Do you not see that 'brown' and 'dog' compose 'brown dog'? — quine
The second premise seems problematic. If lexical concepts can be composed of "lower level" concepts, then why must there be any termination to this composition? I don't see why mere composition should imply atomism. You appear to be assuming this, rather than demonstrating it. — Luke
(2) If concepts can be composed, then conceptual atomism is the case. — quine
Well, there's many options, but I would just say that you can't simply shrug off pan-psychism, is all. That "there is no good reason to believe it" -- you may find other solutions to the problem more convincing for x, y, or z reasons, or you may find the problem to be not a problem in the first place, but pan-psychism isn't just proposed for the hell of it, I'd say. — Moliere
It's about the scale and covert nature of this cyber warfare arsenal. Think how many people own a smart car or TV. How many of these people are just ordinary citizens and not criminals who warrant the attention of the CIA? — Sapientia
"An historic act of devastating incompetence!" — tom
Thankfully in the case of flipping coins both theoretical and experimental probabilities can be easily calculated. If the experimental probability deviates from the theoretical probability by a significant amount (either too many heads or too many tails than expected) we are justified to suspect the coin is biased/loaded. — TheMadFool
So it seems to me that the only path to -- rationally at least -- shrugging off pan-psychism is through rejection of the hard problem of consciousness in the first place (insofar that said rejection is based on reason, too, rather than simple frustration with what sounds like some ridiculous ideas). — Moliere
Your statement that animals lack consciousness is a simple falsehood. — Wayfarer
I don't know. It's not necessary to know one is having an experience in order to have an experience is it?
Do dogs experience hunger do you think? — bert1
I am inclined to regard corvids' memory of where they have stashed their food - the most able can remember up to 500 locations - as 'knowledge'. Just as a for instance. Wouldn't you call that knowledge? — mcdoodle
So the reason is that the CIA is irresponsible. I would say that the leak itself proves a degree of irresponsibility. — Metaphysician Undercover
I usually attribute some kind of feeling akin to excitement or pleasure to a dog when it wags its tail and jumps around in circles. Do you think that is unreasonable? — bert1
There are good arguments for panpsychism, one of them being that since humans have consciousness and humans evolved from non-human animals, these non-human animals should also have had some form of consciousness, albeit perhaps more rudimentary. — Nerevar
I don't think anyone here disputes that. The point about panpsychism is that it says electrons have some form of consciousness. — Wayfarer
I agree the single-celled organisms demonstrate some traits of awareness but I don't know if it is generally agreed that members of the plant kingdom exhibits awareness. Besides 'stimulus and response' might not equate to 'awareness' although it's probably a tricky distinction. — Wayfarer
Assange doesn't have the ability to assassinate anyone driving a smart car, transform your smart TV into a surveillance post, and thousands of other goodie goods. He has the ability to publish information. The two are hardly analogous. — Sapientia
4) We have nothing to hide, so why is this relevant?
Counter: Let me put it to you in a way you can understand. Trump has the ability to blow up your car at will and no one will know who did it. And that's just one tool he has, among multiple thousand. Even if you trusted Obama with these tools (which, by the way, were developed under the Obama presidency), do you really trust Trump to be responsible? — discoii
If you don't agree with panpsychism then I think you ought to be able to explain how intentionality and thought floated into the world from nowhere. — Cavacava
Isn't it simpler to suppose that these are properties are all actual or potential properties of matter. Perhaps 'human exceptionalism' is not nature's radical departure, but rather part of nature's natural progression. — Cavacava
Not sure I agree with electron's inner life, but an electron as well as all other matter must have a history, and perhaps history is all that matter as such can relate to us. — Cavacava
The evidence to which I was referring was evidence of AGW, not that it is a bad thing. If you can't see why it would be a bad thing, I suggest you ask somebody in Bangladesh or South Sudan. — andrewk
What the climate change deniers are doing is almost the opposite of skepticism. They are refusing to accept the mountain of evidence that is before them. Sometimes they even start saying nonsense like 'where's the proof?', showing that they don't even understand the difference between science and algebra. — andrewk
The basic problems of consciousness are just things like the nature of it, how it interacts with the physical, or emerges from the physical structurally, whether it's contingent or necessary. PP answers a lot of those questions. — Wosret
Your missing the point. Under panpsychism, it's not only the entire system from which conciousness emerges. It does so from every state. Each hard drive and memory stick, for example, has their own subjectivity. — TheWillowOfDarkness
In the given robot, there is not one instance of an experiencing subjectivity, but billions (the entire system, each hard drive, each memory stick, each atom that makes up every part, every electron, etc.). — TheWillowOfDarkness
If consciousness is inherent in matter, and is just a fundamental aspect, like space and time, then it solves a lot of problems,... — Wosret
I think this is a more attractive view, in that it allows for an evolutionary 'moment', as it were, when hominids 'became' conscious, without landing every fragment of fallen hair with a complex intrinsic nature. — mcdoodle
Secondly, assuming each hair has its own subjectivity, we don't know what that entails. It might be hairs don't feel pain or are rendered unconcious by the approach of cutting tools. It might well be hairs are, in terms of a manifestation in their own experience, unaffected by being cut. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Strictly speaking, they are just as special. Experience emerges from feet just as it does the brain-- and the same is true each atom, protons and electron, neutron, etc., In this context, there isn't just one "mind" to a body, but billions upon billions, where everything from a single electron to the whole body syestem has a mind of its own. In one person, there are more experiencing individuals than humans on Earth. — TheWillowOfDarkness
If we can only know experiences through having them, then we can't attribute them to others. But clearly we can attribute experiences to others,so why not to electrons?
I wonder whether there's a conflation here of different senses of 'subjective'. Experiences are 'subjective' in the sense that they're attributes of a subject. But facts about experiences are still perfectly objective facts about reality. — Philip Goff
There is no first real number after 0 with the standard order; there is an uncountable infinity of real numbers between 0 and any arbitrarily small but finite value that one chooses. However, they are all still individual real numbers, thus forming an analytic or compositional continuum, rather than a synthetic or true continuum. — aletheist
Please just make your point, if you have one. The real numbers constitute an analytic continuum, not a true continuum as defined by Peirce (and others). — aletheist
Right, there are no "missing" numbers; but that still means that the set of real numbers consists of individual numbers. A true continuum does not consist of individuals. — aletheist
Numbers are intrinsically discrete; and it is not a matter of whether this discrete thing adequately represents the real numbers, but whether it adequately represents true continuity. — aletheist