It is this visual and auditory imagery that informs our intellectual considerations, not whatever distal causes are responsible for such imagery. — Michael
I don't think it creates conditions. — Tzeentch
You seem to be deliberately trying to misunderstand what I'm trying to say. I won't play that game. This obviously isn't about the English language. — Tzeentch
Morality is a set of principles that guide behavior — Tzeentch
The conditions didn't change until one had finally made up their mind and turned their intentions into physical actions. — Tzeentch
Why? Because we voluntarily created a situation in which we cause harm if we aren't to take said responsibility. — Tzeentch
Plato and other thinkers alerted me to the fact that my previous conception of morality was unexamined and muddy, not unlike yours. — Tzeentch
That’s really not true. — Xtrix
Of those who do, I think the problem is powerlessness and hopelessness. — Xtrix
If you can prove the existence of an object like the Higgs particle then you can logically prove the existence of a larger object that we humans refer to as "an apple" through the same methods of testing and using instruments that bypass our perception. We can provide all the data about the apple that confirms it to be that kind of an object, based on how it correlates with what our perception tells us. — Christoffer
So what's the question again? — Wayfarer
The only definite fact in all of this is that quantum physics undermines realism. — Wayfarer
... the most defensible form of scientific realism
I would not presume to have a favorite interpretation of a subject in which I am not qualified — Janus
why not take it to the negotiation table? — jorndoe
Better, drop the notion of direct and indirect and just say we see the tree. — Banno
here we are dealing with 'things' (loosely speaking) that have various 'degrees of reality'; when the particle is observed, it is 'actualised' by the observation. And we don't like that because it undercuts scientific realism
Realism wants to say that what is being observed would exist regardless whether observed or not - and in one sense that is true. But it's not true in any ultimate sense. And that is what is thrown into sharp relief by physics
So their existence is not un-ambigious, which is what is the real problem for physicalism and realism.
Realism wants to believe that there are particles which exist whether or not the measurement is taken; this is what is thrown into doubt by the double-slit experiment
the inconvenient truth is that the hardest of hard sciences, namely physics, has now torpedoed this [naive realism] beneath the waterline.
When the builders come to ask the conditions are that four people are available.
When I make my intentions known that condition hasn't changed. — Tzeentch
opinions vary greatly on what is reasonable and what isn't. — Tzeentch
why I should value your opinion over someone else's. I need reasoning and logic. — Tzeentch
I determine it on the basis of reason and moral principles. — Tzeentch
In the context of our example it sure seems that way. Remember you have also claimed that changing the conditions causes harm, so now you're implying that by internally changing your mind, you're causing harm. Seems absurd to me. — Tzeentch
They voluntarily bring about the conditions in which a child will rely on them for survival. — Tzeentch
That's when it becomes the parent's responsibility. — Tzeentch
It does not. It's a mental construction we use to model reality, but such mental constructions do not necessarily exist in reality. — Tzeentch
How did you learn what the word 'moral' means? — Isaac
By reading Plato I suppose. — Tzeentch
Before the builders ask my help the condition is that there are four people available. After I have made it clear I wish not to get involved, there are four people available. — Tzeentch
Reasonableness isn't a part of my argument. — Tzeentch
reasonableness as you are using it is very subjective and in my view unusable. — Tzeentch
In my "community" ideas vary wildly about what is moral, and many of those ideas I would consider clearly the opposite. — Tzeentch
So it's not possible to change your mind? — Isaac
Sure I can. — Tzeentch
If you scroll back through this discussion you'll see the intentions of the parents are not what's being questioned. — Tzeentch
When one has voluntarily taken upon themselves the responsibility to care for the person in need.
For example, a parent cannot let their child starve, because the parent voluntarily created a situation in which the child depends on them to fulfill their life needs. — Tzeentch
Because things that do not exist in reality do not have consequences. — Tzeentch
Well if you're interested in my approach to morality, you're in luck because I've already been sharing it with you over the last few pages. — Tzeentch
The reason I post on this forum is to test my ideas. — Tzeentch
What was proposed before was that my availability was already decided, and that to dissent was to create conditions and harm. — Tzeentch
Reasonableness isn't decided by majority decision, as we've already established. — Tzeentch
There were never going to be five people available to build the house. — Tzeentch
that there are and were only four people available all along. — Tzeentch
Some do, some don't. — Tzeentch
Me having ideas about morality does not mean I believe individuals shouldn't be free to make their own choices — Tzeentch
I don't see what that has to do with individualism, nor what part of our discussion this is relevant to. — Tzeentch
Non-interference can be immoral, however it is not so by default. — Tzeentch
Inaction does not have consequences. To argue such would be a typically human but erroneous way of representing causality. The drowning man doesn't drown because I did not help him, but because he could not swim and somehow ended up in the water.
The apple doesn't fall on the ground because I wasn't there to catch it.
etc. — Tzeentch
I imagine that someone in the Middle-East who is about to stone a woman to death for adultery would come with a similar argumentation. — Tzeentch
It would be more accurate to say I would not ask you to conform to my ideas of morality. — Tzeentch
But we have. We're currently in the middle of a surge, in fact. At least in the US. — Xtrix
Lots of propaganda against unions. — Xtrix
The fact that something hasn't happened (which is somewhat untrue) means that the problem is with the "idea"? Says who? — Xtrix
Higgs particle is something we cannot perceive but is detectable in a repeatable fashion by equipment built through theories backed up by mathematical logic. — Christoffer
The perception of science data does not render the science data wrong just because we perceive the result of those tests. They have no correlation with each other. — Christoffer
if we and a bunch of aliens, with extremely different perceptions, were to analyze the apple, even with different types of tools, it would still confirm the existence of an object that we could apply definitions to that are descriptive of what we define as an apple. — Christoffer
I'm not in control over the ideas in other individuals' heads for which I may or may not be available. — Tzeentch
Those activities aren't reasonable at all. — Tzeentch
I did not create that condition. I've already given you multiple examples as to why that would be absurd — Tzeentch
Remember when a few comments back I asked you why you felt people were entitled to another's action?
