We're aware that something more is going on with us but it's very difficult to put a finger on, hence the evasive vagaries of the language used ("what it is like" etc.). — Kenosha Kid
The diagram is not in the system, it's an outside view. — Kenosha Kid
A system with an input and output can't have as its output a report on the system. If there's a bit of the system that measures the system, what is measuring it, etc. — Kenosha Kid
nothing wrong with a system examining the inner workings of a sample of almost identical systems. — Kenosha Kid
Have the system report the map input :|--> output for all possible inputs. The resultant map is functionally identical to the system, but differently composed — Kenosha Kid
examining the system, reporting on it, post hoc, is not the use of the system for its intended purpose. When thinking about something, in the common course of cognitive events, to ask myself how it is I’m thinking it, isn’t in that common course. I may inquire afterwards, in which case I would retrospect using the very same system by which the original thought occurred. Check out how a car drives, whether it drives properly or there’s something wrong with it, by driving it, right? Check out the fit of a shoe......ehhhh, you get the picture. — Mww
In addition, part of the system is not in our awareness. Just as in the physical nature of brain mechanics, there is a gap between the sensing of a thing and the apprehension of it, that part in which the perception is transformed into material for the system. Much like we are not conscious of the transfer along nerves of the output of sensation and the input to the brain. — Mww
The first box is the instantiation of it, the last is the culmination. — Mww
I also think if you take care of financial, security, and opportunity issues, the rest will take care of itself. — T Clark
What more would be needed, what more could possibly be achieved, beyond addressing "disparities in education, resources, opportunity and wealth?" That is the problem, the whole problem, and nothing but the problem. Or am I misunderstanding what you're saying. — T Clark
Reminds me of Pattee's epistemic cut and how this is the basis for the subject-object distinction. — Olivier5
I don’t know the cause of my thought. That which cannot be known, can still be thought, hence, the cause of my thought can only be a thought, or, it is nothing. — Mww
I know I start with this (something), I know I end up with that (“basketball”), but whatever happens in between, is part of the system itself, and can never be examined except by the very system of which it is a part. — Mww
It is catastrophically erroneous to say the object in the relation is its cause, for the object is necessarily simultaneous with the thought of it***, which eliminates the time absolutely necessary for the principle of cause and effect. — Mww
Modeling the physical cause of thought can possibly lead to manipulation of its electrochemical constituents. Behavior modification is a real thing, right? More likely behavior modification manifests as beneficial to humanity in general, I would hope. Hence....better humans.
Me, modeling the content of my thoughts, meaning “this is what I think about that”, and providing I wish to benefit myself by rearranging what I think about that....hence making me a better human.
Where it springs from....damned if I know. Sounded profound at the time. Ego or superfluous bullshit....take your pick. — Mww
It is these needs that burden us (i.e. "a difficult situation or unpleasant responsibility that you must deal with or worry about"). — Inyenzi
tell that to people literally starving to death — Inyenzi
What makes you think this? — Isaac
A thought bwahahaha — Kenosha Kid
I expect I'm not far off in thinking that a song "playing" in your head isn't just a representation of the real thing (which is true of hearing it for the first time), but an approximation (recall is imperfect) to a representation (memory) of an approximation (memorisation is imperfect) of a representation (what I heard) of a real thing (what was played). — Kenosha Kid
Then RogueAI's argument would be that this recognizes some sort of distinction between mental event and non-mental events. — Olivier5
this distinction between things "in our head" and things "outside our head" is culturally near-universal and I believe absolutely fundamental to art, justice, politics and zillions other things we humans do. — Olivier5
Still, some other people refuse to envisage this distinction, or try and deny its importance. — Olivier5
The next step is to realize that perceptions are not just different, or even "originating from" a non-mental event in a mechanical manner. Perceptions represent non-mental events, they interpret them in a symbolic manner. Our mental world is (among other things) modeling reality "out there".
