Aside from "indeterministic laws" being a questionable idea in general, why would one have to believe in indeterministic laws? — Terrapin Station
In any event, it could work that you're able to bias probabilities. — Terrapin Station
I was in the middle of writing my responding post when Kippo posted his/her response while mine was underway. Now Kippo, I'm not saying I know you have insight on my activities, cyber, physical local or otherwise, but, my paranoia is urging me to accept you have at least some cyber knowledge of my ongoings, since the coincidence is too convienent. I also get the impression you are both patronizing me and gas lighting me in doing this. — THX1138
Schizophrenia isn't only composed of delusions. — Wallows
There are phases in the life of a schizophrenic. Such as prodromal periods, frank psychosis, and eventually a persistent struggle to form an identity. — Wallows
This simply does not follow and I don't even know what you are trying to say here. — Wallows
One doesn't have to believe that physical things are deterministic. — Terrapin Station
The free will I care about is the ability to choose between a tuna and a turkey sandwich, or between which of a handful of movies to watch, etc. — Terrapin Station
So there are a number of experiences described there, some are Alice's, some are other people's, some are interactions between other people, or between her and others. All within the broad scenario of Alice catching a train to work.
Alice is modeling her experiences, which includes modeling the people she encounters (who, in turn, are doing the same, at least when they're not preoccupied) and she is even modeling herself (e.g., evaluating her morning, reflecting on her pains).
It's not a formal scientific model in the sense of a mathematical hypothesis that has been rigorously tested. But the basic elements are there. That is the human-oriented view with the experiences that ground scientific investigation and enable self-referential modeling. — Andrew M
Minds aren't technically part of the mind-independent world, but they're part of a world that mostly consists of mind-independent stuff. — Terrapin Station
Yes, but I'm not actually a realist on physical laws; at least not as physical laws are usually characterized. — Terrapin Station
Well, if someone can figure out a way to make the notion of a nonphysical something/anything coherent, that would be a start. ;-) — Terrapin Station
"There is a mind-independent world" is another way of saying that there are things that exist aside from our minds. It's not saying that we can't influence the mind-independent world. — Terrapin Station
"Mind-independent world" doesn't imply realism about laws, and it doesn't imply strong determinism. — Terrapin Station
Innately. All my life I haven't learned a thing, at most I've just remembered things. — Shamshir
There is flux and flux allows you to not follow laws. Flux is objective and so a law. Hence the mind is ambivalent. Hence you have free will - and your free will has borders. — Shamshir
I don't see how they're mutually exclusive - I see one arising from the other. — Shamshir
It clearly is — Shamshir
You don't depend on me and I can freely act upon you; same with the world. — Shamshir
My point is that this is a dumb dichotomy. Say there was a 'little free man'. What accounts for 'his' freedom? Another little free man? And so on ad infinitum? As if 'brains' were free or not free. Meaningless claptrap. — StreetlightX
Experience, which is "the practical contact with and observation of facts or events (OED)", is implicit in any scientific model. And that "practical contact" can itself be modeled scientifically.
In a general sense, there's the world, and there are separable systems within the world, from particles to human beings to galaxies, that we can seek to describe, explain and interact with. It takes a human (or similarly sentient being) to experience and model that world but there's nothing preventing the modeling of the modeler themselves.
As I see it, the puzzles of experience are front and center in science rather than neglected. — Andrew M
Why would a mind independent world impede your ability to act upon it freely? — Shamshir
You're assuming a thoroughgoing, strong causal determinism to be the case.
Not everyone assumes that — Terrapin Station
"Mind controls body": what a strange phrase, as if 'mind' were a little man in the head with a bunch of control levers pushing the body about. — StreetlightX
Admit it leo. You have no idea what schizophrenia actually is... — Wallows
No, I asked how the observer could be included in the observations in, for example, biology, chemistry or geology. If you can imagine how, then explain or describe. The question of the mind-dependence or mind Independence of what is observed is irrelevant to what is observed, as far as i can tell. — Janus
How do you know it would be "so different that you can't imagine", if you can't imagine how it would be different? — Janus
Sure what we do affects the climate and may (apart from the immediate effects of, for example, drilling and excavation) over much longer timescales even affect the geology. But the climate and geology prior to the existence of humans would not have been affected by us, would it? — Janus
That we might be thought of as "heaps of particles that blindly follow physical laws while having the illusion of choice" just shows one way of thinking that obviously does not tell the whole story of human, or even animal, beings. Contemporary science is not so reductive as this outmoded Newtonian vision; but that seems to be taking longer to sink in with some of those who like to call themselves philosophers than it should. By reacting against this reductionist model you are actually perpetuating it, because you see only the "either/or" of (necessarily reductively materialist) science versus some kind of idealism. — Janus
Can a mind change the world so it has whatever it desires? No. — Banno
So you have everything you desire? — Banno
Of course minds change the way the world is. Can a mind change anything it desires? No. — Banno
Reality is the stuff that does not care what you say or think. — Banno
Once my mind has control over my body, I already have a physical instrument, namely my body, with which to affect the world. — fishfry
This all serves to set up the thesis that science neglects experience and the human perspective when, to the contrary, science has always been grounded in experience and observation. That's why it works. — Andrew M
I really can't type more than one sentence with you, or you'll ignore stuff. — Terrapin Station
At the risk of a second sentence, what's the difference between the fact that you experience and an experience you have? — Terrapin Station
What can it refer to that experience alone can not, if experience is necessarily lived? — Terrapin Station
Why are you talking about neglecting experiences in that section anyway? That part wasn't about that. This quote: "You completely ignored that referring to experience is referring to something that was necessarily "lived," necessarily processual" is about whether "lived" is redundant.
