That's my complaint. You "consciousness" guys are bogged in the mud because you have a dys-functional conception of what its about. The mind can't make causal sense until you adopt a functional, enactive and embodied perspective. — apokrisis
I'm inclined to with modern views on consciousness pervading the topic, but when I think about it, when I say something like "my song" when referring to a piece that I have composed, I am talking about the same emergent consciousness as I would be if I said "my thoughts." See where I'm going? It is more likely that consciousness is itself emergent in whatever capacity it is so emergent. — Garrett Travers
The emergent properties of consciousness... — Garrett Travers
Problem is, the collective parallel ion pulse currents in the brain don't constitute information referring to something else like in digital computers. The connection strengths between neurons can be changed due to synaps widening. — EugeneW
I'm afraid Internet platforms are part of the game now, not outside of it anymore. TPF may be too small to attract attention yet, but you can bet that this "blame NATO" game is being played all over the interwebs and in traditional media as well. — Olivier5
as if the actions of the American or European states have anything to do with any any sense of cultural identification. I guess this is how fascism takes root: when people look at state actions and think: that's 'us'. — StreetlightX
At which point of grandmaster gamesmanship, blame is inappropriate all round. You lose the world championship - it's not a sin to be the second best player in the world.
— unenlightened
Except that apportioning blame is part of the game. — Olivier5
just as you can criticize NATO for having acted in a way that provoked certain action, it should have been fairly obvious to Putin it would have done exactly as it did. If you're going to require that NATO and the EU be Grandmaster chess players in this environment and expect them to respond precisely to the strategic environment, then let's impose that same standard on Putin. — Hanover
It seems "traumatic stress" is so powerful because it forces the person to face moral quandaries for which they were not prepared for. — baker
It is connected with loss of competence and self-esteem. It is loss of a kind of sense-making — Joshs
Or perhaps depression is the emptiness of the situation itself rather than a secondary response to it. It would be the feeling of the failure to cope rather than a further act of cutting oneself off. — Joshs
But is being depressed or even anxious the human default? — TiredThinker
you haven't really read through the thread, have you? — Joe Mello
Even you came to this thread and looked at me instead of the principle. — Joe Mello
co-operation in pursuit of mutual benefit, which is an element of Capitalism? — Garrett Travers
you can't always be responsible for what others will think and do about you words and actions. — dimosthenis9
At the end we can't be inside anyone's head and predict all the outcomes that our words and actions will bring to him. — dimosthenis9
For instance, how are we responsible for other’s thoughts? It depends on whether you are a behaviorist, classical cognitivist , phenomenologist or postmodern social constructionist. — Joshs
For example I tell you "I like the way your girlfriend dresses" and then your mind goes "oh so he has a crush on my girl?! Oh damn that mother fucker and he was supposed to be my friend. Fuck off I will teach him a lesson". Am I responsible for that other person's complex that leaded into his thoughts and possible actions? It's not always clear the line of responsibility I should take for others thoughts and actions. — dimosthenis9
I m responsible for what I say and do, — dimosthenis9
Every awareness in the world is responsible for the world it is aware of. Here is a challenge; what is your response?
— unenlightened
I m not sure I got this. — dimosthenis9
Well yeah, but there are things that we are totally responsible for. Many others not.Our words and actions are some of them, but thoughts aren't. — dimosthenis9
To want suffering to exist because you want to see people struggle and overcome hardships, can be construed as mildly sadistic. Just because it happens to be people's stance a lot of the times, doesn't mean it still isn't a great stance to have regarding what they want to see from other people. — schopenhauer1
Do you think there is such thing as a mild form of sadism? — schopenhauer1
Am I being not just a little sadistic in my paternal amusement? — schopenhauer1
You, the parent, aren't creating (unnecessarily) someone else who is harmed. — schopenhauer1