Newborns are inherently atheistic. — Harry Hindu
The problem with atheistic scientists analyzing the truth value of religions is that they are usually more literal and fundamentalist about analyzing religious texts than many if not most religious believers. Instead of looking to or for the moral of a myth, legend, story, or parable (Yes, there is even Christian mythology. Only the dolts take it literally.); the atheist debunks the most literal interpretation of the text. That’s why so many atheists think the religious are stupid, or they think we are deluding ourselves. This is a mistake that religious texts can’t impart wisdom and that science alone can address all truths wrt humanity. — Noah Te Stroete
It's a reference to the three beasts of revelation. — All sight
Yes, although in this case, primarily just because I see no evidence of an unconscious mind. — Terrapin Station
I think TS’s objection is “why call it ‘mind’?” when the unconscious doings may not be anything like mind. — Noah Te Stroete
Is it too far-fetched to think an advanced alien can reconstruct the human mind from studying the voyager 2 spacecraft? — TheMadFool
But I don't think it follows from that and the fact that the term "unconscious mind" exists that what "unconscious mind" is supposed to pick out exists. — Terrapin Station
For example, it's possible that there is an unconscious mind, and it's possible that there is not. — Terrapin Station
There are unconscious brain phenomena, obviously, and good reasons to believe so, but no good reasons for believing that phenomena is more or less just like concepts, etc. — Terrapin Station
if your evidence isn't conclusive, logic does not permit you to draw a conclusion. — Pattern-chaser
But where did I say anything even remotely resembling that? — Terrapin Station
"It appears that there may be unconscious mental phenomena" sounds like belief, and it sounds like you feel there are good reasons to take that stance rather than the alternative . It sounds like you feel there is something more than mere logical possibility for the "unconscious mind" side. — Terrapin Station
This is nothing about proof. It's just about having reasons to believe something. I don't believe things just randomly. If you like doing that, okay. — Terrapin Station
If there are no good reasons to believe something, I don't believe it. — Terrapin Station
There are other common labels for some it, though, like "autonomic functions." — Terrapin Station
What label would you apply/assign to unconscious mental activity? — Pattern-chaser
Unconscious brain activity you mean? (I wouldn't say that anything is unconscious mental activity)
Why wouldn't "unconscious brain activity" be a good enough label? There are other common labels for some it, though, like "autonomic functions." — Terrapin Station
scientists worthy of the name recognize that religions are about things, subjects, that by their nature remain outside of science - they have to or they wouldn't be religions. The only occasion for opposition is when religions claim truth for their beliefs, which truth is never demonstrable and remains a case for very special pleading. — tim wood
I think you are conflating consciousness with awareness. We are aware of only a few things at a time, but our conscious activity covers a lot more ground. So it is awareness that is a "surface phenomenon," but awareness is only a small part of consciousness. — SophistiCat
I am interested to hear what others think on this? — philosophy
"Mentality" isn't the same thing as "consciousness." If one believes that there are unconscious thoughts, desires, etc., those would still fall under "mentality." — Terrapin Station
I don't believe there is any good reason to believe that any nonconscious brain activity amounts to mental phenomena. — Terrapin Station
Sorry old chap. I don’t like to result to insult but you are being a bit of an ass. Could you please cut out the assness. Just a little. — Dan84
I did try. I asked him to let it go, but he persisted. So I tried asking nicely - but I'm meeting with that infuriating denial of genuine human emotion Buddhists affect - as a pretense of spirituality. — karl stone
↪BrianW
Wouldn’t philosophy be dull if it was just science.
Imagine. — Dan84
I'm quite sure, if asked, most people would understand the term enlightenment to refer to some eastern spiritual nonsense, and very few would know anything about the 18th century rationalist philosophical movement. What does that tell you? — karl stone
What does that tell you? That science, while surrounding us with miracles of technology - and providing real knowledge of the world, is nonetheless held in contempt. — karl stone
I seek to address that - because truth is important, particularly as we face global scale existential threats. No amount of limb bending and chanting at the beyond is going to solve climate change. We need to complete the Enlightenment project. — karl stone
This modern terminology of distinguishing various theories from each other that is the lingua franca on the forum has been a trip for me. The practice makes me nervous, not the disputations involved but the unspoken agreements. — Valentinus
for the avoidance of confusion in future, perhaps you might use the word moksha, or Kevala Jnana, or ushta instead? — karl stone
I don't know what non-conscious means — BrianW
if its results can emerge into conscious awareness, then I suppose it implies a sort of consciousness — BrianW
Here's a simple example how it can be a conscious, systematic process:
Say that I'm writing a bit of music and I have the following melody notes: C Eb D F
By analyzing the notes in that chord, I might think, "Okay, let's try harmonizing that with a C minor chord . . . er--how about an Fmi9? Mabe an AbMa7? Gsus?"--I'm systematically trying different chords suggested by the melody I came up with, with an eye on creating different sorts of tension/release contours relative to those chords. — Terrapin Station
I think it's a combination of the sub-conscious and the conscious. By this I mean, that while my consciousness was below the state we call wakeful, that is, in the sub-conscious state (which still implies the presence of consciousness), there were mental processes which were active and which generated memories which engraved such deep impressions that they intruded to the conscious state. — BrianW
In terms of the kind of Bhagavid Gita sort of enlightenment... — Dan84
That's interesting because for me a lot of the process is conscious and pretty systematic. — Terrapin Station
Aren't you familiar with https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Age_of_Enlightenment? — Terrapin Station
I made this qualification because I have also been to a "philosophy forum", managed by philosophy students of the Spanish online public university, where people too much into reason and science got bullied and expelled, and marxist and feminist views were unquestionable. — DiegoT