I agree with you if we are talking generally, but people (in my experience, usually dualists) try to use their viewpoint on the mind to defend a viewpoint on something that matters (free will or the existence of non-physical objects). It usually is not argued for intially, but is a careover or a requirment for another belief. — Chany
For the dualist, the physicalist has physical matter somehow produce the mind and consciousness, the mechanics of which has not been illustrated. For the physicalist, the dualist has two different substances on different modes of existence interact, the mechanics of which have not been illustrated. — Chany
Yes, minds clearly interact with bodies. You are assuming that immaterial causes cannot interact with physical causes, i.e. you are assuming your premise. — Chany
1. If physicalism is true, then physical matter produces the mind and consciousness.
2. It is not the case that physical matter produces the mind and consciousness.
Therefore:
3. Physicalism is false. — Chany
Such a thought is called 'epiphenomenalism'. Epiphenomenalism is a kind of dualism. Many philosophers reject epiphenomenalism. — quine
If dualism is true, then mind is not spatio-temporal, and body is spatio-temporal. — quine
I'm asking in what sense strong emergentism and non-reductive physicalism are not forms of dualism, as laid out in the OP. — Marchesk
The circus peanut-in-chief has his Goebbels at his side...the circle is nearly complete. Oh, well...America had a good 240 year run (not perfect, sure, but we generally kept democracy chugging along pretty smoothly for most of that time) — Arkady
Don't recall the details (my memory is getting about as good as my note taking abilities), but I'm guessing these moves are questionable according to the 4th Geneva Convention (and related protocols/policies), and the 1951 Refugee Convention. — jorndoe
Can you prove they don't...or...can you prove you do? — John
This doesn't seem to me to be an answer as to why or how the word 'purpose' can have an adequate substitute of one's own choosing. It's an answer to another question. — mcdoodle
I'm suspicious of the use of the passive voice. '...is tested against reality' does not name the tester. '...an individual is a conjecture..' by what or whom? The implication is that there is an agent. Well, who or what is the agent? Life tends to beget life. But is that 'purpose'? — mcdoodle
I don't understand the value of such a remark. Who could usefully argue for or refute it? I'm a great advocate of neo-Darwinism in (as neo-Darwinists might say) its niche. But to think of it as a guide to say political discourse, or aesthetics, or ethics, would be, in my view, an error. — mcdoodle
The question is whether a non-deterministic universe necessarily chaotic. — Rich
For some reason,Tom does not seem to believe that quantum mechanics is probabilistic. — Metaphysician Undercover
Every human being is conscious. — quine
Given that almost all knowledge in inductive in nature, we cannot prove most things absolutely false. — Chany
If we have a bunch of good reasons for believing determinism to be true and no good reasons to believe determinism false, then we can justifiably believe determinism to be true. — Chany
I totally disgaree; I think it is rubbish. — John
It's not a true perspective, it's an imaginary perspective. Truly, there is no such perspective. — unenlightened
That's a succinct illustration of 'scientism vs humanism'. There are no persons, only gene-carriers. — Wayfarer
It's opponents (of which I'm one) would say that it uses the language and rhetorical techniques of metaphysics against metaphysics. — Wayfarer
The problem with Dawkins, and neo-Darwinism generally, is treating a biological theory - how species survive and replicate - as an actual philosophy or 'meaning of life'. — Wayfarer
I disagree. The word 'purpose' is in the title of your thread. The question of the whole in relation to the individual is a different issue, if 'purpose' is not involved. A word someone likes better will not mean the same thing. Human-defined systems have purpose ascribed to them by seemingly purposive humans. — mcdoodle
And therefore an imaginary view, since genes do not have eyes or a viewpoint of any kind. — unenlightened
But they do not really have a will to survive, a desire to propagate, or a purpose of their own. — unenlightened
I don't understand (hard) determinism because of the question of unknowability. If determinism were true we would have no way of verifying it. — mcdoodle
In regards to quantum interpretations, I believe the De Broglie-Bohm interpretation is the only one that is casual though Bohm stated that his equations clearly leave open the possibility of choice, hence the probabilistic aspect of Quantum theory. As for myself, I use holographic theory, not quantum theory as a launching point for my views. — Rich
It's not unknowable. Likely unknown, though. — Mongrel
I really do not think that the knowledge required to make such predictions even exists, so it's rather nonsense to talk about applying that non-existent knowledge. A more appropriate question would be to ask whether it is possible to obtain the knowledge required to make such predictions. — Metaphysician Undercover
Even Dawkins himself admits under pressure, (and then ignores) that the selfish gene is a mere analogy; that genes have no will, no desire, and no view. And certainly nothing remotely like a purpose. — unenlightened
Memes are an analogy of the analogy, and the same applies only even more emphatically. — unenlightened
Lottery winners are chosen randomly. A computerized random number generator uses the quartz crystal clock. In these cases "random" means a choice was made without any plan or scheme for choosing. The knowledge required to predict the choice is not available. I don't assume that because I can't predict the outcome that it has no cause. — Mongrel
Because of the current understanding of quantum mechanics, the hard determinist position seems very hard to affirm. The best you can do is say that we may be mistaken about our conception of quantum mechanics, given how relatively new and weird it is, but this simply leaves possibility of determinism open. — Chany
has a p zombie ever been observed? — Wayfarer
Do you have an argument for that? In any case, even if it were accepted, it does not constitute a final explanation, but remains just another unverifiable conceptual model to be taken on faith. Any model require further explanation unless it is concluded 'This is just the way things are'. It's easy enough to see that there can be no final explanation, which means that reason and the world are intractable mysteries. — John
But we have no clue as to its origin and its mysterious ability to make the world intelligible, just as we have no way of rationally working out what the absolute origin of the world, or its capacity to be made intelligible by reason, is. This is where reason ends and faith based on intuition begins. — John
So apparently Gengis Khan who had all the women and the power in the world, with no consequences ever for the killing and raping he did... was not really happy. Not really. — Sylar
I'm compelled to repeat this every time Rand is mentioned:
Ayn Rand is to philosophy what L. Ron Hubbard is to religion. — Ciceronianus the White
So, our purpose is to determine the best way of talking about the world without there, however, being a transcendentally true purpose...So, how exactly, can one determine what is "best" if there is no end purpose? — Heister Eggcart
I expect that, given enough time and resources to develop, artificial intelligence will meet and exceed human capacities of speech, creativity, and performance. None of that is sentience. — Cabbage Farmer