Are we, by ignoring, glossing over, deprioritizing climate change, committing mass suicide? — Agent Smith
And yes, that was my last response. — dimosthenis9
Sorry I couldn't resist. — dimosthenis9
So it is a meaningless question that disturbs philosophy and science all these centuries?And even nowadays.
— dimosthenis9
Yes.
— Xtrix
You regard a philosophical problem mind/brain as useless cause we don't hold the absolute truth of definitions.
— dimosthenis9
No.
— Xtrix — dimosthenis9
Now you put into question the definition of "science"
— dimosthenis9
Indeed, since you invoked "science" to define what's physical
— Xtrix
But I forgot, according to you, we can't define science either.
— dimosthenis9
That’s not what I said.
— Xtrix — dimosthenis9
But if Build Back Better fails, then the United States will plainly be incapable of responding to climate change in any organized or systematic way. The U.S. Congress—really, the Senate—will have killed President Bill Clinton’s carbon-reducing BTU tax in 1994, doomed the Kyoto Protocol in 1998, declined to pass Waxman-Markey in 2010, and abandoned Biden’s climate bid in 2021. This final failure will be massively delegitimizing for the United States and for small-d democracy around the world. And because Democrats are likely to lose control of the House and Senate next year, it would resound for years.
You regard a philosophical problem mind/brain as useless cause we don't hold the absolute truth of definitions. — dimosthenis9
But I forgot, according to you, we can't define science either. — dimosthenis9
So exactly which of these common view criteria mind meets as to consider it as "matter"?? — dimosthenis9
Yeah whatever. — dimosthenis9
Science, among others, is what provide us proofs as to categorize what we observe to "matter". — dimosthenis9
Sorry but I can't consider that science. — dimosthenis9
So "empirical observation of ourselves" isn't science? Then what is science?
— Xtrix
When I observe that I have mind or two legs or two arms am I doing science?? That makes me a scientist? — dimosthenis9
You question every single word and we don't have even a base to start discussing. — dimosthenis9
Now you put into question the definition of "science" — dimosthenis9
There are common definitions of what some things mean(like science, physical etc), even if some of them aren't perfect and of course some might change at the future(as the 17th century example you gave) still they are more than enough as people to understand each other and discuss about it. — dimosthenis9
I really see no use in playing such definition game. — dimosthenis9
The standard model is a theory, not a technical notion. It does deal with particles and forces, but doesn’t give a technical notion of matter.
— Xtrix
I'm not sure what to say to such a statement. — T Clark
The theories and discoveries of thousands of physicists since the 1930s have resulted in a remarkable insight into the fundamental structure of matter: everything in the universe is found to be made from a few basic building blocks called fundamental particles, governed by four fundamental forces. Our best understanding of how these particles and three of the forces are related to each other is encapsulated in the Standard Model of particle physics. Developed in the early 1970s, it has successfully explained almost all experimental results and precisely predicted a wide variety of phenomena. Over time and through many experiments, the Standard Model has become established as a well-tested physics theory.
Photons are identified with technological scientific means and exist on their own in nature(even without human existence). — dimosthenis9
So of course are physical. Love and morality are human aspects of human behavior.So of course non physical. I don't see any connection here. The difference is obvious. — dimosthenis9
So it is a meaningless question that disturbs philosophy and science all these centuries?And even nowadays. — dimosthenis9
Physical world is whatever exists in universe and we have scientific observed and verified. Mind is something that we are sure that exists from our internal empirical observation of ourselves but still science hasn't observed it. So of course we can talk about that distinction. — dimosthenis9
Explain how a theory is not also a "technical notion". (What do you mean by "technical"?) — 180 Proof
Matter denotes dissipative structure. — 180 Proof
By physical we mean what science have identified and observed so far. — dimosthenis9
Or else playing that definition game won't allow us to talk about anything at all! — dimosthenis9
So, you do not consider the Standard Model a "technical notion?" — T Clark
That's a different discussion. — T Clark
Every day, billions of people watch TV without any understanding of how it works. They don't think it's particularly mysterious. — T Clark
I don't see matter as particularly mysterious either. — T Clark
The thing is that mind is clearly something non physical. — dimosthenis9
But we know how a television and computer work.
— Xtrix
I don't understand why that matters. I don't see any evidence that the brain is mysterious, just that we don't understand important things about how it works yet. — T Clark
In fact that's the real problem.And the root question of mind-body problem also. — dimosthenis9
"Physical" is an infinitely malleable category for every aspect of experience we can categorize as substance, usually by employing empirical methods.
"Material" in the context of neuroscience and consciousness theory has a similar meaning: physical "matter".
The "body" is carbon-based physiology, which consciousness transcends.
Seems simple enough to me. — Enrique
It can be asked if matter is the foundation of mind — Jack Cummins
So a follow-up question: what do we do about it? — Xtrix
We could ask what is physical and what is not. — Jack Cummins
In other words, to what is do mind and matter come together in the realisation of embodied human experience? — Jack Cummins
Are you suggesting that individual-collective is a false dichotomy? — Merkwurdichliebe
You've obviously never met an Libertarian and only understand Libertarianism as it has been provided to you by others that don't understand it either. — Harry Hindu
Even self-proclaimed libertarians still try to dictate to others how to live their lives, so by definition they aren't libertarians. — Harry Hindu
If you are equating libertarianism with plutocracy — Harry Hindu
Libertarianism is a cover for plutocracy. — Xtrix
then what is the label you assign to those that believe individualism trumps collectivism and that everyone should be able to live their lives the way they want as long as it doesn't restrict others from doing the same? — Harry Hindu
“I am conscious, therefore I exist.”
— Xtrix
...is still "I exist, therefore I exist". — Banno
It doesn't exist hence you have an idiotic ahistorical view which is purely driven by naive ideology. — Benkei
it is unfair to say that only certain strata of society is responsible for contributing. — god must be atheist
Public transportation is just as much available as ever. — god must be atheist
The decline of availability and convenience of public transportation happened not due to capitalists closing down railway lines and making city bus service less frequent... it's because people like to get into cars, drive to somewhere, and then drive back again. — god must be atheist
We are not to be blamed for the decisions we do not make. — god must be atheist
The using of society's benefits IS your decision. — god must be atheist
If the capitalist pigs, as you call them, — god must be atheist
You don't use them because the capitalists force you to, you use them because without them you'd perish. — god must be atheist
So I put to you this: is a person who uses energy as much as the average person in his community, not hypocritical, when he blames the builders to build his home, when he blames the car manufacturers to build his car, when he blames the clothes manufacturers to make his clothes, and the producers of his food, and the transportation companies to deliver this to him or to close to him where the goods are available without much work to him... — god must be atheist
If you were NOT hypocritical then you would simply give up these benefits, and then you could claim moral superiority. But until such time, you simply can't. — god must be atheist
You insinuate (but don't state) things that you want to accuse me with, but there is no accusation, only an insinuation of it. — god must be atheist
Some people just can't take the blame when it's due. It's a spineless, cowardly attitude to blame others for one's own wrongdoing. — god must be atheist
Why do you do this? — god must be atheist
I am not told to laugh off ideas that there are power differentials, and that with more power comes more to blame. — god must be atheist