You denied that you were. I wouldn't be so sure of that. — Tzeentch
I don't need to list the countless atrocities committed throughout history by collectives that were unable to discern right from wrong. — Tzeentch
The degree to which you lean towards individualism is a) inconsistent - it appears to only apply to inaction, not action, — Isaac
Explain. — Tzeentch
Because one cannot be judged for something one isn't involved in.
I argue that not getting involved is acceptable by default. — Tzeentch
of course you fence with notions of reasonableness - fair enough, but if you get to apply your notions of reasonableness then everyone does. — Tzeentch
It's a judgement, not of a person, but of an action and/or the arguments that support it. — Tzeentch
Must the thread really be reset ever so often (⇒ repetition)? — jorndoe
from an empirical pov the OP question is meaningless - it goes without saying that there’s an external material world — Wayfarer
I do know that it’s a different subject to cognitive science. — Wayfarer
I don't see it as a competition — Wayfarer
you don't really see how it could be anything else — Wayfarer
what, challenging "the west" to shoot it out on "the battlefield"? Boasting military prowess? Walking out on a top meeting? Shutting down talks? All the while bombing the Ukrainians and announcing a larger "special operation"...? :D Get real. There's been comments in the thread already. — jorndoe
you don't seem to hold philosophy in much esteem. — Wayfarer
do you see from the evidence I've provided you with, that systems theory would be a very flimsy sort of tool for modeling the true reality of things like the universe and a cell? — Metaphysician Undercover
Availability is something that exists in the mind of some other individual. — Tzeentch
They're sitting on their lawn, reading books, watching tv. — Tzeentch
Parents create the condition of life, and life invariably also includes harm. — Tzeentch
the evidence to the contrary is so vast that I would indeed be confused if this is what you're arguing. — Tzeentch
In the absence of objective truth we have two options: leave the individual to judge themselves (individualism) or let the community dictate (collectivism).
I lean heavily towards individualism.
But we are going wildly off-topic here. — Tzeentch
Because procreation is an act, and not non-interference. — Tzeentch
I'm not judging anyone. I'm presenting moral principles and the logic that supports it. — Tzeentch
It's a notion that doesn't exist to an uninvolved bystander. It's the person who has the desire to build a house that creates it. — Tzeentch
Perhaps so, but I don't agree that it is the uninvolved bystander that creates the condition, nor the suffering.
It seems to me the builders are themselves creating the conditions that cause suffering. — Tzeentch
This idea of 'availability' is subjective. I could reasonably assume half my town to be "available" to do things for me. — Tzeentch
And they don't thereby create the conditions for my house not being built — Tzeentch
And who is to be the arbiter of this? — Tzeentch
People do as they please regardless. The question is whether reasoned morality is a part of that which pleases them. — Tzeentch
I don't agree that what is "easy" should in the context of morality be determined by a third party.
It is precisely what is under contention. — Tzeentch
whatever reason they presents is sufficient, no matter how irrational it may seem to a third party, assuming it is not malevolent. — Tzeentch
Building strong unions — Xtrix
Doing things individually, like installing solar panels, heat pumps, electrifying one's home (stoves, water, etc) and buying other electric things (like lawnmowers) would be helpful too. — Xtrix
I was never available in the first place. So that condition was already in place - I did not create it. — Tzeentch
There are only four people available. — Tzeentch
I don't accept that answer. Societies have agreed on terribly immoral things in the past. — Tzeentch
Tell me about those factors, and I will tell you why it is still inconsistent. — Tzeentch
It's a fairly common phenomenon in certain countries for people not to help out in traffic accidents out of fear for being held accountable. — Tzeentch
this presupposes the person in question was a participant in the first place. — Tzeentch
As far as I'm concerned, by non-interference one isn't creating any conditions that impact a given event. — Tzeentch
I'd argue that believing oneself to be the proper arbiter to judge who could easily save who is at least equally sociopathic. — Tzeentch
The idea that non-interference is immoral by default cannot be applied consistently. — Tzeentch
that belief is not universally held. — Tzeentch
systems theory ontologies — Metaphysician Undercover
You understand why that is implicitly empiricist? In any case, the examples of philosophy are, of course, the philosophers — Wayfarer
do the authors actually state that? — Marchesk
inferring that something is red is distinct from receiving selective visual sensations
Furthermore, you can only see your own red that is an integral part of your virtual reality model.
you cannot see my red — you can only infer that I can see red.
what they say there is quite straightforward non-technical English. — Michael
in the first quote?free energy minimization
in the second quote?sort of neurobiological and cognitive specification that we attempt to demonstrate in this paper.
in the third quote (which also references active inference)You cannot see someone else’s red or another red because they are entailed by another model or hypothesis.
Do I need to properly understand cognitive science to understand the philosophical implications of what Friston and Hobson say here? — Michael
Unless one has a very narrow (and ultimately counter-intuitive, in my opinion) definition of "causing" something (which is not the same as being held responsible for it), I do not think it makes sense to deny that one of the causes behind the man's drowning was that he was not helped. — DA671
If that was true — Tate
I'm not using any, I'm repeating what they're saying — Michael
The schizophrenic does hear voices1, she's just wrong to interpret these voices as belonging to some demon (or person, or something external to herself). — Michael
