I don't quite get the relevance of memory in the equation. Suppose this hapless person does remember every detail of faer horrific crimes and still transforms into a classic good guy, the problem of how we should judge this person still remains; after all, this person has changed faer ways and that's exactly the sticking point in the original scenario in which fae suffers amnesia. — TheMadFool
The Unborn (or Never-To-Be-Born) cannot be "saved" because they don't exist to be "saved" — 180 Proof
If one can occupy himself with the battles in his skull he need not pay attention to the ones that require actual effort. — NOS4A2
Well, no, because consciousness is not an object at all, but a state. It's typical of your sloppiness that you treat consciousness and minds as equivalent, which is as silly as confusing thoughts with thinkers. — Bartricks
it must have at least one (else in what possible sense is it 'sensible'?) — Bartricks
There is a sizable population that believes there is no such problem.... heck I would say the majority don’t think it’s a problem
— khaled
Okaay. You might want to get in touch with the world's philosophy departments and point this out then. — Bartricks
Psst, whether lumps of ham are minds is what is in dispute. — Bartricks
2. If minds were sensible objects, then it would make sense to wonder what a sensible object thinks
— Bartricks
Overgeneralization. It could just be the case that it makes sense to wonder what some sensible objects (such as minds, according to the position you're arguing against) think, while others (such as olives) not. In which case the conclusion doesn't follow. — khaled
No it doesn't. The claim that if something comes into being it has a prior cause is not equivalent to causal determinism. — Bartricks
4. If I am a sensible object, then everything I do traces to external causes — Bartricks
But a reasonably intelligent person, upon asking "Is Megan at the party? And are there any dogs at the party?" and receiving the answer "Megan is certainly here, but I am not sure if there are any dogs here" would conclude that Megan was not a dog. — Bartricks
Surely. It is, of course, possible that Megan is a dog, for it is possible that though the host knows Megan is at the party, the host does not know whether Megan is a dog. — Bartricks
I could claim that nothing is harmful at t1 (moment of death, which is premise 2).
— khaled
Yes, you could couldn't you. — Bartricks
: every extended object has a top and a bottom — Bartricks
Your confusing 'currently unable to divide it' with it being metaphysically impossible to divide it. — Bartricks
So, I can conceive of myself existing, and my brain not. — Bartricks
Note, that doesn't mean that a sensible object has all the sensible properties — Bartricks
unless I am correct then it is inexplicable why there is thought to be a problem accommodating consciousness within a naturalistic worldview — Bartricks
No, you'd genuinely consider me insane if I wondered what a lump of cheese thinks like — Bartricks
If I am a sensible object, then everything I do traces to external causes
— Bartricks
Not necessarily.
— khaled
Explain. — Bartricks
Do you have grounds to conclude that Megan is not a dog? — Bartricks
for it is possible that though the host knows Megan is at the party, the host does not know whether Megan is a dog. — Bartricks
Er, you think there can be extended things that are not divisible — Bartricks
Now, are you claiming that it is 'never' harmful to have one's sensible body destroyed? — Bartricks
Due to it being divisible — Bartricks
Stop up your ears, close your eyes, make sure not to be eating or smelling anything, and now render your body numb. Are you still aware of your self? Of course you are — Bartricks
The point, though, is that the argument has a high degree of plausibility and if it goes through it establishes that our minds are immaterial. — Bartricks
For even if each argument is only 50% likely to be sound — Bartricks
the claim that there cannot be causation between different kinds of object has nothing to be said for it - it doesn't seem self-evident and how could one ever offer non-question begging evidence in support of it? — Bartricks
2. It makes sense to wonder what colour, smell, texture, taste or smell any sensible object has — Bartricks
2. If minds were sensible objects, then it would make sense to wonder what a sensible object thinks — Bartricks
If our reason represents our minds to exist indubitably, but at the same time represents all sensible objects to exist dubitably, then our reason is implying that our minds are not sensible objects — Bartricks
If I am a sensible object, then everything I do traces to external causes — Bartricks
If an object is sensible, it is divisible — Bartricks
2. The destruction of our sensible bodies harms us at the time at which it occurs — Bartricks
2. if any sensible object exists, it will have infinite parts — Bartricks
My reason represents it to be possible for my mind to exist apart from any sensible thing — Bartricks
Sensible objects exist as bundles of sensations — Bartricks
