But what needs to be analysed is the way in which this symbolic violence is linked to the real violence of the institutions with the myriad of almost invisible micro-violences that make up the society of imperial capitalism. — David Mo
Oh really? Didn’t know that its no longer considered scientific. I thought the results haven’t been replicated because of ethical concerns? Thanks for the clarification! — Josh Lee
this. "They" (paranoia or not) wanted you to draw conclusions. Think about it. There is tons of political issues connect to such "research".The implications we can draw from it is amazing — Josh Lee
Would making such a distinction be a legitimate or lawless act? Or would it come down to whose opinion is which?Are there clear criteria to distinguish between legitimate and lawless acts of violence? — Number2018
A little joke: Of course you have a purpose... Who else should pay your elders pension?Could you ever prove I dont? Would it be right to tell people they dont have a purpose if that's what you believe to be more realistic? — Benj96
I tend to the opinion that we do not understand those as they are real corner-cases that are largely irrelevant to our existence. Hence they lack reality.But are these truly understandable things, or no matter how evolved our brain gets we'll never grasp the true essence or these very abstract things? — Eugen
The lack of understanding in QM comes from the paradoxes of it and from the lack of willingness to admit that the way we're dealing with science from the observer perspective is subjective, therefore wrong. This is why QM has so many paradoxes. — Eugen
But being present in two universes at the same time is something that makes sense to us, we would understand this state, while a dog cannot understand us playing a videogame. — Eugen
Than your answer to my question would be no and I personally agree with you. So why do you think that way, what are your arguments? — Eugen
Comprehensible to whom? I would understand the difference between abezido and nuralemina :DBut the substance of my question lies exactly in the issue of our capability to comprehend every *comprehensible* thing of the reality, or if reality has things that aren't comprehensible to our mind but comprehensible to a more evolved brain. — Eugen
Has anyone ever proven one or the other? All this does is rephrasing common opinions. From this foundational basis then "arguments" shall be made why that property can or cannot be present in which kind of machinery in a "wise platonic tongue".When the computer chip in your clothes dryer receives data from the humidity sensor and decides when your clothes are dry, do you think it has feelings and opinions about the matter?
And if not, why would a bigger machine, operating on exactly the same fundamental principles, be any different? — fishfry
What does he know? Did he die before? "Rotting body"? - Death in particular can come quickly. Seems he is lacking introspection wrt to what he is talking about. Just another MIT profressor put out of context?! We can doubt - mushy mysticisms about everyday experience substitute modern voodoo for thorough analysis. Being psychic is not a problem limited to A.I. though. The lack of any foundational reality has a long philosophical tradition. Seems to be something for chosen audiences.“What does it know about dying if it doesn’t have a body that rots? Can it still be intelligent?” — Frank Pray
If two subject are the same and one of them is the same as yet another, then all three are the same.What do you mean? — TheMadFool
It is anthropocentric.Is this a false assumption? — TheMadFool
If it can it's behaviour must be intelligent.The Turing test specifically states that all the AI has to do is give the impression that it's a human. — TheMadFool
I guess this is more about transitivity. Humans are assumed to be intelligent. Commonly this is assumed to be indicated by intelligent behaviour and communication. Therefor the behaviour of an intelligent machine must be indistinguishable from human behaviour in this respect.I find that hard to believe because the test specifically mentions that the AI has to convince a human that it (the AI) is human and being human involves consciousness - in fact consciousness is the defining feature of being human. — TheMadFool
If you think, as Turing supposedly did, that consciousness can be inferred from the behavior of a computer then it isn't much of stretch to conclude that Turing would've come to the conclusion that p-zombies are impossible. — TheMadFool
No, they just accumulate power.I don't believe physicists have any true knowledge of anything — Gregory
Realizing that matter could have infinite aspects (and forces) is an agnosticism that I think leads to a spiritual way of thinking — Gregory
3) so philosophy is a higher science than the physical "sciences" — Gregory
Starting from the fact that we cannot agree on just what is consciousness and have big problems in deciding just what is and what isn't conscious, it's hardly surprising that even a brilliant mind like Turing would be vague on the subject. — ssu
Seriously - there is not much to say: The young are far out on the gaussian curve of voters - society is not yours, and will never be until you do not care anymore.It was Rousseau that started me on the "loathe society, it's unnatural" path, if it makes any difference. — madworld
You assume that because a coherent relation is not detectable now, it will never be detectable because it does not exist. — jgill
How would you know? All you relate to is consciousness. Because you call it such?Consciousness has different modalities. — MonisticIdealist
No, a perception is consciousness. You seem to image an entity "consciousness" which could then have perceptions or not - which is empirically never the case. That is reification.A perception is a state of consciousness, just like a thought, a dream etc. — MonisticIdealist
Ex falso quodlibet.However, perceptions of brain activity are certain states of consciousness themselves. — MonisticIdealist
I don't know. Communists have emotions? Ninotschka (from that movie about communism)? It seems to be based on systematically replacing emotions with the scientific socialist formula. — Syamsu
Because as I see it. in determinism everything is factual. All the causes, all the effects, they are all factual matters.
While with incompatibilist free will, then you have the agency of the choice as inherently subjective, validating the idea of emotions, and the concept of subjective opinion. — Syamsu
That was the difference we started with. All there is is there.Neither is there an absence of a first person point of view as self — javra
Big point: There is no "self".is not one (as a transcendentally apprehensive self) frightened during such juncture at seeing this other during the dream? — javra
Because your body does not need to be there (as normal) in dreams.How does the case of dreams dispel the proposition that "the transcendentally apprehensive self is neither its mind nor its body, though conjoined to both"? — javra
Not in the case of dreams. It is literally the empty form of perception.Yet the transcendentally apprehensive self is neither its mind nor its body, though conjoined to both. — javra