The underlying premise is that the label art is a subjective attribution. — JosephS
Even saying "this isn't art" doesn't prevent the viewer/recorder from deriving art from it, at which point the viewer becomes the artist in extracting it/framing it. — JosephS
Things artistic, if I understand your meaning, are [1] things that might be considered art. Arguably unbounded. How about [2] things closely related in form or type to other things that are already typically perceived as art. Art and artists, as social disruptors, should rightfully chafe at this restriction. If the label art is essentially subjective so is artistic. It remains that my morning commute isn't art (it's a pain in the ass, daily slog) unless I call it so, and at which point you tell me that my art is lame-ass crap, which I agree with.
Is the set of things artistic larger than the set of things that are art? With definition [1] above it would seem the proposition is true. [2], to my eye, is not as clear. If 'artistic' gets us to the clouds that look like Mickey and Minnie Mouse, but doesn't include my latest bowel movement, or if artistic includes my dog barking chopsticks but not the sound of my coughing up phlegm, this proposition is not nearly as clear cut. — JosephS
Once we fully develop the cognitive capacity to interact with and understand the universe from this position, then the will is potentially unconstrained. — Possibility
My John Donne never saw a film and never wrote a screenplay. He died in 1631, London; he was 59. He is considered one of the greatest love poets in English. He was a poet and a clergyman, Church of England. What my Donne and your Dunne have in common is that they are both dead. — Bitter Crank
Should a cloud that combines characteristics of Donatello's David with Michelangelo's be considered art? — JosephS
It's music and music is an art form. But I'd have difficulty calling the software the artist.
Where does that leave us? I suppose until the AI can be considered as having an identity separate from the programmer, it means the artist would be the programmer. — JosephS
The funny thing about our current system is when you consider what are called "externalities," if these were actually factored into a companies cost to do business, many of the companies that are currently profitable, (often through accounting voodoo) would no longer be profitable. — rlclauer
Presumably they do, though I am not that familiar with the psychological machinations of insects and fish. Why wouldn't it count as desire? — Tzeentch
And now you also know where Ernest Hemingway got the title for his novel, "For Whom The Bell Tolls". — Bitter Crank
O death where is thy sting?" — Bitter Crank
No man is an island entire of itself; every man
is a piece of the continent, a part of the main;
if a clod be washed away by the sea, Europe
is the less, as well as if a promontory were, as
well as any manner of thy friends or of thine
own were; any man's death diminishes me,
because I am involved in mankind.
And therefore never send to know for whom
the bell tolls; it tolls for thee. JOHN DONNE, 1572 -1631 — Bitter Crank
If you are talking about physical coercion: the desire to continue material existence. — Tzeentch
where do we begin to create a system which enables free enterprise and the rewarding of ingenious or hardworking person's — rlclauer
You can decide to call it art when you see it, and some regard this as the step that makes it art, the viewer, but it became art immediately by his actions. — Brett
When an AI can engage in artwork that involves not just novelty but mutual adaptation as part of the reflection on the art, as art, I'll be satisfied we're dealing with art (maybe not good art). — JosephS
As Carlo Rovelli says in ‘Reality is Not What You Think’:
“When we acquire new information about a system, the total relevant information cannot grow indefinitely, and part of the previous information becomes irrelevant, that is to say, it no longer has any effect upon predictions of the future.
In quantum mechanics when we interact with a system, we don’t only learn something, we also ‘cancel’ a part of the relevant information about the system.” — Possibility
but our will is free in relation to the future. Not what could be - but what can be, when we include ourselves. — Possibility
Can computers be genuinely creative and/or create art? — m-theory
I would be most impressed by a computer that interrupted its performance of the task you had assigned to it, by saying, "Your work is just too boring. Here, listen to this song I have been composing."
A computer becoming bored and deciding to make up a tune would be a sign of computer intelligence. Emily Howell is a demonstration of David Cope's skill in instructing the computer. I find Emily Howell's composition interesting enough, but it did begin at David Cope's instigation. — Bitter Crank
When we talk about creativity in art, aren't we talking about how a 'thing',an art-work, reaches out to us in a way that goes beyond it self as a thing qua thing. — Cavacava
As I’ve said before, I don’t think this is a case of EITHER determinism OR free will. We need to get away from this dichotomy and the ‘apologists’ of compatabilism in order to understand and develop a practical model of the will. — Possibility
Free will isn’t a force, it’s a capacity within us to be aware of, connect and collaborate with the potential in our experience of interacting with the unfolding universe. It doesn’t really matter to the past (that’s already been determined) - only to our experience of what lies ahead. — Possibility
, that could help thoroughly explain the idea? Or are you sort of inventing it as you go along? (I hope that doesn't come across negatively, in my mind, all of the now-famous philosophers were "inventing it as they went along")It doesn’t really matter to the past (that’s already been determined) - only to our experience of what lies ahead. — Possibility
What you’re explaining here is, in my view, a five dimensional subjective experience. The ‘conscious self’ (‘I’) exists as an experience of interacting four dimensional events, both internal and externally observable. The ‘evidence’ I have that my self exists consists of the experience of internal events; your ‘evidence’ that I have a ‘conscious self’ comes from your experience of externally observable events. Yet neither of us are certain that what we experience (‘know’) is ACTUAL, except that we agree on the experience (‘knowledge’) that these events interact with what we can agree is actual by its relationship to mutually observable/measurable data: the body, heart rate, etc.
