What are the physical processes in the brain for? — bahman
The action of pushing the button belongs to you — Metaphysician Undercover
What this reveals is that ALL our causal inferences could be coincidences. That means causality, as we perceive it, could simply be nothing more than a coincidence. We can't know for sure. — TheMadFool
If there is a causal relationship between the mind and the external world then there is no need to make distinctions between mind and body, or mental vs. physical. — Harry Hindu
My preference is to define the concept of thinking so broadly that it refers to a kind of phenomenon that does not have to be accompanied by brain let alone the ability to use language. Most people, however, prefer to think in specifics, so they are inclined to define thinking narrowly as a conscious process that takes place in a brain and is intertwined with language. — Magnus Anderson
Why is there a someone? — Joshs
"... the "why" question deals with the reason for there being objects of experience at all as opposed to the question of what they are ultimately composed of." — Thorongil
Why is up to us.
— Banno
I don't think — Thorongil
They are real, but their reality is in some sense dependent on the mental or composed of the mental. — Thorongil
but why they are. — Thorongil
laws of physics, — Joel Bingham
That's your argument, there are no parts? — Sam26
How is it that a cat doesn't have parts, e.g., legs, heart, lung, liver, etc. that work together to achieve higher order functions than any single part alone, and the same can be shown with the tree. — Sam26
time enables change. does time exist? maybe not. — Pollywalls
E=MC^2 means — Marchesk
There are two types of thinking: on is focused on similarities (holism) and the other on differences (reductionism.) I prefer to focus on similarities. — Magnus Anderson
leap that reason cannot justify — unenlightened
You are no doubt aware that your idea of people being a herd and allow others to do their thinking for them is an idea (maybe a 'meme') YOU picked up from a different herd. — Bitter Crank
My philosophical views are mostly dualist — Jonathan AB
It actually is fairly amusing to see how so many
people argue against their very own existence, when all they actually
can really prove to themselves in all sincerity - is that existence. — Jonathan AB
premises, which would make for a deductive argument. — Michael
The leap is that the pattern continues into the invisible future. — unenlightened
I wanted to build a tiny consciousness into the things of the world — Joshs
What are the chances that the future will be like the past? — unenlightened
chances are it will be like the past — unenlightened
No doubt building on the lead of the cave man who grunted, "Maybe food will come this way." — tim wood
we can depict the world mathematically — Marchesk
Evolution is not random, it selects from favourable attributes and rejects those which are unfavourable. — Pseudonym
Don't buy into this free will clap trap, as this flies in the face of the massive advances in science of the last 250 years which assert determinism. — charleton
This seems to make our claims of knowledge groundless and any assertions of probability merely cumulative of previous experiences and hence subjective or psychological. — Perplexed
But getting back to the issue of intelligent design, how could atoms and molecules have such complex behavior patterns in the absence of any sort of underlying physical structure? — CasKev
certain ways just because. Panpsychism, as I understand it, says that everything has a mind of sorts. — CasKev
I tend to think that consciousness and self-awareness can only exist in our physical world when there is a brain to produce/hold it. — CasKev
I can't see how there could be consciousness or self-awareness at this level. ( — CasKev
but it's hard to imagine them feeling pain, or having awareness of existence. — CasKev
how could these 'laws of nature' simply arise — CasKev