It’s an unbearably sinister view, that there’s this cabal of evil millionaire pharmaceutical companies scheming to get rich by pulling the wool over the citizen’s eyes. — Wayfarer
What possible reason could there be for creating another person?
The only reasons I can imagine are completely self centered around the parents personal desires. — Andrew4Handel
Good is anything that raises an individual's quality of life;
Bad is anything that lowers an individual's quality of life. — Yun Jae Jung
I saw in a UK poll yesterday that even a year after the start of the Covid-19 pandemic about 50% of respondants could not name the disease's major symptoms. I find this level of ignorance staggering. — Tim3003
in this thread it's not even an especially detailed one I'm talking about: it's just "all that matters, morally speaking, is people not suffering" (and consequently, which lead to this discussion, "therefore we should update our idea of what's moral when we discover that something causes someone to suffer"). Which seems like a kindergarten-level "insight", not something that should make me look like an "authoritarian know-it-all". — Pfhorrest
The central questions of philosophy do not change, you are simply intellectually unadventurous. — Bartricks
We find what's common in the degenerate neuronal systems that produce the same cognitive function? — khaled
This is, I think, the specific point on which Isaac and I differ. If I understand him aright, he thinks that there must be one brain state for one mind state. I suspect this is something he assumes for methodological reasons: it makes the MRI scans more impressive. — Banno
"Would you care for another glass of 'Two Barrels'*?" — Isaac
That's a play on words, both meanings are using "two" as a number. — frank
We can. — Banno
An example? — TheMadFool
1. An agent is only responsible for an act if said agent could have done otherwise. — ToothyMaw
If that is accepted then the rest should follow for anyone who can keep up with the logic (which NB does have novel implications as well as drawing novel connections between disparate well-known things). — Pfhorrest
Nobody I know of denies that you can, but plenty of people, anyone opposed to altruism or hedonism, denies that it matters to: anti-altruists denying that other people's anything matters, anti-hedonists denying that anybody's appetites matter. — Pfhorrest
I am of the peculiar opinion that applied ethics is not properly speaking a branch of philosophy at all, but is rather the seed of an entire field of underdeveloped ethical sciences — Pfhorrest
It seems like this is simultaneously a principle that everyone must have already learned as children, but somehow also a controversial opinion among learned people — Pfhorrest
Moon-object-public; sensation of themoon-representation-not public. — Mww
It's not a model. I'm telling you what I haven't experienced. As far as I know, it is logically impossible to experience such a thing, because I cannot have anybody else's experiences. — Luke
Perhaps there's not such thing as 'your own' sensations at all, by your definition. — Isaac
Perhaps there's no such thing as 'your own' brain at all, by your definition. — Luke
Then please explain how you can see or experience or verify what other people's sensations feel/are like. — Luke
You can perceive someone else's behaviours, but you cannot perceive someone else's sensations. — Luke
If I tell you how I feel, all you will perceive are my behaviours, not my sensations. If you could perceive my sensations, then I wouldn't need to tell you how I feel. — Luke
How do you know that "behavioural consequence is a property of your sensations"? — Luke
Again, this is not analagous. We can verify the makes and models of our phones as easily as we can verify the phones themselves: simply by looking at them. — Luke
I don't have pains unless I am consciously aware of them, or unless they hurt. I don't see how I've equivocated on this. — Luke
If I'm not consciously introspecting and 'seeking out' pain signals, then I'm not the one doing it. — Luke
Also, does this imply that near-identical bodies produce (only) near-identical experiences? Perhaps this is what Isaac is getting at with his talk about 'sameness'. — Luke
I think so. — khaled
Conversely, it is impossible for science to distinguish the functions of reason with respect to components of the brain. That is to say, imagination is not to be found in the region containing this component, understanding in that region, moral constitution thataway, aesthetics over yonder. Cognition....aisle three right; opinion....level ten left. — Mww
does the exact same region of my brain respond to my understanding of race riots, as it does to my understanding of internal combustion engines? — Mww
Everydayman will the more readily accept that he thinks by means and ends of reason, than he will accept mathematical algorithms and natural law as necessary for how he thinks. — Mww
One does not think the pain he is in, one does not report anything whatsoever to himself — Mww
And the upshot of that is that it is improper to talk of representing our own pains and pleasures. "I have a pain in my hand" is not like "I have an iPhone in my hand"; it is more like "Ouch!" — Banno
