking the newer stereotype that portrays all hunter-gatherer society as better than western culture by virtue of innate peace and harmony with nature, or in terms of degrees of freedom or freedom from coercion. — VagabondSpectre
78% (pg. 21) of Hadza die from illness and disease though, and they live shorter lives on average. — VagabondSpectre
The Hadza, the !Kung, and Eskimo groups are three examples of nomadic hunter-gatherers which are far from perfect and statistically live less long, die more often due to violence, and have significantly higher child mortality rates, and the two latter groups additionally practice infanticide. — VagabondSpectre
Suicide and suicide trends aren't necessarily a measure of a civilization's merits. But also, citation please. — VagabondSpectre
Many Amazonian groups practice tribal warfare involving stark levels of violence (surprise attacks in villages involving the beating, rape, and murder; torture). The Yanomami people for instance dabble in agriculture, so perhaps you wouldn't accept them as an example of an imperfect hunter-gatherer group? Western presence in the Amazon region may be one of the root causes of exacerbated violence among the Yanomami (by causing resource scarcity and anxiety among groups mainly), but it also shows how fragile indigenous societal systems can actually be. When the Hadza people inevitably face enough loss of livable territory that allows them to avoid conflict by moving away (or some other crisis which forces settlement such as population growth) then they too will experience rising levels of inter and intra-group violence as their existing conflict resolution mechanisms are strained or no longer function. — VagabondSpectre
There's some ambiguity in the term "western world" but I thought that we were referring to first world nations who have adopted contemporary western technology and standards, where food, medicine, and education are actually guaranteed human rights. We can indeed sustain these things given our steady technological improvements, and one day they might be available in every nation... — VagabondSpectre
So what I’m saying is that by concentrating on the aspects of metaphysics that recognisably relate to the Aristotelian tradition, then you do have at least a ‘domain of discourse’ within which their might be rational discussion. — Wayfarer
According to our western moral and medical prowess, a young girl being married off deprives her of sexual freedom, presents a real threat to her physical, sexual, and mental health, and denies her opportunities for education and independence. — VagabondSpectre
John was wrong about the color of the tie. — StreetlightX
But one knows or does not know the color of the tie. — StreetlightX
I don't think that a shared metric for deciding what answer is superior is required for a meaningful debate. That would make a debate end, but many debates do not end and yet are still meaningful. Agreement is not the basis of meaning, nor does there need to be some metric for statements to be meaningful. — Moliere
some people like a higher degree of decidability, and some people don't care either way. — Moliere
In the debate on consciousness it is understood what it means to be wrong. Further, "consciousness" is clearly defined. — Moliere
But just because I'm not interested in some debate that does not then mean that everyone over there interested in it is speaking gobbledeegoop. — Moliere
It seems to be arguing something like 'religion relies on faith, metaphysics is like religion, therefore we can't say anything objective about metaphysics'. But by concentrating on particular aspects of the Aristotelian tradition of metaphysics - and, after all, the term 'metaphysics' was invented specifically in relation to Aristotle's works - it is possible to at least converse meaningfully about specific metaphysical ideas and doctrines, as I am attempting to do with the discussion about the ontological status of numbers and universals. I think there is a central theme in that discussion, about metaphysics generally, which has considerable consequences for culture and philosophy. — Wayfarer
The reason many positivists have such an aversion to metaphysics, is because if mathematical platonism is true, then their preferred philosophical model of naturalism and/or materialism is not. — Wayfarer
Does superstring theory, or colliding 11 dimension branes in the multiverse count as a meaningful scientific debate? I think so, on a theoretical grounds, but some have said it's pure metaphysics and shouldn't be in science. — Marchesk
There is a consensus that both players are all-time greats at basketball, but there isn't a consensus as what counts as being greater between the two (which often means the best ever).
And yet there are many discussions on this. What happens is that the Lebron James supporters will list criteria that supports their claim that Lebron is better, and reasons why Jordan is not. And the Jordan supporters will do the same.
