Also, it's not exactly the case that "digitization only encodes what it is specifically designed to encode". There is a trivial sense in which that is true, in that digital hardware is designed to encode bit states and can only encode bit states. However, it is very much the case that digitally instantiated artificial neural networks, after training on whatever inputs were provided to the ANN, will have a great many bit states which were not determined by the designer — wonderer1
:up: Thanks for your reply. I take it that ‘analog = intuition’ and ‘digital = analytical’? — 0 thru 9
I think it is the consequentialism that leads you to believe, cynically, that personal moralities tend to (and intend to) control others socially.
I cannot agree and find your analysis specious because there are people who do not approach morality from the perspective of consequentialism. They wish to act right no matter the fee-fees of some person, with no care for the consequences or social costs, and with no desire or goal of controlling others. — NOS4A2
And of that immense amount we are able to ‘collect’, there must be more that is somehow beyond us. Stuff that perhaps animals can detect, or highly sensitive equipment. — 0 thru 9
But then, in humans, everything rational is constitutive of consciousness, so in that respect, there is nothing particularly significant in merely holding some belief or another. — Mww
Nahhh…I’m not getting into the belief/knowledge mudhole — Mww
We’re saying the same thing for all practical purposes, in language two centuries apart.
Except for the trust part; that I can’t reconcile with disparities in language. My problem, not yours. — Mww
Actually, this is probably what you meant to say. There is an idealized model of the information received from perception, it even has its own name; intuition constructs the model but does not use it, hence, the notion of being a bridge. — Mww
Very interesting. Doesn't this reflect the distinction between mathematical idealisation and reality? The former allows for complete precision as a matter of definition, of which the reality is always an approximation. (I have in mind the argument from equality in the Phaedo.) — Wayfarer
:100: Old school. — Wayfarer
So right & wrong, fair & unfair, and concepts of justice aren't part of morality? — Judaka
To what extent should consumers be free to make choices about what products and services they consume in the context of neoliberal capitalism? — Judaka
I have no idea what "true" morality means, so I just clarified my views on the subject. If we're going to talk past each other, may as well be honest about it. — Judaka
I am not looking for an argument, I am just saying, we can recognize objects as such, that's kind of strange is it not? — NotAristotle
For example, two trees are green, but I recognize that, despite the similarity in their color tone, they are not the same tree. — NotAristotle
↪Manuel Recently observed 'time-dilation in the early universe' might account for JWST's anomalous "six galaxies" ... — 180 Proof
I certainly think it's an important aspect of moral discourse. It seems inconceivable to me that one could take the position that X is immoral but not be concerned if anyone actually does X. — ChrisH
As I see it, the point of a moral position is not simply to defend one's views but, more importantly, to persuade others. — ChrisH
It has recently been shown, rather convincingly [for me, at least,] that we cannot distinguish between living in a simulation and living in a 'real' universe.
That brings into question whether we can truly know anything at all.
Comments? — Torus34
Personal moral beliefs, though seemingly individualistic, ultimately align with the core features of morality, including social control, emotional responses, and the application of moral principles to oneself and others. I would argue there are very few, if any, notable differences between either approach. — Judaka
You find it pessimistic because you define morality as goodwill. The coercion in morality comes from the intolerance of evil, and a desire for justice. It not inherently bad. But, this thread is not about that anyway. — Judaka
In the Meditations, he argues that the experience of isolated awareness and the choices available to it are not inherited from parents but are created moment to moment by God. That perspective does not favor any attempt to understand how the 'thinking activity' came into being as a process of nature. — Paine
Would any notion of self be possible without the ability to experience self as object? That is to say, to recognize that there are other selves, of which the ‘I’ is just one more? — Joshs
No need to take the distinction too seriously. It’s not how we see ourselves most of the time anyway. — Mikie