So there aren't unpleasant sensations until we create words for them? That makes no evolutionary sense. — Marchesk
Semantics. What difference does it make if we lump all the sensations which hurt... — Marchesk
That's my question to you: how do you know that it isn't? — Luke
It's private because I've never known or experienced anyone else's sensations except my own. — Luke
My argument for privacy is that you cannot have other people's experiences/sensations; you can only have your own. — Luke
There are the inner sensations and the outer expressions, and you can never see or experience or verify what other people's sensations feel/are like. — Luke
All you will get is a (verbal) behaviour. You still won't be able to see or access their sensations. — Luke
How can I not have access to my own feelings of pain? — Luke
I have conceded that we could all have the same experiences. That wasn't my point. As I said: "We could all have the same experiences, but do we? Probably, but who knows? How can we know?" — Luke
The point of Wittgenstein's Eiffel Tower example is — Isaac
I'm not familiar with that example. Do you have a reference? — Luke
Accuracy is irrelevant to my argument. It's the fact that we cannot access other people's sensations in order to compare them. — Luke
You can only know of your pain sensations by being conscious of them — Luke
I have direct access to my pains when I feel them. — Luke
If reason is reserved for conscious processing, which is granted, and if much of the modeling is unconscious, how can such modeling be said to be acting like reason? — Mww
that modeling is utterly irrelevant to a separate system that models itself absent all those terms in its purpose, even while operating in conjunction with it. — Mww
Who’s we? The teeny-tiny fraction of intellectually specialized humanity that even considers the new system a better explanatory device? — Mww
So, technically, you’ve replaced nothing, but only attacked a common opponent.....ignorance.....from a different direction, and with a much smaller hence potentially less effective force, using experimental weapons. — Mww
I suspect there to be many senior firefighters, soldiers, and these days, nurses’ aides, boldly scoffing at that. A few of ‘em.....the more senior.....rolling on the ground, even. The most insulted, the most senior, would look at you with that, “what....you wouldn’t do your damn job???” expression, and immediately proceed to ignore, if not regret, your very existence. — Mww
Some preliminary conditions for reason are subconscious, but these are not decisions. — Mww
It evidently hasn't - "I can't explain it." — Isaac
It's the object of "can't explain.". — frank
We recognise them using our reason — Bartricks
Not a highpoint in the intellectual life of the forums. — Banno
One can understand. Hmmmm. Does that mean one has to calculate? Or might he....you know....introspect? — Mww
and by your own admission, this science is itself speculative, so all that’s happened is we’ve substituted an older speculative system for a newer one, which is nonetheless speculative for it. — Mww
for all intents and purposes, why not just say we simply reason to the prevention of cause? — Mww
humans can reason to prevention, then proceed to ignore it. — Mww
One thing I noticed: the paper recognizes the human cognitive system as representational; there are eleven instances of that conception therein. Always a good first step, methinks. — Mww
We have the same experiences because we're both human. We each have private pains because you don't have access to my nociceptors. — frank
The reporter asks what it's like. I say I can't explain it. You'll just have to go through it yourself.
A unique, private experience has been talked about. — frank
If you want to be prudent, you need to prepare for everything, including natural catastrophes and the collapse of economy. For this, billions are needed. — baker
Indirect realism"s weakness is about the trustworthiness of representations. How do you confirm that they're accurate? — frank
But you grant that people can have experiences that aren't publicly know — frank
most people simply have pain without needing to make any predictions. But this highlights our differences in talking about the issue. You're talking about our brains making predictions, which happens unconsciously, whereas I'm talking about our conscious experiences of having pain sensations. — Luke
You want me to cite the studies proposing the disagreements that you're referring to? I don't know these studies. I had in mind something along the lines of Wittgenstein:
244. ...How does a human being learn the meaning of names of sensations? For example, of the word “pain”. Here is one possibility: words are connected with the primitive, natural, expressions of sensation and used in their place. A child has hurt himself and he cries; then adults talk to him and teach him exclamations and, later, sentences. They teach the child new pain-behaviour.
257. “What would it be like if human beings did not manifest their pains (did not groan, grimace, etc.)? Then it would be impossible to teach a child the use of the word ‘toothache’.”