In other words, there is an epistemic gap between the event perceived and the corresponding perception events. — Olivier5
Are you arguing for dualism now? — Olivier5
We can measure the intensity of sound and understand how that effects the body, sure, but do words come with more intensity? — NOS4A2
Well, this conversation has taken an uncomfortable turn for the pathological. Are you saying that you can't tell the difference (even colloquially) between the expressions "there's a song playing in that room over there" and "I've got this song playing in my head"? — Isaac
No, — RogueAI
In short, it’s a comfortable rendering of something for which no certain knowledge yet repeals. — Mww
Exactly right. I am Everydayman. Makes no difference whether true or not, there seems to be a little tiny world contained in my head, and wherever it directs, I go. — Mww
I can never ever think to a cause of thinking — Mww
Modeling the cause of thought implies making better humans.
Modeling the content of thought implies making a human better. — Mww
People generally believe in the just-world hypothesis, and there is evidence suggesting that such belief correlates positively with mental health. — baker
Also, it seems that most people believe that disparity is normal, a given, and not something to take any action against. — baker
It's not clear what the motivation for reducing disparity is or should be. Do you have any ideas? — baker
Only someone beholden to the superstition would try pass off evidence of the power of the brain — NOS4A2
Do you believe that such disparities are not justified? — baker
Many of them have left Labor style politics precisely because they feel disenfranchised by what they see as stifling political correctness. As one such person said to me a couple of weeks ago, "We need jobs and housing, not gender neutral pronouns." — Tom Storm
So the question remains; how best to facilitate cultural change, whilst recognising the disparities in education, resources, opportunity and wealth. — Tom Storm
He or she (motivated by the sense of dis-ease, dissatisfaction, pain, or suffering felt) addresses and deals with the need — Inyenzi
It seems highly implausible that you actually have a song playing in your head. — Isaac
No it doesn't. — RogueAI
it tells me specifically about myself from within — Mww
Most of all, my metaphysical paradigm doesn’t need to juxtaposition disabilities or physical damage in justifications for my normative mental goings-on — Mww
it is my duty to resist your bullshit. — unenlightened
There is no empirical evidence that some combinations of sounds and marks on paper have more power than others. — NOS4A2
There is no instrument that can measure it — NOS4A2
no hypothesis to account for it — NOS4A2
no formula to describe it — NOS4A2
We're a curious species. We're usually not content with "that's just how things are". We always want to know why. — RogueAI
I think the idea that mental states = physical states is contradicted by the simple fact that I can have a song playing in my head while there's no music in my skull — RogueAI
Most materialists believe that machines can be conscious. That entails that the pain of stubbing a toe is (or can be reduced to) a bunch of tiny switches turning off and on. That's extremely implausible. — RogueAI
I'm sure you've heard all that and have an explanation you like. — RogueAI
Would you agree that the physical is sometimes conscious and sometimes not? For example, your brain is conscious and your kidneys aren't agree? — RogueAI
Can you give me an example of physical stuff that isn't mind-independent? — RogueAI
So, the sun is mind-independent? You didn't agree with this before — RogueAI
If all minds disappeared, would the sun still exist? yes, no. — RogueAI
Did you mean to say the bolded? Aren't you talking labels here? Is your position then that the sun's existence is dependent on whether minds exist??? — RogueAI
Right, there wouldn't be labels for anything, but the stuff would still be there. I think we're agreed. So the physical is mind-independent. Agreed? — RogueAI
Until black lives do actually matter as much as white lives, there is no civility because civility is a mutual relation. — unenlightened
What would happen to the universe if all minds dissappeared? Would planets, stars, galaxies, etc. still be around? — RogueAI
Do you think your ideas have physical attributes? Size, weight, texture, etc.? — RogueAI
While accommodating the fairness of the request, I deny the expense.
Got something this virgoyankeebabyboomer don’t gotta pay for? — Mww
Oh no, you don’t!!! I know you. No need to over-analyze such a simple mental exercise.
Peruse this, peruse that, judge degree of explanatory content relative to a given condition. — Mww
As a legitimate survey participant, you’ve concluded the first is a model for the absolutely useless, the second is a model for guesswork. And by admitting to the possible commission of your own guesswork, you’d tacitly acceded to the second-order usefulness of the one in form if not in content — Mww
Welcome back, by the way. — Mww
It’s not complicated; each participant answers as he sees fit. — Mww
