and "intersubjectivity" doesn't amount to anything more than the fact that we can utter things to each other including agreements. It's nothing like literally sharing subjectivity. — Terrapin Station
I wonder if Wait arrived at this via his own intuition? — Rich
The past consists of the changes/motion that occurred, but that are no longer occurring (and it no longer exists, of course--it rather existed). Talking about changing the past, then, it talking about changing changes that no longer exist. — Terrapin Station
The Ship of Theseus problem takes the two distinct forms of identity, logical identity as claimed by Terrapin, and material identity as stated by Aristotle, and creates ambiguity between them. — Metaphysician Undercover
But to answer your question. Bergson views the future as virtual action. It is what is intended but has not been. At this time, not having pondered this too much, it seems reasonable. — Rich
For example, how do I know that I exist and am evolving? It is the memory of myself juxtaposed on a prior memory of myself. The two memories create time. The time of scientists, or click time, is different. — Rich
It appears to me that the past is constantly changing. In fact, it is the only thing that is changing as it evolves into a new past. — Rich
The [...] purpose of both logic and intuition is to satisfy the emotions. — MonfortS26
The problem with that on my view is that "changeless time" is a contradiction. — Terrapin Station
No, they are the same chair at two different times. It's just the natural effect of passing time (what you call change), that the very same thing will not be logically identical at two different times. How could they be logically identical if the passing of time is change? But this doesn't mean that it's not the same thing, just because it's changed. — Metaphysician Undercover
Whether there's any "continuity of existence" depends on whether you mean by that that the chair is logically identical at T1 and T2. If so, then there's no "continuity of existence." This doesn't imply that the chair at T2 has no connection to the chair at T1. They're developmentally, causally, continuously related. — Terrapin Station
You're aware that Bohm's reputation in US academia had already been permanently affected by his early association with communism? — Wayfarer
I was having a discussion here a few months back about an interesting feature of the double-slit experiment, which is that the interference patterns are not rate-dependent. Whether you fire one photon at a time, or many together, you end up with the same pattern (up to a certain point). I posted a couple of threads about this on physics forums. — Wayfarer
It strikes me as being philosophically significant, although nobody on the physics forums were prepared to acknowledge that. To me it signifies that the probability wave is not a function of time, and from a relativistic point of view, therefore not of space-time. — Wayfarer
I think that Bohm was necessarily cautious about declaring consciousness and/or free will is necessitated by QM. — Rich
Bohm dared not go so far though he's clearly implied it was there. — Rich
Of course, the observer who also participates in the field has an effect. With the possibility of free will, we have a casual model of QM which permits creative actions. — Rich
I'm intrigued but confused by this. I'm also struggling to understand the ensuing paragraph. — Noble Dust
Seems worth expanding into a longer from, though. — Noble Dust
Well, my response may have been a little over-zealous. I was maybe reading a pet peeve of mine into your post. Apologies. — Noble Dust
I think I agree with this concept if I'm reading it right, I just use the word objective in a different sense. I think of the physical world as an objectified form of spirit. Which is ironically sort of an opposite use of the term, so maybe not. — Noble Dust
So what would bring about that state, evolution? — Noble Dust
What's so sacred about overcoming biases at the altar of Lord Science? I've never understood that. If the entire world shed it's biases and accepted an analytic, rational, scientistic belief system, how would this serve some sort of evolutionary telos? What exactly would be accomplished for mankind? What would mankind accomplish by doing this? I'm not interested in living in a world full of philosophy forum members. :P — Noble Dust
As I've said elsewhere, I'm a sucker for teleology. What more do I need? I need to know the secret to the whole thing; I need to know where this thing is going. That preoccupies my philosophical interests more than anything else. — Noble Dust
The nice part about being a pessimist is that you are constantly being either proven right or pleasantly surprised.