This isn't because they don't understand each other, it's because they don't agree. Similar to political debates where a conservative and a liberal will base their arguments on their political persuasion. They can usually understand each other, but they don't agree on the politics of the other side's position. — Marchesk
focusing only on those words is cherry picking, and does not account for the words we judge as being "easy to define" through the Socratic Method. — Samuel Lacrampe
Most words judged as hard to define have resulted in more agreements than disagreements. E.g. The definition of 'knowing' as: 'justify' + 'true' + 'belief', is mostly agreed upon; and those who dispute this definition nevertheless agree that it is close to the mark, as the exceptions found were rare. — Samuel Lacrampe
(1) As far as I know, it is the best method we have. — Samuel Lacrampe
(2) Even if we do not reach a perfect definition, the method gets us closer to it. — Samuel Lacrampe
(3) When we do not reach a perfect definition, it is still that very method that allows us to know that. — Samuel Lacrampe
The thing is you can accuse political debates of having this problem. Does that mean the issues being debated lack meaning? — Marchesk
Looks like this is where we disagree anyways, — Moliere
I don't think you'll find your standard of meaningful debate outside of philosophy, though. It's just how human beings are -- they become attached to certain positions and argue for them. Scientific theory changes not so much because of pure rational debate, though that is a part of science, but also because stubborn old codgers who love their ideas die, and the young aren't attached to them. — Moliere
So what is it to have a meaningful debate, then? And by "meaning" are you talking about linguistic meaning (which the use of "nonsense" or "senseless", two terms that I think are different, seems to imply) or are you talking about meaning in the sense of the point of it all, the reason why a debate would take place? — Moliere
Your insistence on talking about philosophers instead of philosophizing about the topic at hand begs the question: Is the topic so hard for you that it is pointless to explore it for yourself without appealing to other's opinion? — Samuel Lacrampe
Now I take it that if we can detail not just our own beliefs but the beliefs of others, and others can do the same for us, then that demonstrates that what people are saying is meaningful -- it's not just a nonsense that an individual has come up with. — Moliere
So your argument is an appeal to authority. — Samuel Lacrampe
The fact is a lot of philosophers have used the method in their philosophy: Aristotle, Aquinas, C.S. Lewis, Peter Kreeft. — Samuel Lacrampe
Do you disagree that concepts have essential properties? — Samuel Lacrampe
Do you disagree that the essential properties of the concept 'triangle' are 'flat surface' + '3 straight sides'? Do you disagree we know this because we cannot falsify the hypothesis by coming up with an example of the concept which does not contain these properties? — Samuel Lacrampe
The only thing I've said is backwards are reasons for infanticide. — VagabondSpectre
we also have more reliable diets on average (freedom from starvation and food insecurity). — VagabondSpectre
I imagine hunter-gatherer children generally didn't die of malnutrition and starvation but instead actual infanticide, and for reasons other than just food insecurity. — VagabondSpectre
How much time do you spend obtaining and processing your food? Is your house, computer, and internet a necessity? Would you give it all up if only you had a primitive Eden? — VagabondSpectre
Granted, the Hadza, have 2 hour work days, and the rest of the time they sit around gambling in boredom (metal arrow heads, knives, honey and such), with nothing else to bother accomplishing. — VagabondSpectre
Pointing out that leaders of small groups can wind up being sadistic is not racist. — VagabondSpectre
Cultural practices which exploit the innocent exist among some indigenous peoples and it's not racist to point this out. — VagabondSpectre
The west doesn't guarantee it either, but it does better on average. — VagabondSpectre
Seems like a false dichotomy. I would prefer not to die of exposure because that's the cultural and therefore justified norm. I'll take a hospice over a tent in the woods any-day. How about you? — VagabondSpectre
You've decided to impugn my character instead of addressing my point that bushmen cannot afford to care for their elderly like we can, and while we could always do better than we currently do, we sure beat the pants off a tent in the woods. — VagabondSpectre
Here's a quote from the article you cited. "Girls are around 14 years old before they begin regular food gathering and water- and wood-collecting. This is in spite of the fact that they may be married before this age. Boys are 16 years old or over before they begin serious hunting. Children do amazingly little work.” — VagabondSpectre
is WWF saying that we've taken out a loan on another half a planet? — VagabondSpectre
You're basically saying archeology and anthropology are hopeless endeavors because we don't have perfectly representative remnants. — VagabondSpectre
At first I thought you believed traditional ways of life are just the bee's knees, but now I see you think it's racist to say western civilization is somehow better than any other civilization.
