Seems likely you're not a parent. — tim wood
If whether or not one believes in God affects the way that they behave, then the claim about God, which you say that science makes, that God doesn't actually effect the world that we experience, is blatantly false. That's the thing about beliefs, they clearly have effect on the way that we behave. — Metaphysician Undercover
Science produces concepts, philosophy determines the objectivity of these concepts. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the things in concepts are non-existent? What about numbers and circles? — Metaphysician Undercover
But what about the concepts themselves? How would one make a falsifiable theory concerning the existence of concepts? Or is it the case that some of us just take it for granted that they are real, and some take it for granted that they are not real? — Metaphysician Undercover
Tell me, can science predict what I am going to do today? — Rich
Thereby subjugating every human attribute to adaptive necessity. — Wayfarer
Except for what matters about it. — Wayfarer
So here, you’re basically saying that everything that is not measurable, not quantitative, is subjective. So ‘it’s your business what you believe, but don’t think for a minute it’s scientifically true’. — Wayfarer
something which can be considered the basis for qualitative judgement — Wayfarer
All the bluff and bluster apart, that is what is at issue as far as I’m concerned. — Wayfarer
The point at issue, is the extent to which science does or doesn’t say anything meaningful about questions of quality. — Wayfarer
Many serious people claim it regularly.
the worldview that guides the moral and spiritual values of an educated person today is the worldview given to us by science. — Steve Pinker — Wayfarer
Consciousness mediates data by adding the ability to act on account of believing in different ways. — Janus
Isn't this the point in the lecture where you bring up flying spaghetti monsters? — T Clark
It's something that moves us, gets into our hearts. — T Clark
It is an uncomfortable thought that I have been strongly affected by someone whose motives are suspect or worse. — T Clark
Meaningful things, such as God and the supernatural, are asserted by most of those who hold the scientific worldview, to be non-existent. — Metaphysician Undercover
it actually decides what "is" meaningful and important, and denies the existence of that which it deems as not meaningful and important. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's why dualism is required, as you implied in your earlier post. Without dualism these features of the human being cannot be understood. — Metaphysician Undercover
the person holds the seemingly contradictory beliefs, "I am going to the store", and "I am not going to the store (right now)" — Metaphysician Undercover
The person is all ready to go to the store, and chooses a time to leave, randomly.. . — Metaphysician Undercover
they do not posses the same cognitive capacity to transcend to a level of autonomy that human beings can — TimeLine
They are not aware of themselves because they do not have consciousness — TimeLine
[language is] necessary to attain any sense of moral consciousness — TimeLine
what gives us 'humanity' or a 'soul' is our ability to love — TimeLine
being moral cannot be performed without consciousness, that our instinctual drives or impluses contain nothing of substance — TimeLine
do not see how any honest, rational person can accept the latter. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Wouldn't it make more sense to either genetically or technologically get rid of emotions instead of doing nothing more than pushing the boulder from the Myth of Sisyphus to attain some fleeting sense of happiness that serves no real purpose other than increasing the probability that our genes get passed on? — MonfortS26
The problem I have is more like science as the arbiter of what ought to be considered meaningful and important. — Wayfarer
It is quite usual to believe, nowadays, that 'science knows' or 'science proves' many things that science neither knows nor proves. I am engaged in trying to draw that out, and will continue to do so. — Wayfarer
A thermostat cannot have a belief without a behavioral correlate because there's complete identity between the behavior and the belief in the thermostat. — Hanover
The significant difference between the thermostat and the human belief is that the thermostat necessitates action, and in the human being belief doesn't necessarily result in action. One may or may not act on a belief. That's free will. — Metaphysician Undercover
If consciousness exists in belief(1) but not belief(2), they are different. — Hanover
So are you admitting that there is a distinction between my belief and the thermostat's, yet you just don't think it's relevant enough to warrant it having a different term attached to it? — Hanover
Is a proposition a linguistic statement? Are you now saying the thermostat has an attitude toward a linguistic statement? As best I can tell, all the spring does is expand, and that's what you call an "attitude"? — Hanover
This is an antiquated view of determinism, but regardless, it's irrelevant whether the thermostat's reaction and the human reaction are pre-determined. I've not argued that beliefs arise from an other world miracle substance. — Hanover
it's reasonable to argue that studies of the phenomenon of youth and childhood afford an objective (read: not just cultural) basis for some decision making. — tim wood
Parsifal was the Metropolitan Opera radio broadcast last Saturday. I had a nice long nap during the opera and when I woke up it was still going. There are parts of his operas that everybody likes, and long stretches where you really need to be a fan. — Bitter Crank
Wagner died in 1883. It's more like Nazis were Wagnerian sympathizers. — Bitter Crank
Do you suppose thermostats have phenomenal states? — Hanover
guess having an opinion bars one from discussing that opinion with someone who has an opposing view? — Hanover
I do think it is very clear that your claiming that a thermostat has a belief is not how the word belief is used among speakers of English. — Hanover
Apparently metal expanding and flipping a switch is a belief, so I'm not real clear why all physical reactions aren't beliefs. — Hanover
We all know that we are conscious, and we subjectively have no doubt about it. — Hanover
It's just a misuse of language to say a thermostat believes, and it's clear that something different is happening when I believe it's too hot and the thermostat switches on the furnace. — Hanover
Behavior is not what defines belief. It's just evidence of an internal state. If I'm shivering and exhibiting every sign of being cold, it is not necessary that I believe I'm cold. I might think I'm warm because I've become unable to distinguish cold from hot, or maybe I'm entirely numb, with no feeling at all and my body is reactively shivering. — Hanover
We can figure out (just as we can when computers submit to a Turing Test) when an entity is mimicking conscious like behavior and when it is truly conscious. — Hanover
No, I do believe that cats and dogs have beliefs too, but not thermostats or waving trees. — Hanover
Consider the way that paranormal scientific claims are treated - they're subjected to much higher standards of evidence than many other types of claims, — Wayfarer
Because modern science insists that only what is sensible (sense-able) is real — Wayfarer
I don't understand why people can't separate art from artist. It's fundamentally hypocritical, and indicative of our hero-worship celebrity culture; the heroine falls; we spit on her. — Noble Dust
I think consent laws are an effort to protect a class of people from exploitation and abuse. — tim wood
there are child-labor laws and a host of other laws protecting both children and adults in "imbalanced" relationships. — tim wood
And to restate my view, consent addresses inequality. I believe that same-age sex, without force or coercion and with mutual "consent," should be free from legal scrutiny. — tim wood
If behavior were belief you could, but it's not. Belief references a conscious state, — Hanover