you can will your leg to move, but that doesn't mean you instruct your skin, sub-tissues, cellular systems, intracellular environments, chemical processes etc. — fdrake
'rather than discussing it in a framework familiar to me', you mean. If it can't be reduced to the kinds of terms that physicalists can comprehend, then you say I'm talking about a 'subjective feeling'. But to try and explain why it's not a subjective feeling, requires you think outside the square that you wish me to step into. — Wayfarer
We could talk about this elsewhere sometime if either of us can be bothered. — fdrake
I've read some stuff in clinical psychology that heavily criticises the naive application of the (diagnosis->treatment) paradigm in bodily health to mental health; since it promotes treatment methodology that just doesn't work. The individual level variability of mental health aetiology is so great, and the diagnoses interact so much (depression with anxiety as a comorbidity or anxiety with depression as a comorbidity anyone?), and the medication targets neurochemistry rather than psychological state (by necessity), "you're depressed? take prozac", "you're in chronic pain? try this exercise program!"; it's applying a billiard ball style reductive explanation (like germ theory) to interventions in crazy complicated complex systems, and as is predictable it doesn't work so well. And it's not necessary, since the patient is literally right there with self reports. — fdrake
It's just a rabbit hole devoid of any how questions (or generalisations from procedural descriptions), it's sitting there like it's waiting for something. — fdrake
Empiricism amounts to the elevation of the senses to the sole criteria for valid knowledge (along with predictive power and replicability — Wayfarer
I'm trying to understand what's behind it all, where that belief originates, because I'm sure it originates in something real, but something very difficult to realise and understand. — Wayfarer
Another feature this highlights is that explanations need not tell the 'whole story', whereas reductive explanations, when right, must. — fdrake
So the chance throwing of the die might produce 1,2,3,4,5,6, but it was not specified and therefore not ordered. — Metaphysician Undercover
Whether or not one might say that a chance occurrence appeared to be ordered, or vise versa would depend on context, and what exactly would be meant by this. — Metaphysician Undercover
How could you say that the outcome of a design is not designed? Perhaps we could appeal to accidents or mistakes — Metaphysician Undercover
it is impossible by way of contradiction for a designed state to come by chance. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's like saying that a hectogon appears to be a circle. If you know it's a hectogon (designed state), and are calling it such, then you know it's not a circle (created by chance), so it doesn't make sense to say that it appears to be a circle (created by chance), when you know it's not. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's like saying 'Rape is a type of fucking - not something separate.' — 180 Proof
You actually don't show a lot of interest in that subject, or knowledge of it. — Wayfarer
Wow - so much in one sentence and the claim is that this is true absolutely which I can see intuitively — NilsArnold
that environment plays a huge role in determining IQ. It's a mixture of nature and nurture. — Artemis
No, not exactly. — Hallucinogen
At 12 years. In adulthood it is about 80% — Hallucinogen
No, not exactly. https://www.nature.com/articles/mp2014105 — Hallucinogen
the present-day subject of physics has nothing to say about the intentionality resulting in the existence of such objects. Thus it gives a causally incomplete account of the world. — Matias
it is contradictory to say that objects could be ordered by chance — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm trying to understand how the Atheists account for existential questions. — 3017amen
I'd recommend you look at the untenable Atheist thread OP. There are ton's of questions over there... — 3017amen
I tried. — Banno
The frame work is Existentialism. It started in the Book of Ecclesiastes — 3017amen
Sure, the 'whys' of existence are very perplexing. — 3017amen
you haven't explained the reason why, you yourself as a human being, care about those things — 3017amen
you're presuming those things are important for some reason, but you haven't explained the reason why — 3017amen
why do you care to take a position on the subject matter? — 3017amen
I don't really care what other people believe unless it justifies actions which I think are immoral (which religious beliefs sometimes does).
I care very much about my beliefs though. It's important to me that they are useful, consistent and not overwhelmed by empirical evidence to the contrary (where such is relevant).