the proposition that our minds are our brains. — Bartricks
I also don’t need to sacrifice mine or my children’s rights to protect Tim from a virus any grown adult can avoid on his own accord. — NOS4A2
Until someone comes along and deems masks to be risky, then you’re left wondering why you gave up your right in the first place — NOS4A2
This answer assumes that neither optimism or pessimism is the proper starting point — Hanover
So with that being said, one can be a "happy-go-lucky" Schopenhaurian philosophical pessimist. — schopenhauer1
Buddhism is pretty much the same thing. The world is inherently suffering — schopenhauer1
I do for the simple reason that I am able to dress myself. — NOS4A2
Instead, we should appeal to everyone's direct appetites, free from any interpretation into desires or intentions yet — Pfhorrest
But can Tom make his own arguments? Now this changes the path this takes. — schopenhauer1
I now have to choose to argue your particular line of thought. — schopenhauer1
- That most general and fundamental subfield of the ethical sciences, playing the foundational role to them that physics plays to the physical sciences, is what I think deserves to be called "ethics" simpliciter. That field's task would be to catalogue the needs or ends, and the abilities or means, of different moral agents and patients, like how physics catalogues the functions of different particles.
- Building atop that field, the ethical analogue of chemistry would be to catalogue the aggregate effects of many such agents interacting, as much of the field of economics already does, in the same way that chemical processes are the aggregate interactions between many physical particles.
- Atop that, the ethical analogue of biology would be to catalogue the types of organizations of such agents that arise, and the development and interaction of such organizations individually and en masse, like biology catalogues organisms.
- Lastly, atop that, the ethical analogue of psychology would be to catalogue the educational and governmental apparatuses of such organizations, which are like the self-awareness and self-control, the mind and will so to speak, of such organizations. — Pfhorrest
Why is this a good thing to do to someone else? — schopenhauer1
534,000 deaths in your country.
Less than a thousand in mine. Lockdowns work. Where yours went wrong was to lock down too late, and hence for too long. — Banno
Also, does this imply that near-identical bodies produce (only) near-identical experiences? Perhaps this is what Isaac is getting at with his talk about 'sameness'. — Luke
All of this of course assumes that, identical bodies produce identical experiences.
— khaled
So it's no more than an assumption, right? — Luke
Why can it not be anything stronger than an assumption? — Luke
You can access their "neural regions involved, behaviours produced, words used to describe it...etc", but whether these are associated with the same sensations seems like little more than an assumption. How can you prove it? — Luke
It's the fact that we cannot access other people's sensations in order to compare them. — Luke
Your individual situation doesn't map to large social gatherings — Bitter Crank
and still today, more than a hundred years after the double slit experiment. — Olivier5
There is no qualitative difference here. — Olivier5
It takes courage to doubt everything at the risk of going completely insane. — TaySan
Your "egg of consciousness" is different from most people's because you don't say "the mind is non physical" or anything like that.
— khaled
That is correct. — Olivier5
As for old assumptions that do clash with modern scientific observations, well, they should be discarded I suppose. — Olivier5
The model where the mind is non-physical, yet has top to bottom causation, and also mental events are private — khaled
determinism — Olivier5
epiphenomenalism is for the epiphenomenal among us, those of us who have no impact on anything whatsoever and are quite happy about their own irrelevance. The theory may logically be true for them, as a self-fulfilling prophecy is: they don't matter because they don't want to. But otherwise, it is logically self-contradictory. — Olivier5
I wouldn't break the egg of my own consciousness for any omelette — Olivier5
Some social constructs may be based on insufficient empirical evidence but it does not make them total nonsense. — Olivier5
There is no evidence we should care for babies though, that much is true. We do it for other reasons than strictly material. And therefore, not all social construct can be evidence-based. Some are a priori stated. — Olivier5
There's a social value in having a case that is immune (or seemingly so) to counter-argument using established methods of debate. That social value is not the same as the utility/aesthetic value of the belief to you. — Isaac
Once we do that, I think we come up with only a few basic things that remain. — Dharmi
That seems enough to me already. Doing it deliberately on top of all that seems a bit masochistic. — Isaac