I don't think you actually understand what I mean and blame my "lack of clarity" (so far you're the only one, bert) for your failure to understand me. — 180 Proof
Do you understand the Bayesian/semiotic approach to modelling well enough to justify such a doubt?
If not, your proclaimed doubt is “happening in the dark”. — apokrisis
it should be easy enough to see that the brain - in modelling its environment in terms of its embodied self-interest - ought to feel like something. — apokrisis
"Different" but not unrelated: noun, verb, and preposition, respectively. — 180 Proof
What seems to be the problem? — Olivier5
I think play is living in the moment. — James Riley
There are only two parties in American democracy for the simple reason that those who created it realized, much to our benefit, that given any issue, only two voices matter - those for and those against. Vote abstention is possible and practiced even in a 2-party system. In short, we have all the advantages of a democracy with none of the downsides of a multi-party democracy which, to my reckoning, adds another layer of complexity confusion to politics. :grin: — TheMadFool
I mean, seriously. Have you ever interacted with, say, the better arguers in Architects & Engineers for 9/11 Truth, Inc? These discussions generally strike me as so facile. Go out and find the better proponents of what gets called a conspiracy theory and argue your case that you present here. IOW tell them that really it is based on ad hoc, cherry picking and other fallacies. Point out to them where, see how it goes. — Bylaw
1. If God exists, then he would not suffer innocents to live in ignorance in a dangerous world
2. God exists
3. Therefore, God has not suffered innocents to live in ignorance in a dangerous world — Bartricks
There was a plot to knocked down the WTC and it succeeded. — 180 Proof
An example of a "true conspiracy theory" please. — 180 Proof
A first clarification would be that brains work not on stored memories but active anticipations. They are designed not to remember the past but predict the future. So the comparison is between what is expected to be the case, and what turns out to be the case. — apokrisis
Where did I say that? Again, you put the words into my thread. — GraveItty
Is not remembering that we are conscious simply to repeat to ourselves "I am conscious"? — Janus
It's obvious to everyone, — Wayfarer
Would the question "how does it feel to be a seagull" have any meaning beyond these specific inquiries? — Janus
I'm more of the opinion that consciousness in this scenario constitutes a nescio quid, such that for a zombie to make a true qualia-claim it would be referring to something to which it in principle does not have access. — Pantagruel
If zombie-consciousness is devoid of phenomenality, what possible set of conditions could give rise to the zombie asserting phenomenality? Isn't this a petitio principii? — Pantagruel