A new trend in presentism is to give the present a separate temporal dimension, I call it breadth. [...] What happens is that the present is now not a dimensionless point, but a point with its own dimension. — Metaphysician Undercover
My argument is simply that any instance of a present occurrence which we refer to, can, upon analysis, be determined to be a combination of part past and part future. This is also the case when we refer to a present experience, what we refer to is part past and part future. — Metaphysician Undercover
Though, of course, I like many think the significance accorded to Nietzche's views to be spurious, his ideology having served in turn for example to provide a pseudo-authenticity for Neo-Nazi ideology as currently resurected by the extreme right - claiming as it does to constitute an ultimately 'invarient objective good' and using the tired old line to justify ignoring 'conventional' morality, "You can't make an omelette without breaking eggs"! — Robert Lockhart
They don't require a period of time--they are what time is in the first place. Time isn't something separate from changes/motion. — Terrapin Station
The "morphing" is the present. — Terrapin Station
I thought nature/reality used mathematics like computers use code. It would seem silly to think the mathematics is fundamental and reality is then built on top of it because where would it exist "fundamentally"? — intrapersona
This sounds similar to the concept of universals and how they have some existence outside of the concepts that "the form" is inhabiting in reality. IE "the perfect triangle exist abstractly even though there are no perfect triangles in reality" I call bs on that. — intrapersona
1. What determines a measurement? Even molecules can exhibit the same behavior that electrons and photons do in the double-slit experiments. — Marchesk
4. Do normal, macro-scale objects exist when we're not "looking"? I recall reading that Bohr and Einstein debated whether the moon was still there when they turned their backs. Bohr, being the champion of the Copenhagen Interpretation, argued it was just a range of possible states. — Marchesk
A question I would like to clear up is this. Does the Universe and the physical laws of physics happen because of math of QM or does the mathematics of QM just describe the behavior? — Mike
Not really. It makes possibility prior to actuality. And if you then give pure possibility a name like Apeiron, you seem to be pointing to a quality - and saying I count just one of these.
That's why Plotinus did call his version "the one". The quality was named after its quantity, is seeming it's most essential characteristic to him - the undivided that logically must stand at the end of a trail of divisions. — apokrisis
But it does mean that we can treat the Apeiron as a quality which we know how to quantify. — apokrisis
Measurement is experience. But it grows in rational sophistication as we go from the firstness of naming some brute quality - exclaiming "I see red" - to the thirdness of some habit like reading numbers off the dial of an instrument. — apokrisis
No… The experiential content of my present sensations is incorrigible. — lambda
As far as I’m aware, moral relativism is the view that moral values are hierarchical rather than absolute — Robert Lockhart
The same way I think we have a tendency to perceive our feeling as being about neutral when we are confortable, negative when we feel more suffering and positif when we feel less suffering. — Raphi
On the surface, it seems implausible that a consciousness could only experience different variation of suffering, but you have to take for account that our brain is also, according to me, really good to entertain illusions, making itself believe that life is more than just suffering. — Raphi
I wonder if it is clear that possession is founded on and an increment of detachment? — unenlightened
I wouldn't say that wondering how the golden rule could even exist at all "standing on its own" would be tangential to the issue of whether it stands on its own, but okay. — Terrapin Station
Aside from my comments above, this argument doesn't hold water. Say that a sense of fairness is unconscious, that it's innately part of our biological makeup. Well, there can be an individual who has physiological abnormalities so that they have no such unconscious sense as part of that individual's biological makeup. Thus, the sense of fairness is still relative to individuals. It's present in the individuals who have it, and not present otherwise. — Terrapin Station
Ability to accomplish what? And you're obviously equivocating here, as you were talking about power in the context of governments and societies and "might is right." — Terrapin Station
Even if you were to argue that it's impossible to have a human with abnormal physiology, so that they have no sense of fairness, and necessarily, all humans have the sense, it would still be relative to humans, since it's not a part of rocks, say. — Terrapin Station
No--how could it "stand on its own" where it's "indifferent" to what people think etc. about it? How could it even exist at all in that case? Where would it be located? What would it be a property of? — Terrapin Station
That's not "indifferent" to what anyone thinks, however. Stalinism would be declared "corrupt" due to comparison to the Golden Rule to someone who feels that the golden rule is a normative basis for ethical judgment. So that's dependent on what someone thinks. — Terrapin Station
<sigh> No, that doesn't work, because moral relativism doesn't amount to saying that moral judgments "originate with power." — Terrapin Station
So it neither originates with a social decree nor is it independent of what various people have to say about it. — Terrapin Station
But do you understand that no one is saying that it's right because of mass appeal or because of legislation? — Terrapin Station
