Emotion would certainly seem to be a factor. You can tell from the way they tend to become agitated and turn irate the moment you challenge their preconceived ideas — Apollodorus
Most Atheists are very unsophisticated in their thinking when it comes to justifying their belief system. — 3017amenWell, atheism is not a belief system. — tim wood
But we are guided nonetheless by our Will and intellect to move forward with living life. In — 3017amen
Like a circling eddy in a stream, yea. — frank
My question relates to how that cognition works with philosophical theories about how we got here. Is that foregoing an example of top-down reasoning or bottom-up reasoning, I wonder. — 3017amen
One idea would be that just as I reflect on events and my self is generated by that reflection, the tribe's living self is generated by saying how we got here? — frank
So this would be my question: say your experiences are like texts. Do you read them while they're being laid down to paper? Or do you act unconsciously and read them later?
Remembering backward, but living forward, as SK said. Does that have any bearing? — frank
What needs to be explained is how the passage of time seems to change depending on our mental state. Is the passage of time a mental state, or independent of mental states? What is the difference between change and time? — Harry Hindu
What if self consciousness starts with memories? Recognition of the self comes from analyzing remembered events and assigning cause and effect. Sometimes the self is a cause and sometimes it's affected. Either way it's always central in the narrative. — frank
Maybe at first all the things we put under the umbrella of consciousness are identified as parts of the environment. The storm is angry. The river loves me. The lion hates me. I kill the lion.
I've been pondering why it is that math stalled in development until the invention of abstract money. Maybe abstractions were there, but not entirely fleshed out the way we experience them. — frank
The distinction between the past, present and future is only a stubbornly persistent illusion."
--Albert Einstein — Tiberiusmoon
Something like sleep can cut off our observation of time which gives the illusion of time going by almost instantly, so this observation gives some insight to how days go by faster or slower. — Tiberiusmoon
Since the illusion is within ourselves as observers, it is rational to think that our physical reality has no time of which everything progresses but a constant state of here and now that changes as energy is acted upon matter. — Tiberiusmoon
Time is just a measure of a observation of matter, not so much a measure of progression. — Tiberiusmoon
This also answers why we haven't met any time travellers in our reality as such concept would not exist logically in this regard. — Tiberiusmoon
consciousness violating rules of bivalence, non-contradiction, etc.) — 3017amenHow does this work? — tim wood
Anger management does not seem to be popular with the fanatical atheists here!
— 3017amen
Very true. That's an idea for a new thread: Does atheistic philosophy foster fanaticism, paranoia, and mindless violence? — Apollodorus
The record speaks for itself and it's says your are a liar. — James Riley
Not at all. The record doesn't say that. You say that. And we've seen what your statements are worth. As I said, you need to calm down, you are only aggravating yourself and making your condition worse. — Apollodorus
most creation stories are denominated myth — tim wood
I just think the reality is so much more complex than it is being portrayed in this thread. — Jack Cummins
Trans men, after hormone therapy, are stronger and faster than trans women, after hormone therapy. If the concern with transgender women competing against cisgender women is that cisgender women have an athletic disadvantage then it would be an even greater concern for transgender men to compete against cisgender women.
Michael — Michael
So trans men should compete in women's tournaments? — Michael
He comes off as a person of great erudition. It's great to have him in the forum. I hope to keep learning from him...and others too. — TheMadFool
did think about that. There seems to be an unfounded assumption in thinking that AI isn't conscious because, as we all know, by that token even human consciousness is uncertain insofar as other minds are the issue. We infer consciousness in other people - other minds - not by some kind of direct access to their consciousness (impossible as of the moment) but through how they behave and of the the cues we keep an eye out for is intelligence. In other words, a big clue, at least we think it is, that indicates the presence of consciousness (minds) is intelligence. Compare this with the intelligence AI demonstrate by beating us at our own game as it were. Shouldn't we extend AI the same courtesy and deem them as conscious too? :chin: — TheMadFool
That's where the problem lies. Science is clear that in physical competitions especially at top level a biological female is not the same as a biological male. So the issue seems to be political. Politics decides how science is applied. — Apollodorus
Do thoughts help to explain the nature of consciousness? — Jack Cummins
So, I am asking what does thought tell us about the nature of personal identity and about the underlying source of consciousness? — Jack Cummins
A discussion in another thread with 180 Proof revolved around mind and intelligence. 180 Proof said something to the effect that evolution is intelligent in that it suggests an optimum strategy given the volatile situation of the enviroment. Nonetheless, he refused to accept the involvement of a mind behind evolution citing AI as instances of intelligence sans minds. — TheMadFool
My response was to present a a gedanken experiment using the Turing test. Suppose you're interacting (say playing chess) with something that's hidden from view by a curtain. You examine the moves and come to the conclusion that your opponent is intelligent. Based on this piece of information (the entity behind the curtain is intelligent) alone can you infer whether your opponent has a mind (a human player) or doesn't have a mind (AI)? The answer is a big NO!. Why? Both humans (having minds) and AI (having no minds) possess intelligence and so you won't be able to tell which is which. Mind - No mind equivalency. — TheMadFool
The same argument works for evolution which bears all the marks of intelligence and so, based on this single data point, one won't be able to infer whether evolution is the product of a mind or is like AI, mindless. Hence, with nothing to go on but signs of intelligence, evolution with a mind at the helm and evolution with no such thing "...can't be told apart..." — TheMadFool
By the way, a case can be made that if god doesn't exist, intelligence and even consciousness has to be/could be an illusion. After all, if pure random chance can produce wonders (universe, life) that some sections of the population believe could only have been the handiwork of a conscious intelligence (god) - the two can't be told apart - it follows, right?, that conscious intelligence and unconscious non-intelligence are indistinguishable and Leibniz claimed the identity of indiscernibles. :smile: So, is consciousness an illusion? Daniel Dennett should take a look at this argument. — TheMadFool
I actually bought the Barrow and Tipler book The Anthropic Cosmological Principle from Amazon recently, just so I'd have a copy in my library. It's an enormous book, 738 pages, with mountains of footnotes and references. — Wayfarer
Give it a try. Else your reply is a confused non sequitor. — tim wood
But I do think he's got some serious issues there. It isn't unheard off for those with certain issues to take up the study of psychology. Perhaps in an attempt to self-treat themselves? Maybe he can tell us more himself if he can muster the cour — Apollodorus
Yeah, when you run out of arguments you start using threats and abusive language. S — Apollodorus
think "quite emotional" is an understatement. People like 180 sound like a kettle that is permanently on the boil — Apollodorus
course. Political concerns are often what encourage atheists to be evasive of religious ideals, in combination with their irreligious personalities - they're an additive element, as opposed to a characteristic one. — Aryamoy Mitra
think we need to be as cautious as we should be open-minded about this.
Cautious because beliefs - theism included - have consequences that permeate all aspects of life and living. — TheMadFool
The issue it seems is not whether the ends [Mind, Humans, Organized Complexity] can come about with/without an intelligent agency (god/creator) working on the beginnings [Matter, Primates, Initial conditions] but whether the two possibilities - a god-created universe vs a universe without one - can be distinguished from each other in the first place! — TheMadFool
Those programmers must begin by establishing Initial Conditions as a starting point that seems to be close to the desired outcome — Gnomon