I didn't go back. — Gregory
All your questions on this thread have been answered. — Gregory
You really can't figure out that your logic is calling you to Christianity? Jezz
I've already been down your road — Gregory
Matter is magica — Gregory
lso, I think you dont understand emergence — Gregory
Red and blue make a brand new color (purple) — Gregory
New things arise. — Gregory
Does it really matter if he is conscious or not? — Gregory
Even atheist try to live "by His rules" for the most part — Gregory
You seem obsessed with knowing if God is conscious and believing that consciousness comes only from consciousness. I think you're wrong on both points — Gregory
If you feel that Spinoza should have known of the "hard problem" then either you think he was wrong or you believe he thought God was conscious — Gregory
The point is S denies the hard problem. If you think there is a hard problem, you disagree with Spinoza. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Mind is not experience and is given without experiences. — TheWillowOfDarkness
The divine part of our subconscious is dependent on matter but superior to it in a sense by way of emergence — Gregory
So no he is not an idealist or a materialist — Gregory
There is a divine spark in all of us and I call that God. But it emerges from matter. — Gregory
He thought we had to think of him as conscious intellect, but also that we know nothing of His inner life. — Gregory
The reason I say you are a dualist is because you hold experiences are a different type of reality, such that they cannot be affected, explained, related to or accounted for by other things that exist. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Spinoza says God has intellect. The intellect we know is our own and he says perfect free will is an illusion but also that there are passions of the soul (mind, thought). So God is conscious by analogy, but we really can't understand Him. — Gregory
Spinoza might say 'Because it is in the essence of rocks to have qualia or think as humans do, if at all.' In other words, what makes them distinct kinds of entities is the different degrees of complexity which constitute each, and that the 'functional complexity' of humans is above a threshold sufficient for them to "have qualia" and to "think".
2. If rocks do have qualia and think, why doesn't a planet have qualia and think?
Rock do not; and even if rocks did, inferring that planets would on that basis is a compositional fallacy or hasty generalization fallacy (e.g. cells that make up your body undergo mitosis but your body does not periodically self-divide into two bodies) premised to begin with on a category error of referring to astronomical bodies (re: "planets") in terms of functions peculiar to ecology-bound organisms (re: "qualia and think"). :roll:
3. Why not the whole universe can think and feel?
Same as 2. Also, according to Spinoza, "the universe" is an infinite mode and therefore lacks "think" and "feel" essences appropriate to its constituent finite modes like human beings.
What's the fundamental difference between things that have consciousness and things that don't?
Some are 'functionally complex' enough to manifest self-reflexive phenomenal awareness (i.e. "consciousness") and some – the astronomically vast majority – are not. The "fundamental difference", Spinoza might say, is their different essences which, in contemporary computational or systems theoretic terms, correspond to (I term it) 'different degrees of functional complexity'. — 180 Proof
Eugen appears to a dualist — TheWillowOfDarkness
Yes. "Materialism" (re: natura naturata, or modes) is not ultimately real (re: natura naturans, or substance) in spinozism and, therefore, it's false to claim so. Also, in spinozism, "consciousness" does not emerge from "unconscious matter" so there's no "hard problem" (just as there's no "mind-body problem"). — 180 Proof
We know there isn't a hard problem — TheWillowOfDarkness