You're confusing the second half with the first half. (Hence a reason why the best course of action is to stick to one thing at a time . . . against my better judgment, I addressed more than one thing in a post and you're conflating the two.) — Terrapin Station
What is the non-lived sense of experience that you'd be referring to there?
Let's just solve that first, because this is going way too many rounds without you clarifying that. — Terrapin Station
You completely ignored that referring to experience is referring to something that was necessarily "lived," necessarily processual. — Terrapin Station
For example, no materialist neglects ("lived") experience. — Terrapin Station
That's an abbreviated way of referring to processes one has gone through which were "lived." It just seems like a stupid term, where we're adding words where there's no need to add words--adding words to make it sound more "intellectual"/theoretical. We can't come up with an example where simply "experience," unmodified by a redundant adjective, wouldn't do just as well. — Terrapin Station
How about addressing the fact that you're forwarding strawmen? — Terrapin Station
The gulf between a belief being widespread and being universal and a necessary part of engaging in science as claimed by the article in the OP is unfathomably wide. — andrewk
Many of us like to think that science can give us a complete, objective description of cosmic history, distinct from us and our perception of it. But this image of science is deeply flawed. In our urge for knowledge and control, we’ve created a vision of science as a series of discoveries about how reality is in itself, a God’s-eye view of nature.
the belief that physical reality has absolute primacy in human knowledge, a view that can be called scientific materialism. In philosophical terms, it combines scientific objectivism (science tells us about the real, mind-independent world) and physicalism (science tells us that physical reality is all there is)
Objectivism and physicalism are philosophical ideas, not scientific ones
Science has no metaphysical dogmas. Plenty of scientists do — andrewk
can we stop saying "lived experience"? What other sort of experience is there? — Terrapin Station
And then how powerful is this group of scientifically illiterate philosophy interested people? I do get that religious people who are skeptical about science as a whole, at least in arguments, has a decent amount of power, but these are not people who are interested xin philosophy - for the most part.
But that's a secondary issue. A very important one. My main reaction is 'so what?' if there is a problem as brought up in the OP, then the fact that there are scientifically illierate people who focus on philosophy is not relevant. If there is no problem as presented in the OP, then it is still not relevent. So the issue is: is that problem there? — Coben
And how would it be possible by only looking at physics, the movement of particles to derive how elephants behave in groups? — ssu
You are simply dismissing issues like entropy, randomness and quantum mechanics or that not everything in the phenotype is explained with the genotype. And with social sciences it's totally obvious that things simply don't get explained by movements of particles. Nobody would believe such reductionist crap. — ssu
And these people have a powerful influence on the way society moves and changes and interpersonally are often quite harsh and dismissive. I honestly can't believe that this is being denied by people in this thread. The fact that they are like this does not mean science is bad or should be overthrown. It means what it means. There is a closemindedness and oversimplification by this culture or significant subculture - and one that is really quite philosophically illiterate despite their intelligence - and this is problematic. — Coben
Simply put it, physics cannot answer to every question there is in science. Hence the observation that everything is made of particles doesn't take us anywhere in a huge field of scientific topics. Add social sciences into the mix and physics is totally useless in those fields of inquiry. — ssu
Physics doesn't claim anything like that. — ssu
Yet a quantum-physicist has no clue based his own field how mammals communicate or what the monetary policy ought to be. The idea that one phenomenon can be reduce to other more fundamental phenomena and in the end "everything would be physics" is just silly as physics has a limited scope to the field of science. — ssu
Many have commented that this view exists, and offered their opinion that it is a problem. I have said as much myself, many times. Those who are open to this message have already received and accepted it. Those who really need it are those whose emotional attachments to their personal beliefs are so deep that they cannot even hear discussion like this one. A shame, but there it is.
So where to go from here? :chin: — Pattern-chaser