Thoughts exist in much the same way. They’re ‘real’ because of the relationships that exist between 5D subjective experiences of 4D events interacting with 3D observable objects consisting of measurable data.
It is in this 5D structure of the mind that the experience (knowledge or understanding) of any event in spacetime has the capacity to interact with the experience of any other event. — Possibility
It is here that I think this ‘ontological freedom’ is ours: insomuch as we are aware of, connecting and collaborating with the potential in each experience. We have the capacity to intervene, to prevent predicted events from occurring, to change the causal conditions of future events, even to alter the ongoing effect of past causes, etc. by changing how we relate to the significance of an experience. — Possibility
to prevent predicted events from occurring — Possibility
“I dont know” leaves the answer to whatever question completely open, saying you don’t know means the answer could be anything. A person could start eliminating certain possibilities after that of course to determine what isnt the answer but the possibilities of what IS the answer is inherently open by nature of not knowing.
an hour ago — DingoJones
They simply don't have an opinion on it. Maybe they don't have enough information, or they think it's not something that can be known, etc. — Terrapin Station
No, an agnostic, by virtue of being an agnostic, isn't committed to the existence of God being possible, just that they don't know whether or not God exists. — S
The 'third type of person' is supposed to be the agnostic fyi, and i don't think agnostics think they are better than the other folks, what they're simply stating is that; — Philosophical Script
what they're simply stating is that; atheists can't be 100% certain that deities don't exist, — Philosophical Script
Do you believe in god(s)?
Are you sure? — ZhouBoTong
what they're simply stating is that; atheists can't be 100% certain that deities don't exist, — Philosophical Script
how can they even prove that? — Philosophical Script
could someone care to explain the concept of agnostic theists and agnostic atheists because personally i don't think the concepts of agnosticism and the latter are compatible — Philosophical Script
Whether or not they have free will doesn’t change what the purpose of punishment is or it’s effectiveness. — khaled
But how are we so sure these internal 4D events exist? Perhaps it’s because internal experience shows us how they interact with observable/measurable (actual) internal 4D events, such as heart rate. — Possibility
tease out Hegel’s idea of dialectic process and reach some level of synthesis that is more convincing than compatibilism. — Possibility
I've had more or less the same views about a lot of philosophical issues for 30 to 40 years, and even longer for a few things. And I've been talking about that stuff with others in the manner that we do here for just about that long, including remotely via computer, starting almost 40 years ago via BBSs, and then for the past 25+ years on the Internet. — Terrapin Station
or the actions that might be required to sharply reduce population growth, or worse, or to reduce population already born, are to many people unthinkable. — Bitter Crank
What say you? — Bitter Crank
After god created us he fled in horror like Victor Frankenstein — Evil
I concur. I LOVE reading my own posts (and short stories, essays, etc.) It's equivalent to a person loving his or her own voice in speech. — god must be atheist
Again I concur wholeheartedly. I just had re-read my favourites so many times in the past, that I expect no new nuances to crop their heads. Which is most likely a mistake. There are nuances everywhere that you hadn't before noticed, because appreciating art of any form is very much dependent on the mood you are in at the time. — god must be atheist
Best to ask a modern Gnostic Christians what his beliefs are because Gnostic Christianity is a perpetual seeking religion that has evolved along with man's moral thinking. — Gnostic Christian Bishop
Before anyone can make these claims, they must prove the existence of these gods. — Sir2u
Yes — Noah Te Stroete
We can, though, say that what did happen, non randomly, trumps as actuality the claims such as "should have", making those to be of a fantasy world stance. — PoeticUniverse
That there is only one reality is not a reasoning, but an observation. — god must be atheist
Show me more than 1 reality. Show me that reality is a multiplicity by and in itself. Evidence suggests there is only one reality. — god must be atheist
Time to consider sober, reasonable thinking. I don't mean to be mean or demeaning or insulting, but it is an insult to intelligence to claim that reality exists in more than one expression of itself. — god must be atheist
The way I see it, it boils down to one assertion: I have and can make a choice. — Terrapin Station
I’m trying to work out what you’re arguing with me about. I agree with pretty much everything you’ve written here. — Possibility
Sure, but does that help us to understand how it happens and how it interacts with everything else? I’m using ‘fifth dimension’ because it relates to other discussions and other areas of philosophy, where ‘abstract thought’ is too vague a concept. For instance, I’m of the belief that a sixth dimension (also involving abstract thought) structures our interactions, too - but that’s off topic here. — Possibility