To this latter aim, I'll robustly defend my beliefs as best I can, and try to show inconsistencies and contrary evidence in competing beliefs, just to make sure they are not something I might be advised to adopt myself. — Isaac
Why is that useful, for what purpose? — 3017amen
Adoption studies have shown over and over again that environment plays a huge role in determining IQ. It's a mixture of nature and nurture. — Artemis
Okay, take a deep breath, you haven't explained why you care about those beliefs — 3017amen
why would you care about inconsistencies — 3017amen
care about your Atheism v. Theism concerns? — 3017amen
Okay, let's be brutally honest with each other: why do you even care? — 3017amen
you have made absolutely no progress toward answering the question. The distinction between design and no design is made according to whether or not there was a "person" involved, but an individual is free to use whatever definition of "person" that one might dream up. How is that useful? — Metaphysician Undercover
You said atheists aren't concerned about asking questions, and I said: Interesting...seems contradictory...what is causing your sense of wonder about these things — 3017amen
Interesting...seems contradictory. — 3017amen
I am referring Gregory Clark's research. — Hallucinogen
My argument is that social influences are less than genetic factors — Hallucinogen
The information I've linked to outright refutes this — Hallucinogen
Wouldn't sex at birth be a genetic influence? — Hallucinogen
I view outcome as a function of ability, with very little difference in opportunity between people. — Hallucinogen
I have difficulty seeing how attaining wealth could change one's genes. Or that necomjng wealthy would raise one's IQ, especially given pre-existing evidence that variation in IQ is ~75% due to genetic variation. — Hallucinogen
The information I've linked to outright refutes this. — Hallucinogen
I shouldn't have to point out to philosophers that that doesn't mean it causes it. What causes it is the genetic advantage of the parents wealthy enough to send their kids to an exclusive school. — Hallucinogen
Brain processes, like ink marks, sound waves, the motion of water molecules, electrical current, and any other physical phenomenon you can think of, seem clearly devoid of any inherent meaning.
By themselves they are simply meaningless patterns of electrochemical activity.
Yet our thoughts do have inherent meaning – that’s how they are able to impart it to otherwise meaningless ink marks, sound waves, etc.
In that case, though, it seems that our thoughts cannot be identified with any physical processes in the brain.
Thoughts and the like possess inherent meaning or intentionality; brain processes, like ink marks, sound waves, and the like, are utterly devoid of any inherent meaning or intentionality; so thoughts and the like cannot possibly be identified with brain processes.
As it is, I argue that the kind of materialist theory of mind that Dennett and others argue for, adopts the rhetorical and technical vocabulary of philosophy, to argue that wisdom proper, sapience, is an illusory byproducts of the Darwinian algorithm. — Wayfarer
It's one big cluster you're very devoted to, you've studied a lot, and when challenged on a single part of it you use the rest of it to argue for the challenged part. — fdrake
... it is a domain of discourse, with recognized luminaries, and wide historical scope. I could provide some references... — Wayfarer
... One of the books that got me interested in the subject... — Wayfarer
'... [insert long entirely subjective quote] .' ~ Paul Tyson, Defragmenting Modernity... . — Wayfarer
... one of the points coming out of the 'Blind Spot of Science' article a few months back... — Wayfarer
So largely, I view outcome as a function of ability, with very little difference in opportunity between people.
Here's a source for my claim that IQ and conscientiousness predict future earnings:
https://www.mdpi.com/2079-3200/5/1/3 — Hallucinogen
female employment primarily consists of make-work jobs created or subsidized by the government itself, such as feminizing little boys in the schools, drugging them with amphetamines such as ritalin for imaginary mental diseases, and getting them to attend gender-fluidity lectures by transvestites. — alcontali
it reiterates that we can cluster people into meaningful groups, — Hallucinogen
characterising 377 microsatellites will give an underestimate of how different individuals/groups are from each other. This because it's not just the sequence of small areas that matters, but the areas around them and the distances between them as well — Hallucinogen