Is that correct? — VagabondSpectre
Should we take from this that being Leo Tolstoy or being rich and famous constitutes a disaster? If he did commit suicide, does that mean his life was objectively a disaster or not worth living or that the lives of his servants were more worthwhile? — VagabondSpectre
If I had to make a serious guess as to why suicide rates are increasing, I would say it has to do with a rise in emotional and mental stress, and/or a reduction in forces which have previously mitigated suicide. Working in a cubicle is almost certainly less emotionally healthy than hunting or working your own farm (and can seem bereft of the kind of existential pat on the back traditional living can provide), but in the end the boons of centralized economies and long distance trading means working in cubicles leads to fewer of our children starving or suffering malnutrition. — VagabondSpectre
Without the cities we wouldn't have the medical and human capital that makes that possible, and our massively increased average lifespans and low infant mortality rates are testament to this — VagabondSpectre
Perhaps if they had property rights, established farms and infrastructure (along with the ensuing inequalities), there would have been a place for her to be cared for. — VagabondSpectre
“What kind of development is this when the people lead shorter lives than before? They catch HIV/AIDS. Our children are beaten in school and won’t go. Some become prostitutes. We are not allowed to hunt. They fight because they are bored and get drunk. They are starting to commit suicide. We never saw this before. Is this “development”?” — Roy Sesana of the Botswana Bushmen
“We are against the type of development the government is proposing. I think some non-Indians’ idea of “progress” is crazy! They come with these aggressive ideas of progress and impose them on us, human beings, especially on indigenous peoples who are the most oppressed of all. For us, this is not progress at all.” — Olimpio, of the Guajajara tribe in the Brazilian Amazon
‘Mining will only destroy nature. It will only destroy the streams and the rivers and kill the fish and kill the environment – and kill us. And bring in diseases which never existed in our land.’ ‘We are not poor or primitive. We Yanomami are very rich. Rich in our culture, our
language and our land. We don’t need money or possessions. What we need is respect: respect for our culture and respect for our land rights.’ — Davi Kopenawa, Yanomami
It's like having a gun cocked against our heads — Guarani-Kaiowa, Brazil
We are committing suicide because we have no land — Unnamed Guarani, Brazil
‘My father said that before the whites [came] we had hardly any illnesses. In 1984 my father died of a lung infection. At the time of [the building of the road] everyone got flu and measles and everyone died’
"We have been in long lilim long before the companies came in… in the past our life was peaceful, it was so easy to obtain food. You could even catch the fish using your bare hands – we only needed to look below the pebbles and rocks or in some hiding holes in the river. The people are frequently sick. They are hungry. They develop all sorts of stomach pains. They suffer from headaches. Children will cry when they are hungry. Several people including children also suffer from skin diseases, caused by the polluted river. Upper patah used to be so clean.’ — Ngot laing, 53, chief of long lilim community
‘When i was a child life was easier because there was forest, enough food and we made farinha [manioc flour] and fished. We made our own sugar from the forest bees. I was born in amambai and it was an indigenous village then. I think things are much worse now. We are surrounded by ranchers here. They have fenced us in and they won’t let us in to hunt armadillos and partridges. They won’t even let us look for medicinal plants on the farms. The time when we used to get honey from the bees is over because there is no forest left. There is nothing for the indian now. He has to look for everything in the town now. So that’s why the young are committing suicide because they think the future will be worse’ — Adolfin Nelson, limão verde, 1996
‘First they make us destitute by taking away our land, our hunting and our way of life. Then they say we are nothing because we are destitute.’ — Jumanda Gakelebone, Gana Bushman, Botswana
This is a link to a google scholar search, so I'm not sure which paper you're referencing. — VagabondSpectre
working in cubicles leads to fewer of our children starving or suffering malnutrition. — VagabondSpectre
...before they had to spend all their time hunting, foraging, and processing. — VagabondSpectre
It is quite relevant to point out that infanticide and violence are inherent in some non-western ways of life. — VagabondSpectre
in some ways we treat the lowest members of our society (criminals) better than they can afford to treat their most beloved. — VagabondSpectre
I'll demonstrate that it stands to reason with the following: — VagabondSpectre
Not being deprived of education generally means not being engaged in labour of some kind, and it also tends to absolve them (especially girls) of an economic/cultural/traditional need to marry at what we consider to be an extremely young age. — VagabondSpectre
We don't need another half a planet, we just need to not run out of oil before we can diversify away from it. — VagabondSpectre
The bones themselves tell us about the age of the deceased (and in numbers, their average lifespan), and the condition of the bones can tell us about causes of death like violence or child-birth (and in numbers average cause of death). — VagabondSpectre
We know from anthropological research that on the whole, ancient tribal life was rife with early demise and hardship. It would be exhausting to present every applicable metric to actually prove my point, so perhaps you could point out a non-western civilization which fares better than our own in a specific metric of your choosing? — VagabondSpectre
the average child is less likely to die early or be exploited than in the past. — VagabondSpectre
We're making moves to bring a universal end to the exploitation of children; things are getting better. — VagabondSpectre
We're currently at a place where injustice has been reduced more than ever before — VagabondSpectre
Things could get worse and then maybe we can call the whole thing a disaster, but until then I think we're performing passably. — VagabondSpectre
I have made no presumptive assertions. nomadic hunter-gatherer communities are not exempt from bad leadership, disease, famine, hardship (inducing infanticide), warfare, etc...
Warfare and bad leadership being equal (it depends on the time and place), disease, famine, hardship, infanticide, and premature death are all things that occur less frequently in the western world (and on average in the world of today) than any other society and globally at any other time. We have greatly extended lifespans thanks to medicine which can keep us alive through afflictions, and thanks to better living conditions which is an added health bonus. — VagabondSpectre