I have never asked a fellow human "Are you conscious?" Nor have I ever asked myself that. But it seems clear to me that talk of "evidence of consciousness" doesn't have much to do with either case. Interestingly, I'm able to say the preceding with a fair amount of confidence in spite of my inability to clearly define consciousness. My knowledge of it is apparently more in the "know how" department.. that is, the ability to correctly use the word. — Mongrel
This was directed at anon's evolutionary theory (which is accepted by a fair number of pretty intelligent people). — Mongrel
"Imagine that we inhabit a two dimensional space and that we ourselves are two dimensional. Consider how it would seem to us if a spoon passed through our world. Perhaps we would eventually evolve to the point of being able to discern the truth that is beyond our powers of perception."
-- the adherent to "special insight" — Mongrel
If anything is real, consciousness is... — anonymous66
the reality is that... — anonymous66
So, perhaps there is a "real reality", but whose version should we accept as "real"? — anonymous66
I think the evidence suggests rather that our sense organs are such that they give us the ability to see the world in a way that is beneficial for the survival of our species, not a completely accurate one. — anonymous66
Can "consciousness" even be described by the conscious entity? How do we exteriorize ourselves to our own consciousness so that we can observe it, and still be conscious? — Bitter Crank
Albert Einstein said that the definition of insanity was doing the same thing over and over again and expecting the same result. Can this be applied to philosophy? — darthbarracuda
It's straight one-nation conservatism. — jamalrob
Indeed... but Dennett clearly isn't just doing that, for he also talks about the presence of our experiences. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Please do. :) — Moliere

... it strikes me that big P Psychology might be a whole matrix of everyone's theories about other people. — mcdoodle
But on a deeper ontological level there's a need to at least examine the possibility that there is an anonymous self that precedes the narrative. — photographer
I wonder what kind of historical parallels this might dredge up. — Nils Loc
I assume you are acquainted with hypothetical questions? Or are you just dodging mine? Such evasiveness ill suits you, Un.
(As for your foolish "White lives matter" statement, I'll ignore that, except to say, as BitterCrank pointed out, American blacks slaughter each other at astronomical rates, and so they can look to their own for the bulk of their oppression in the 21st century U.S.) — Arkady
Is a black police officer who murders a restrained white subject less culpable than when a white officer murders a black one? — Arkady
By identity I mostly mean the psychological phenomenon where we, as humans, feel like we are this or that category, or the kind of person who does such-and-such, or expresses in particular ways ... — Moliere
What would, for instance, ISIS or Hezbollah do if they had at their disposal the military of France (never mind of the United States)? — Arkady
Why should one be less culpable? — Arkady
They're both murder. Why should one be less culpable? — Arkady
...
oppression counts as provocation, a mitigating circumstance. — unenlightened
Find me the report of such an event or better the film, and that question might become worth answering. But given the news that I see day after day, you are starting to sound like a 'white lives matter' merchant, trying to misdirect attention away from the rampant racial oppression that is happening. Why would you be doing that?Is a black police officer who murders a restrained white subject less culpable than when a white officer murders a black one? — Arkady
There certainly is such a thing as oppression, but the virtue of the oppressed is not therefore superior. — Bitter Crank
I thought "we" referred to the West and its allies, implying that, say, the U.S. and French militaries were more barbaric than, for instance, ISIS and al Qaeda. — Arkady
It also seemed as if you were taking an apologetic stance towards the Nice terrorist's actions, by suggesting it is we who are at fault for trying to help him out of his despair. — Arkady
...we could pick any number of formerly impoverished lumpenproletariat — jamalrob
I think one can oppose Western militarism and oppose Islamism and Jihadism at the same time (and incidentally I don't think the latter are a reaction to the former). One can seek to ensure that people have something to lose without at the same time treating Jihadist or Jihadist-inspired murders as inevitable, and without indulging the ideas of self-appointed conservative representatives of Muslim communities. — jamalrob
Vinay Lal says watch out for the hidden imperialism there. If you are responsible for my terrorist actions, then you have the qualities of an adult (responsible and able to choose), while I am like a toddler (lashing out reflexively, too immature to be held accountable.) Lal says adult/child is one way dominion is expressed and justified. — Mongrel
So now the question is: what is the appropriate social response? More drones and Hellfire missiles? Nukes over Fallujah? Boots and Robots on the ground? Bombs, bombs, bombs? Or something completely different? Clever infiltration? Better propaganda? Systematic hacking of propaganda systems? Totally unexpected actions? — Bitter Crank
Hmm, so, for instance, Osama bin Laden attacked the United States because we bombed Saudi Arabia? — Arkady
...some foolish, kumbaya nonsense... — Arkady
In what way is this state of mind which
a. sees the world run by a tyrannical, exploitative, monstrous cabal
b. sees any means of resistance as morally defensible
not itself rather like the Nazis? And where is the "within" wherein the poisonous regime might be dismantled? — Bitter Crank
I find these acts morally indefensible ... — Bitter Crank
, I feel entitled to ask what or who it doesn't matter to? And there is no possible answer, because everything is on the other side of the relation....really nothing matters... — David
The emotive aspects of human thinking and behavior don't allow for the abolition of either "follow the leader" or "lead the following". It isn't that individuals can't be dispassionate, it's that they can't be dispassionate enough to still be dispassionate in groups. We're stuck with leadership and followership, like it or not. — Bitter Crank
The two sets of qualities that you mention are distinct and not mutually exclusive, so that one can be good and decent and yet be lacking in the department of leadership skills.
I don't think that this is true of Jeremy Corbyn, however. — Sapientia
This is open-ended, but... — David
... why we shouldn't act in an attempt to make any kind of divine force happy ... — David
How did you get to the conclusion that the rise of Trump lead to the Left to die? — Saphsin
Even if you think that people shouldn't blame immigration, you have to listen to them when they do, and give them a meaningful response. Negotiating a reduction in European freedom of labour movement will be a meaningful response, and to me it has to happen, whatever my own more liberal views about migration (Reader, I married an immigrant). — mcdoodle
