Fried plantains and stewed goat. — Nils Loc
The subject is doubt, not conversion. — Hippyhead
If solipsism is true there can only be one solipsist.
One? — Wheatley
Getting atheists to doubt the qualifications of human reason to address the very largest of questions (scope of god claims) is pretty close to impossible. — Hippyhead
Getting Catholics to doubt the degree to which the Bible is literally true is child's play in comparison. — Hippyhead
FYI, there's more acceptance of doubt in religious communities than on atheist forums. :-) — Hippyhead
Apparently the giant companies like Dole are eschewing new tech gene modification to try and get ahead of the new oncoming fusarium wilt problem (like what hit the Gro Michel with panama disease in 1950s). — Nils Loc
If the banana was domesticated 7,000 years ago, does that mean they were as seedless back then? — Nils Loc
Venn Diagram will work here, to present a visual overlapping of counts. — Caldwell
Would It help to put it this way?
2/3 registered users have never posted
Of those who have posted, 2/3 have under 10 posts — SophistiCat
Or if you like pies (who doesn't?) — SophistiCat
Percentage of people who like green eggs: 71%
Percentage of people who like ham: 85%
Percentage of people who like Dr. Seuss: 93%
etc., etc., etc.. — Pantagruel
The stats weren't presented as an analysis of the collective, but of the properties of individuals. No wonder I have so much difficulty offering systems theoretical arguments. — Pantagruel
Can you think of a sound without replicating it with your inner voice?
Can you think of the feeling of touching a rough surface (i.e., sand paper) without "seeing" the act of touching the rough surface in your mind? — Daniel
So i'm here , if you are interested, ask me a question... — Koen
Does the mind occupy a space? — Daniel
That’s because it’s pure speculation. How would one even begin to test such a theory? — Possibility
:grin: No, SophistiCat's stats did not add up to 222%. Please read it again. — Caldwell
Note that "posters" are a subset of "users," and posters with < 10 posts are a subset of posters with < 626 posts. — SophistiCat
I'd say it is obvious that our minds are constantly changing; — Daniel
but isn't the rotation confined to a space? — Daniel
but the rotation in itself is not something that has mass, it doesn't need so — Augustusea
the mind is a result to a process, that process is physical, the mind is just a result of it, i.e. doesn't have to be physical, and that process in the brain does have mass, and is affected by time and space — Augustusea
So the relationship in question is not that of the cup, but of its energy, as a comparison to the mind and its relationship to the brain and ‘surroundings’. The energy is not solely a property of the cup or the coffee, any more than the mind is solely a property of the brain or the nervous system. It exists as a property of continually changing particle relations in the variably integrated organic system, and manifests as energy events that appear to ‘occupy’ the brain and/or the nervous system depending on the measurement/observation. — Possibility
If the mind changes, why not consider it a physical entity? — Daniel
...answers on the back of an envelope in ten words or less. — Banno
Ok. I might be wrong on this. Aren't time and space connected? Can they act independently of one another; as in, can something occupy a space and not be affected by time, and vice versa? If the mind is affected by time, shouldn't it also occupy a space? — Daniel
Is the mind timeless? Does it change at all with the passage of time? Or does it always posses the same exact qualities as time progresses? — Daniel
the mind changes definetly with time, as do all physical things, it gets more complex, with more processes, more memories, and more thoughts, and even on an atomic level, its atoms will get replaced by new ones eventually — Augustusea
There is no reason to assume that the mind, understood as energy, is confined to the material of the brain. — Possibility
We attribute properties to conceptual ‘objects’ arbitrarily - Banno’s cup is not the only thing keeping his coffee hot, . — Possibility
and it also keeps other items hot that exist outside of the red cup. The cup casts a reflection on the shiny white table that has the property of being red, ‘occupying’ space outside of the red cup that is contingent upon the existence and redness of the cup in relation to the table and the light... — Possibility
Is the mind affected by time? — Daniel
the mind or consciousness is a process, the brain occupies space, the electrochemical signals do, consciousness is just a result or outcome of such, it doesn't need to occupy space — Augustusea
All that describes is the distinction between matter and energy. — 3017amen
You haven't made the case that energy somehow doesn't exist, like it does everywhere, and within space. — 3017amen
Then you would simply have to prove why/how there is something and not nothing. — 3017amen
It's kind of the latest thing in science — 3017amen
Space then contains information and energy. Just like light energy being within space. — 3017amen
The electrochemical process take up space much like the electrical grid in your home. — John Onestrand
When there's no power to the grid the output stops and the question "where does it goes?" becomes pointless; — John Onestrand