Science avoids the controversy and gives an operational definition which is: Time is the quantity measured by a clock. — TheMadFool
If gravity is indeed omnipresent, then it simply is a law. — Janus
I agree that we need more than two subjective views to proclaim that the theory is objective. — Damir Ibrisimovic
You misunderstand me: I am saying that according to ordinary usage "the law of gravity" applies to both the human formulation, and to the natural force. In the latter one of its senses, 'the law of gravity' is synonymous with simply 'gravity', in other words; but the addition of "the law of" signifies that gravity is a universally acting force; in other words it is understood to be "law-like" or "lawful". — Janus
Laws are for us. Nature doesn't need or use them; it just does what it does. Just that. — Pattern-chaser
We don't invent the law-like behavior of nature. Sure, the Law of Gravity is also a human formulation as well as an invariant natural phenomenon which does not depend on us for its action. — Janus
We don't invent the law-like behavior of nature. — Janus
Sure, the Law of Gravity is also a human formulation as well as an invariant natural phenomenon which does not depend on us for its action. — Janus
As I understand it, to say there is a universal law just is to say that there is a universally invariant form of action, a natural behavior which operates at all times and all places regardless of human awareness and opinion. — Janus
Second-order volition are desires about desires, or to desire to change the process, the how, of desiring. — Wikipedia
letting one's own biases and experience cloud how what they believe and how they arrive at their beliefs. — MindForged
what could be a more philosophical topic than nothing? — Ciceronianus the White
The hair trigger gun aimed down all of our throats is nuclear weapons. — Jake
How would idea of the universal action of gravity at all times and places differ from the idea of a universal natural law of gravity; a law which is real in more than a merely nominalistic fashion? — Janus
So, do we have higher order volitions? It would seem so to my mind. — Posty McPostface
1. If ALL the predictions of logic are true then logic is justified
2. ALL the predictions of logic are true
So,
3. Logic is justified — TheMadFool
it's still absolutely crystal clear: the Leave vote was about national sovereignty and our wish to extricate ourselves from the EU superstate experiment; immigration and all the other issues are subsets of that fundamental point. — gurugeorge
the laws of nature are not same as the laws of physics, but they are dynamically related and so laws in an analogical sense. — Dfpolis
I wonder why one feels compelled to use a loaded term like "intentionality" for the tendencies of nature to form certain patterns or forms? — prothero
So does that mean you agree that humans perceive many things daily, subconsciously, which don't count as an experience, because we are not consciously aware of them? Basically, the majority of data that your senses perceive, but you are not consciously aware of.
And would you agree then, that most of what animals perceive is not an experience, if they are not consciously aware of it? — Tyler
These bytes don't change with the screen display. They are the instructions that cause the computer to execute word processing functions. — Pattern-chaser
>But once the instructions causes word processing functions, this would then cause the screen display to change, as word functions are executed, wouldn't they? — Tyler
How does my experience of joy, fear or grief affect my neural activity (or vice versa, if you prefer :wink:)? — Pattern-chaser
>I believe the basic connection between the 2 is generally understood, at least to the degree of function. — Tyler
There is much more to it than mere sensation. — Pattern-chaser
>I dont think I grasp your explanation which argues this point. Other than sensation, there is neural activity and emotion, but what more? — Tyler
It is not sense - store - recall - review. It is more like sense - perceive - associate - interpret - integrate into worldview - conscious awareness. — Pattern-chaser
>But the steps of "associate - interpret - integrate into worldview" are all neural activity, of relative memories (and could be summarized as "store"), wouldn't you agree? — Tyler
OK, perhaps you can, but will it account for the human experience I have described? The feel of the water as my hand passes through it. The trees on the bank, and the rustling sound of their leaves blowing in the wind? The smell of a local brewery nearby, and the imagined pleasure of drinking a pint of beer, that might soon follow...? In other words, the whole experience, as a human experiences it. Can you describe that adequately and usefully in terms of neural activity? I don't think that's possible, is it? — Pattern-chaser
I think it is possible. I don't see why a physical process involving the laws of physics should be impossible to describe. How to describe it may depend on your definition of "describe".
It should be quite plausible to describe every step of the mechanical function involved with the sensory input, neural activity, and instinctual triggers of emotion. — Tyler
...will it account for the human experience I have described? The feel of the water as my hand passes through it. The trees on the bank, and the rustling sound of their leaves blowing in the wind? The smell of a local brewery nearby, and the imagined pleasure of drinking a pint of beer, that might soon follow...? In other words, the whole experience, as a human experiences it. — Pattern-chaser
We care what Ptolemy, Galileo, Newton and Hubble saw, not about their subjective experience in seeing it. — Dfpolis
Eh, we still don't care. — gurugeorge
The firmware of meaning is similar to relationship and evolved from it, however, this organization of relationship is organized around logic and spatial reasoning; differential and integral, without using an emotional attachment. — wellwisher
My approach is to show the behind the scenes working of the brain in terms of consciousness. — wellwisher
Does it make sense to say: "X is really just Y" ? — rachMiel
Consciousness and brain needs to be defined. “Brain”, which is process, is the room “you” are in. The universe perceived is essentially “the brain”. — raza
Metaphysics, in philosophy, deals with the underlying principles behind reality. — wellwisher
Dark matter and dark energy is a metaphysical system — wellwisher
You cannot be a thing separate from your experience. You can only be whatever the experience is. — raza
Everything you have identified can be classified under “Experience”. — raza
My identity is not limited to "whatever is occurring", I don't think. I have memory and a remembered history. Sure enough, this history stems from past experiences, but it persists, and helps to form the being that I refer to as "me". — Pattern-chaser
On memory and history, memories arise within consciousness. — raza
You are fluid in that as an experience changes and shifts, so you also do... — raza
...because you are that. — raza
Metaphysics complements physics if you know how to translate between the two systems. — wellwisher
An eternal soul persists apart from the body. It is like a DVD of data that is removable. — wellwisher
I think the idea of involuntary vs voluntary arises because some thoughts seem to be far more spontaneous - as if from nowhere, and not, therefore, necessarily following a remembered thread. — raza
You cannot be a thing separate from your experience. You can only be whatever the experience is. Your identity is whatever is occurring. Whatever arises in consciousness is you. — raza