What is an illusion? What is not an illusion? — A Seagull
In addition, it seems to me that all Illusionism does is shift the problem. Isn't the problem of creating illusins of qualia just as hard? — Echarmion
But we don't need a justification to ignore the hard problem. We can just concentrate on the easier problems regardless. It's not like the hard problems presents any barrier to physical research. — Echarmion
Our perceptual sensations are out there in the world if there are other minds. — Harry Hindu
How can you even claim that science has provides answers if we don't get at the real states-of-affairs of the universe in some way. — Harry Hindu
If the world isn't colored in, or sound or feel like we experience it, then how can you say that there are brains that produce qualia? It seems to me that minds produce brains - which is a 3-dimensional colored shape as we experience it. What is it really "out there" - brains or minds? How does a mind "fictionalize" other minds - as brains? — Harry Hindu
and a mirage would be an illusion within the "illusion" of consciousness, — Harry Hindu
And what are the implications, other than that the hard problem doesn't exist? — Echarmion
That's the problem... — creativesoul
That strikes me as a we bit circular. The hard problem is the reason we are even considering the approach. — Echarmion
But since, in that scenario, we are the computer desktop, it seems entirely irrelevant (much like the simulation hypothesis, incidentally). — Echarmion
How does the brain introspect, and when a brain introspects, why doesn't it experience an arrangement of excited neurons rather than the qualia of colors, shapes, sounds, etc.,? — Harry Hindu
For something to be useful, it has to have some sort of connection with real states of affairs in the environment. — Harry Hindu
I don't understand how a "fiction" is useful for anything but entertainment, — Harry Hindu
What's the difference between experiencing the illusion of qualia and experiencing qualia themselves? — Echarmion
What difference does it make in any practical capacity? — Echarmion
It can be said, not without adequate justification, that we've outgrown the colonial mindset and no nation is currently engaged in conquering other lands in an expansionist attitude. — TheMadFool
The mediocrity principle implies that we should regard our habitable situation as "average". The rare earth hypothesis violates that. It claims our habitable conditions are/were exceptionally NOT average. Is there a good justification for this? — RogueAI
Tardigrades, immortal jellyfish, flatforms, possibly lobsters and turtles... — Pfhorrest
Someone dropping a big rock on the earth is far more survivable than living on another planet, and there doesn't seem to be a lot of doubt that the latter will eventually (if not soon) be possible. — Pfhorrest
And the Earth can be moved, and the sun can be changed. You're looking at things through the primitive lens of a Type 0 civilization. — Pfhorrest
Heat death of the universe is not guaranteed if it is not a closed system, which dark energy suggests it is not. — Pfhorrest
That's also the reason we better continue to cure "regular" diseases because otherwise longevity research will just be a waste as nobody can enjoy its full potential otherwise. — Benkei
Altered Carbon is on Netflix, though I did not really like the plot. — Echarmion
You think the wright brothers listened to people when they told them they couldn't fly? — Witchhaven87
It's highly and most likely we will yes but you're not god so don't act like you know for certain that it is predetermined I'm gonna die as well as you. — Witchhaven87
I'm not gonna die because people can get it together. — Witchhaven87
whether chairs really exist. — Pfhorrest
..because if there is an all-knowing, all-seeing and all-powerful being, then the answer to every philosophical question becomes "Because God Says". — Banno
Are there true sentences involving colors as objects of them? If so, then colors exist. — Pfhorrest
It's just ridiculous. If 'science' can't square with simple everyday facts... then 'science' is using the wrong linguistic framework. — creativesoul
So take this to the final step... is your conclusion that colours do not exist? — Banno
The table is made of wood; therefore there is no table, only wood.
Would you agree with this?
The table is made of atoms which are mostly space. Therefore there is not table, only space. — Banno
The sky is the selective absorption of certain wavelengths of light. Therefore there is no sky. — Banno
Colours are differing electromagnetic frequencies. Therefore there are no colours.
Colours are just the result of differential firing of the rods and cones in your eye. Therefore there are not really any colours. — Banno
Perhaps. But do you see how naive realism is foundational? — Banno
It doesn't hide the assumption of naive realism - it displays it and shows that it underpins language use. — Banno
And there is no rationality that can show how any statement can have a direct correspondence to the 'world of actuality'. — A Seagull
The second asks about the domain of a predicate, are there things that are coloured? ∃(x)f(x)?
This difference in structure shows why it is so much easier to see the second as asking 'bout word use. — Banno
Why? — 180 Proof
Suppose, as I point out in wall-of-text # (iv), we can't recognize "any evidence for them" - we can't surmise validly from our own intellectual / technological deficits that we're alone even locally in this constellation or galaxy. — 180 Proof
Some people are bothered by consciousness not having a location in the atlas of the brain. It doesn't bother me. I'm just glad it's there. — Bitter Crank