That they exist ‘in the abstract’ is enough. Whether they could/would/should have existed tangibly is something we think/believe subjectively based on value/significance/logic/moral structures, and we internally interact with these abstract possibilities and integrate related information accordingly - even though they may have never had a tangible existence. — Possibility
I’m not talking about ‘knowing’, though - I’m talking about subjective experience: awareness, connection and collaboration. Recognising that there are always infinite possibilities that we may never have imagined precludes any claim to ‘knowledge’. As Rovelli says in relation to QM and Information Theory: ‘There is always more information to be obtained about a system’. So i’m not suggesting that we have to know the exact outcome of every possible possibility - only that it’s out there as information to be sought. — Possibility
The dictionary definition of WILL says: ‘the faculty by which a person decides on and initiates action’, with these obvious assumptions built in that I’ve been trying to eliminate. — Possibility
The dictionary definition of FREE is ‘unconstrained’, and this is the one I have been working with throughout this discussion, despite the tendency for contributors to bring their own meanings with them - include conceptual definitions of ‘free will’ that allow them to delve into apologist style arguments to support its apparent existence. — Possibility
I can relate to this, too. My aim here is not to argue one way or the other, but to tease out Hegel’s idea of dialectic process and reach some level of synthesis that is more convincing than compatibilism. I’ve found there are may people who’ve reached an externally manageable/arguable viewpoint that is nevertheless internally unconvincing. — Possibility
I think it's more like: only one possibility exists, but you don't know what it is, therefore you imagine all kinds of different possibilities exist. (You meaning the general you; human.) — god must be atheist
This is a good post and I agree with you. though I am still skeptical that this is an issue amenable to philosophical resolution. — Arne
"Free" in this case means "not causally determined." If you can choose between two options you have a free--that is, not a causally determined--choice. — Terrapin Station
because probabilities is a human-only oriented knowledge prediction. A mind could potentially foreknow or precognize all events in the future, but a human mind can't as its lack of ability to encompass all that is to know to know the future manifests in less and less accurate predictions with each iteration of the causation process; the further into the future, the less accurate the prediction, the less probable that a foretelling is precise. But it is only from the point of view or from the limited capacity of the human mind. In effect, the future is knowable, and precisely knowable, since there is no cause without an effect, and no effect without a cause. — god must be atheist
Your opinion extrapolates from what is knowable by humans, to what is theoretically knowable. That is a mistake. — god must be atheist
The ‘infinite possibilities in any given moment’, for me refers to the fifth dimension. — Possibility
We can only verify the existence of one ‘actual’ moment because to do so it must be measured/observed in relation to the rest of the 4D structure of our experience. — Possibility
For most of the universe, the infinite possibilities in each moment are not only beyond awareness, but they’re also beyond any deliberate interaction. — Possibility
And yet they exist, otherwise you wouldn’t be asking the question, would you? — Possibility
How are you vaguely aware of them? — Possibility
Was there a possible moment that you would have preferred to have occurred, instead of what actually occurred? Can you experience this preferred moment occurring in your mind? Does that impact on physical events in your bodily systems, even though it didn’t actually happen in time and space? Perhaps the un-actual moment wasn’t so much ‘preferred’ or more valued as calculated to be more probable. Different value/significance system, same dimensional relation - interacting ‘outside’ spacetime, in the fifth dimension. — Possibility
Well, what if instead of the regret of experiencing a preferred unactual moment, you had been aware of and been capable of interacting with what you could do differently prior to the moment you did it? — Possibility
Free will. Because of the choice part. — Terrapin Station
I really hope that you do not believe that just because a person that is in favor of free speech, that they are by default a person who believes in acts of violence. — ArguingWAristotleTiff
The way I see it, it boils down to one assertion: I have and can make a choice. — Terrapin Station
For instance, if I bought a watch (one watch) and chose and bought a Berghammer watch and a Rolex watch, then there would be separate histories happening in time concurrently. That is not happening, so when you set out to buy one watch, your choice is always one watch of the kind that you choose. — god must be atheist
I’m here and that is my singular ‘privilege’ and with such ‘privilege’ comes a substantially greater weight of responsibility to myself and others that makes petty squabbles of skin tones, languages spoken and culinary preferences so mind-bogglingly unimportant it almost makes me hysterical. — I like sushi
Yes, petty squabbles such as slavery, disenfranchisement, violence, police brutality, inequitable court systems, generalized suspicion and distrust, job and housing discrimination, etc. — T Clark
Are you playing devil’s advocate or making an attempt to mock me? Funny response either way. Thanks for reinforcing my point better than I ever could :) — I like sushi