"Wait, if I do not like doing this, why would I want this to be a way of life for other people?" — schopenhauer1
the belief that the project is worth continuing somehow. Or the belief that not continuing the project is somehow harmful. Among a slew of other justifications(orders from God and such) — khaled
That this way of life needs (somehow) to take place? — schopenhauer1
And if this is a political choice, what is wrong with the contrarian view of this? — schopenhauer1
Why is one praised be default? — schopenhauer1
So my premises are on why we create ANY socio-economic-cultural arrangements — schopenhauer1
Except determinism makes enormous claims, like the idea that this post I am now writing was predetermined since the Big Bang. — Olivier5
It's how we're identifying what the epiphenomenon is of. Otherwise, how are you claiming that the aspect of your whole epiphenomenological experience at the time is in any way 'of red'? — Isaac
So when I see that table, the light reflecting from it hits my retina which causes a cascade of signals to travel through my brain, one of which (combined with other signals identifying your request and an appropriate type of response), causes me to form the word 'red'. — Isaac
By that definition, it can't be defined by being caused by wavelengths of light can it — Isaac
There are no signals running from your cone cells to your big toe in response to the wavelength of light, so how can a signal from your big toe be causally related to the signal from your cone cells if there's no physical connection? — Isaac
The only way we're carving out some aspect of a person's holistic experience as being of red is that it is caused by the same physical components as are stimulated by the 600nm wavelength (or that they are associated with the word 'red' - therefore publicly learnt). — Isaac
I'm following your line of thinking. — Isaac
they’ll produce a similar experience in exposure to similar wavelengths.
— khaled
Yep. — Isaac
So the content of that experience (the one just caused by your cone cells responding to 600nm wavelengths) can't have anything whatsoever to do with your big toe can it? — Isaac
the only way we're dividing the experience of 'red' from everything else going on at the time is by restricting it to that which is caused by your cone cells responding to 600nm wavelengths. — Isaac
How could I possibly guess it's colour if I didn't know the name of it's colour? What would my answer consist of? — Isaac
You're undermining your own position on epiphenomenology. Just because the experience accompanies the physical activity in the brain, doesn't mean it is the cause of it. — Isaac
I was asking you about the nature of that content, but you seem to have avoided the question. — Isaac
There is zero evidence that physics is deterministic — MondoR
It is just a personal, spiritual decision that one makes on how they wish to think of their life. — MondoR
Some picture themselves as bowling balls, others as marionettes, and others as personal creators. — MondoR
Yes, I feel like I am choosing as does pretty much every human being. So why the mythology of determinism? — MondoR
There is no substantiation for it. It's just a story. — MondoR
No reason to believe otherwise. — MondoR
You choose to be a balling ball thrown by the Maker. — MondoR
Of course. One can choose to believe any story they wish. — MondoR
In the meantime, you'd agree with me that many other people think of their mind as a kind of captain of their body. Hence they assume minds have causal force. — Olivier5
Yes, I haven't been arguing that the mind is non-physical in any substantive sense — Janus
The insight is the result of a choice by the mind to explore, to learn something new, to create a new idea, and with whom to share it. — MondoR
Otherwise one is just a bowling ball colliding with pins because the Maker [the Big Bang] made all of the decisions at that point in time — MondoR
The Big Bang gets credit for everything. — MondoR
The alternative is a decision that is not determined by anything other than the self, with the self not being (wholly) determined by anything and the decision being purposeful. — Janus
Exactly. It is new insight — MondoR
Your life is totally meaningless. — MondoR
Yes, if 'physical' means 'non-mental', as is often conceived including by Khaled. — Olivier5
But if one considers the mind itself as a cause, as a force in the world, then I think it follows that mental events ought to be regarded as 'physical'. They must have some materiality. The mind maters. — Olivier5
A model which does not predict individual events, but instead predicts the aggregate outcome of many events in a statistical manner, is not a determinist model. Period. — Olivier5
That cannot be reconciled with the idea that our decisions are wholly determined by physical processes — Janus
So I accept that the two paradigms are correct in their own contexts, and make no demand that the irreconcilable be reconciled. — Janus
Yes, they're both objects I can refer to the colour of with the word 'red'. — Isaac
The experience of seeing a red postbox seems very distinct from the one of seeing a red letter 'A', but no distinguishable components. — Isaac
One whose boundaries are created by public criteria. The reason for the 'slice' is public. — Isaac
If you ask someone what colour the word 'RED' is (when printed in blue ink), they'll usually say 'red'. — Isaac
but no distinguishable components. — Isaac
With public epiphenomena we have the arbitrary (and loose) linguistic boundaries, with their 'props' of set membership. — Isaac
There's no pre-identified slice that always precedes saying 'red'. — Isaac
Experiences as epiphenomena can't 'make' us say red, only neural activity can do that. — Isaac
public epiphenomena — Isaac
there's no way of distinguishing the 'slice' of epiphenomena associated with red — Isaac
I still don't see anything in there that's more than just saying there is such a distinction — Isaac
rather than explaining how it manifests. — Isaac
what is the property being preserved over what sequence? — Isaac
the property being preserved is (for colour) relational retinal cone stimulation in a sequence of perception events - say red, red, red for the colourblind, as opposed to red, red, green for the normally sighted — Isaac
that all physical, and more relevantly neural, processes must be deterministic. — Janus
To be free is to be determined by the self — Janus
Decisions are not random because there is a purposeful intelligence in play. — Janus
whether or not minds can make free decisions. — Janus
If you guys want to buy into misplaced scientistic dogma, be my guest. I'll trust my own experience any day. — Janus
So (for tomorrow, as I have work today) could you explain again the difference between structure and content as you're using the terms in the context of experience? — Isaac
How does that tell us where to cut the continuous and unfiltered 'experience'. — Isaac
then how can I know that the commonality is not our big toes (rather than the wavelengths of light)? — Isaac
How can we know where to cut then? — Isaac
What's baffling to me, is how, having done so, having sieved and diced this thing, having taken it to the academy, shown it around and agreed where it should be cut and what elements belong in what category,... people then what to claim that the remaining diced and filtered sections are all-of-a-sudden ineffable again, private — Isaac