Science is indeed a by-product of philosophy. — Olivier5
Well, it seems to me like I think and wonder in language, if that's any different. I'm never aware of myself thinking and wondering using neurons. — Luke
I think there are two different meanings of "awareness" at work here, and both are "common use". — Luke
All you have done here is to identify brain activity with conscious awareness; it doesn't explain how you are conscious of your brain activity. — Luke
Apparently it records CPU usage but not each binary step. — Olivier5
Descartes, Leibniz, Giordano Bruno, Gassendi, Averroes, Avicenna...
Ari-fuckin-stotle. — Olivier5
the significant point is that the scientists are usually playing catch-up with the philosophers — Joshs
Looking at your conversation with Olivier, I should add that there are no fixed boundaries between what constitutes science vs philosophy. There are more and less theoretical or applied sciences , and the same goes for philosophy( analytic vs continental) . I’m less interested in whether a particular set of ideas is labeled philosophy or science that how profound and useful
those ideas are. I should add that all other areas of
culture including poetry, literature , music and art , contribute to the shaping of theoretical ideas. That’s why I’m fascinated by the way a particular scientific theory belongs to a large cultural
movement. — Joshs
Lorber's patients either had no brains — Dharmi
That severely lowers the probability that brain produces consciousness. — Dharmi
decisively debunked — Dharmi
I'm not understanding why you wouldn't extend the same attitude toward the psyche. — frank
Entity just means thing. The thing that produces self reports is what? The whole organism? — frank
It's decisive proof against the idea that brain creates consciousness. Since the folks involved had no brain hemispheres, or were missing massive volume of their brain hemisphere, yet were fully conscious and had intelligence. Many were even students at university. — Dharmi
BTW, you frequently seem to be putting a homunculus in "the brain" which interprets signals. Maybe that's just a result of the nontechnical language you're using. — frank
So we never exit the realm of models, right? We just deal in models of models, and models of modeled models.
This language implies the thing that's being modeled (the thing in itself), but that's forever beyond our reach. Is that a fair assessment of your view? — frank
Sure, but it's not telling you what the CPU hardware is actually doing. And binary is an abstraction of electricity being moved around through logic gates with high and low voltages. — Marchesk
It doesn't give you a run down of the detail of its calculations though. To do that, the CPU would need to know what it is calculating while it is calculating. IOW it would need to be self aware. — Olivier5
Inner dialogue is talking, no? — Isaac
Private conversation. — Marchesk
A lot of people: us all. We all do it, including you. — Olivier5
No you don't. You think and wonder using neurons. You talk using language. — Isaac
Inner dialog doesn't exist? I hear my thoughts in words. — Marchesk
Can computers describe their own calculations in detail, bit by bit? Or do they only report the results of theses calculations, at points specified in the program? It makes a difference. — Olivier5
So you think scientists invented science, huh? Logic, anyone? — Olivier5
Right but what do we do instead of introspection? — khaled
I would think the answer is “No” then. Doubting your beliefs isn’t fun usually. And if it’s not how you arrive at beliefs anyways then why bother with it? — khaled
Scientists, as a loose collection, would not even exist in the first place if philosophers had not first carved up a safe space for freedom of inquiry, sometimes exposing themselves to significant risk of punishment in doing so, and if they had not used this space to invent the scientific method. — Olivier5
I typically think and wonder using language. — Luke
what I'm consciously aware of does not have the nature of, or is not in the form of, a brain signal — Luke
You become aware of the signal because they're connected to the part of your brain for which activity therein is what we call 'conscious awareness'." The latter doesn't at all explain how, or at what point, you become aware of the signal. — Luke
Then what is it that you are aware of? — Luke
In this case, doesn't it seem to you - that is, aren't you consciously aware - of your arm being in one location, when it is, in fact, in another location? — Luke
Of course, Popper was influenced by scientists, mainly by QM. — Olivier5
Humans are the meaning-makers and we're outside the computer. — frank
You want a lesson in computer architecture? — frank
Realizing that is not at all the same as considering that the world is basically discourse. — frank
Meaning? — Olivier5
The question then is: Now what? Is this reason to doubt more, or less? — khaled
Then again, doesn't this also apply for the reasons you believe this: — khaled
We seem to be stuck here. If we throw everything out as "Oh you just believe that because you've been conditioned to believe that" we'd have to throw THAT out too. — khaled
None of the process is consciously thought, no. You're only aware of the result. — Isaac
Then why are you referring to "thinking" and "wondering"? Those are not things you do unconsciously. — Luke
You said, "No, it feels to you like an awareness of your arm." Now you're saying instead: — Luke
This might be why someone is consciously aware, ... What makes someone aware of them? — Luke
You said earlier that the feelings are inferred from the signals. This is the opposite. — Luke
Maybe we already decided what to believe for the most part, and only doubt as a pretense to seem reasonable in front of others, when we're really just trying to find a way to confirm our own beliefs logically. — khaled
Some scientists read Popper, argue with Popper, discuss Popper between themselves. The idea of falsifiability (and others) makes its way in the discourse. — Olivier5
Scientists were influenced alright, whether they like to admit it or not. And whether they are conscious of this influence or not. Don't take take their word for it. — Olivier5
Popper was Kantian and had an undeniable, modern influence on epistemology and philosophy of science. — Olivier5
Scientists are very ambitious. They’re very competitive. If they really thought philosophy would help them, they’d learn it and use it. They don’t. — Lewis Wolpert
[philosophy is] just a way of talking about discoveries that have already been made.
So none of this is consciously thought/wondered. — Luke
If you become aware of the signals by having the feeling, then the signals are inferred from the feeling, rather than the other way around. — Luke
You do realize this is just a social construct right? — frank
A pubic carving up of the world. — Marchesk
Which of all that (and the several hundred more) is 'happiness'? — Isaac
If you don't already know what it is to feel happy, why should I bother trying to tell you? — Marchesk
They don't feel the need to borrow the intellect of an eighteenth century German. — Isaac
Their beliefs and worldviews might have been influenced by Kant, unbeknown to them. Scientist do not live outside of society and they are influenced by the culture in which they live. — Olivier5
I don’t get how asking these questions is supposed to lead me to your conclusion. — NOS4A2
All of the above can be acquired without appropriation, through common enterprise and free trade rather than force and coercion, as I’ve already stated. — NOS4A2
There are many forms of physicalism.
For instance , what allows Barrett to reject naive realism is her indebtedness to Kantian idealism. That’s why she can talk about a veil of appearances separating us from a world we have no direct access to and must use interpretive faculties to understand. She would agree we can never access the thing in itself. That notion of the physical only emerged with Kant. So I would say the default position in most of the sciences is a physicalism
derived from , or at least consistent with, Kant’s idealism. — Joshs
Toiling your own field, planting a seed, watering the seed, and using the sun to grow wheat for flour is somehow appropriating the product and labor of others. — NOS4A2
all "products of [one's] own labour" involve "appropriating the products and labor of others" - the field, the seed, the clean air, the good soil, the clean water, the open ground... All the products and labour of others. and that's just to grow a grain of wheat. Multiply that by a thousand for your computer, your fridge, your car... — Isaac
