What kind of stupid answer is that? Where did I isolate the object from the rest of the world? — Riley
We already discussed that the eyes are for seeing, the heart for pumping - in which you made no objection. — Riley
Yes that is what I’m suggesting. I’m asking whether the mental phenomena “will” is the cause or result of physical phenomena in your view and in either case how. How does your “will” physically move your arm. Or if you’re a determinist how (which I know you’re not) how would physically moving your arm cause the subjective experience of “will”. — khaled
I never said I don’t believe others are conscious I said you can’t know they are. — khaled
I meant weird as in it could be said by a hairline determinist or someone who believes in free will. — khaled
That’s awfully vague. What if said robot I was talking about looked human and acted like a human but essentially just had silicon replace carbon. — khaled
Not as your personal feeling, but in whatever passes in you for a larger sense. — tim wood
So, for everyone else, does Non-Cognitivism deny that Ethical value judgements can be made? — thewonder
What reason do you have to believe anyone other than you is conscious — khaled
Also, defining will as a mental phenomena seems weird to me. — khaled
Do you mean to say that the “will” somehow results in a different physical causal chain or that the feeling/mental phenomena of will results from a physical causal chain? — khaled
Feelings aren't made of particles — Harry Hindu
Particles don't even exist. — Harry Hindu
However, you can stop the goal of this species — Riley
Oh my bad. I must not have caught that typo. Self-Consciousness possesses the ability to contradict the natural law because it manifests the will. But it Isn't inherently contradictory. As in "if this then that." It is also a non-sequitor to think that this disproves teleology and such. Considering they are not logically opposed. — Riley
Does a robot that determines what it will do based on random nuclear decay have free will? — khaled
But your 'choice' is severely limited, right? "Free" means unrestrained. — ZhouBoTong
Hmmm.... you just accepted the idea of teleology. Teleology is that which is the end of something in relation to it's ontology. Which you just verified. — Riley
F-off Terrapin. If you've an argument to make, I'll read it. - You obviously have either not read, or not understood, or both, my post. — tim wood
And it should be made clear: that the natural law is in relation to teleology. Not the will and not to the individual in-and-of-itself. But rather the parts to the whole than the whole to the parts.
The eyes for seeing, the heart for pumping. These all have their end. Which is why I see that you misunderstand precisely what is being said by the words 'natural law.' — Riley
Yes. Anything else implies murder is not wrong. — tim wood
I am not certain it's possible to describe how reason works. There are arguments to be made about whether murder should be wrong. Those arguments must be logically valid and proceed from acceptable premises. — Echarmion
Has the understanding of teleology in relation to ontology escaped you? It Was my point that self-consciousness, which manifests the will, is contrary to the natural law. — Riley
What is consciousness as it relates to Being? — thewonder
This is such a ridiculous conversation. This is a debate? We teach CHILDREN better ways of thinking about this.
“Sticks and stones may break my bones but names can never hurt me”
We don’t need to make it illegal for people to hurt other peoples feelings with their words. Grow up.
Thats at the level of government and law.
On a personal or moral level...grow up.
Thats how far things have fallen, we have to aim for the philosophy meant for children. — DingoJones
Self-consciousnes brings are unnatural in-and-of-themselves because they can contradict the natural law. — Riley
Words only have the impact that you allow them to have on you. Only YOU are in control of what you say and I am the only one that can control my response, — ArguingWAristotleTiff
What would be the particles of the mind? — Harry Hindu
How is asserting that everything is either "physical" or "mental" not just hand-waving themselves? What does it mean to say that something is "physical" or "mental"? What are the differences between "physical" and "mental" things, and then how do they interact? — Harry Hindu
It's reason-able because the statement is processed by a part of the brain that operates on a reason-ruleset, so to speak. A part that we use for things that concern interpersonal relations. — Echarmion
But there are attacks that no reasonable person should be expected to tolerate: — Pattern-chaser
Its only effect - its intended effect - is to cause so much hurt as to provoke a violent response. — Pattern-chaser
This is degenerating into silliness. You know quite well the points I have made. You wiggle and squirm around to avoid my points with petty objections. Why not just admit that there is no human, moral, justification for your position? — Pattern-chaser
Why have you not (also) said "I believe we have free will and that we can or at least should have the power to stop ourselves from spouting hate speech"? — Pattern-chaser
You write like someone who values the freedom to speak hatefully toward others. — Pattern-chaser
Your "ought" is that we "should have the power to stop ourselves from becoming violent". But the corresponding "is" is that we can't. The empirical evidence is conclusive. Do you deny this? — Pattern-chaser
Yes, there is. I think that's where we get 'freedom of speech' from - we (most of us) think it's a good idea. — Pattern-chaser
But (some) humans are given to hate speech, and their targets are (sometimes) unable to endure the hatred aimed at them, and respond with violence. We can confirm this by simple empirical observation. — Pattern-chaser
Aren't you confusing ought with is here? — Pattern-chaser
I mean being able to re-create the relevant brain-states in their own mind with sufficient accuracy. — Echarmion
But there are also things that are reason-able, like "murder is wrong", because these kinds of brain-states, whatever we want to call them, contain in them a connection to other subjects. — Echarmion