Presumably, the reason for these expressions of pain are (consciously experienced) pain sensations. — Luke
People's heights are not private. You can see and measure how tall someone is. You cannot see or measure someone's pain sensations which are private. — Luke
You're trying to make this about language again, here, instead of the privacy of subjective experience. It's a given that we use the same words to refer to the same sets of behaviours. — Luke
But more to the point you don't have access to that particular set of signals either. — Isaac
What particular set of signals? — Luke
fMRI scans, conversation, behavioural observations... — Isaac
These can only measure pain behaviours, not pain sensations. — Luke
If these aren't enough for you to know we have the same experiences, then it is a question of 'sameness'. — Isaac
They're not enough, because there is no way to verify the sensations themselves. — Luke
We can compare and look at each other's phones, though. That's the difference. — Luke
It would be clearer if you could define what 'private' does mean, instead of what it does not mean. — Luke
Why do we need to "predict" what pain is? Why does someone who is in pain, after stubbing their toe, need to make any predictions? — Luke
How does a child infer and predict their own pain without knowing the word for it? Do children not feel any pain before they learn how to use the word 'pain'? — Luke
Yes, that's my point (assuming by 'signals' you mean pain sensations). Once again, I'm talking about the privacy of subjective experience, not the privacy of language or the privacy of the use of the word/model "pain". The pain sensations might be radically different. Indeed. — Luke
Why can't you be sure about this? Is it due to the privacy and inaccessibility of knowing the subjective experiences of other people? — Luke
We could all have the same experiences, but do we? Probably, but who knows? How can we know? — Luke
Spell it out then. What does Luke mean by 'private' that I've thus far misunderstood. — Isaac
Nothing special. In this context, I'm using 'private' to mean 'not publicly known'. — Luke
Pain doesn't come from language, it's biological. — Marchesk
We wouldn't have language for sensations or feelings if we didn't already have them. — Marchesk
Certain pattens of neurons fire and we experience color. How do neurons firing result in color sensations? There's no answer to this as of yet. — Marchesk
I have no idea what an answer will look like. — Marchesk
which for you means taking all the unknowns of experience and squashing them into a little guy in the closet who does something with a representation or model. He's got a second pair of closet eyes with which he does that, and so forth. You need to explain that away as well. — frank
Create our own new....
What better inkling of “private” could there be? “Create our own new” is merely speechifying synonyms for inventive, individual, personal, and time-successive, all necessary ingredients in the recipe for “private”. — Mww
Nahhh....nothing so dramatic. — Mww
Pain speaks to dangerous effect; reason speaks to the quantity and quality of the cause of it. The one is immediate and not a cognition, the latter is mediate and is always a cognition. — Mww
What ta hell is a hidden state anyway? — Mww
Isaac believes things like pain are social constructs, as are things like trees and the moon. — frank
Yep; and since social, public and hence not private. — Banno
I think Isaac is basically an indirect realist who has a persistent misunderstanding about what others, like Luke, mean by "private." — frank
You can cite all the neuroscience you want, but we already know the brain is behind consciousness. We still want to know where the red, pain, dreams, etc. come from, since neural activity isn't itself colored, painful, etc. — Marchesk
All in all, the political verses are not my favorites. — T Clark
I think it is both in the sense that the "Empire" is presented as a condition that involves all those who participate in it rather than a result of a specific class pursuing articulated ends — Valentinus
In some developed countries minimum wage is determined by collective bargaining rather than law, and one could argue employees there get better wages and benefits because of it. Bargaining has been the mainstay method of determining renumeration since time immemorial, after all, whether there is law, taxes or not. — NOS4A2
I agree that bargaining for renumeration necessarily includes taxes wherever taxation exists, but people do not do so because it is right and moral. They do it because they have to or risk punishment. This to say nothing of under-the-table employment or black markets, where taxes need not apply at all. — NOS4A2
So the assumption that only law can determine renumeration is a false and one. — NOS4A2
The notion of “common resources” seems to me unappealing. — NOS4A2
I live in a very vast country. I don’t claim any ownership over the territories and resources of the Inuit peoples, for example. I would not go there (nor could I) and take their resources just because I claim to have some share over it, because I just so happen to live within the same border. — NOS4A2
The only one who stole land, in fact, is the state. — NOS4A2
In order to pay a tax one is forced to labor for the benefit of others. If 20% of my income goes to the government, that means 20% of my labor is forced to serve the benefit of someone else. — NOS4A2
Like it's impossible for a government not to do those things? — Isaac
The use of violence, coercion and the process of corruption and wherever those may lead it, yes. Undoubtedly. — Tzeentch
The whole raison d'être of centralised government is to prevent a repeat of the very bloody process of centralisation happening all over again. — Isaac
Centralized government has to do with consolidation of power, not with preventing bloodshed. And it has done none of the sort over the course of history. Again, the greatest atrocities in our history have been committed by centralized governments. — Tzeentch
Violence is self-perpetuating. Hence, why I fundamentally disagree with its use. — Tzeentch
Developing countries usually struggle with a myriad of other problems, government corruption undoubtedly one of them. And your answer is to give such corrupt governments a further mandate for violence and coercion. — Tzeentch
