So, is that to say, that you consider the challenge made by Constance to be irrelevant to your enterprise? — Valentinus
Does that conclusion amount to a rejection of a claim that something else can be recognized outside of the stories we make to explain things? — Valentinus
You had better tell that to the professor...
— Pop
They are doing science; you are not. — Banno
As I mentioned before, it has an almost religious fervour. Sure, it explains lots. That's not the same as explaining everything. That's the overreach. — Banno
Seems to me you are just offering yet another game. — Banno
I'll admit not seeing much in it at all. Saying "forms can be anything physical" doesn't ring with Wittgenstein's analysis. Saying that it's all interactions of forms doesn't clarify anything. Proscribing a definition of information as "the evolutionary interaction of form" simply looks confused. — Banno
So answering the question "what was at the beginning..." - the beginning of what? That'll tell us what game we are playing. — Banno
And he had much to say about the identification of simples. What is to count as a simple depends on what one is doing. There's a deep tendency for folk to choose this or that to be the ultimate simple - Logos, information, dialectic (@Pop); but any such choice will be relative to this or that activity - that language game.
So answering the question "what was at the beginning..." - the beginning of what? That'll tell us what game we are playing. — Banno
I skimmed. The metaphysical basis of logic, as you say, and Wittgenstein: you know such an idea is an oxymoron in his thinking? — Constance
As to the tutorial, I found it a bit elementary. Not wrong, but a bit off the mark. Such discussion of perceptual knowledge relationships begs the question, what is knowledge? — Constance
The appearance to us of the external (to our bodies) world is a collaborative enactment between our bodies and the external world in which they are embedded, and latter provides the medium within which our enactments can occur. — Janus
Sounds like you're close to something, but then ...information?? Counterpart in the real world? At any rate, the construction of relation as constituting meaning is close to a good point, I think. The distinction: can you elaborate? say more about this "counterpart" if you would. — Constance
Well, something changes doesn't it, such that if we were to be there after it had happened, we would see the tree fallen? — Janus
In the beginning there was the word? — Constance
But the world is brimful with relations that don't require us to be noticing them, or even involve us at all, in order to exist. — Janus
It may turn out to be the case that relational pattern , rather than intrinsic content , IS the basis of objective reality. — Joshs
Can you measure a pattern? Say a square or a circle? What are the bits of a circle? — Prishon
Wheeler's idea of information differs from Tononi's. — Manuel
The problem with this is that it may run the risk of being dismissed by physicists who don’t see it as either empirically valid or philosophically coherent.
They may be wrong , but I think what you’re aiming for will be much between comprehended by others of you put more emphasis on the human behavioral implications of your theory ( emotion, intersubjective relations , cognition and perception , psychopathology, language , ethics). — Joshs
The way I understand it, five-dimensional conceptual structure isn’t organised according to time — Possibility
Given that the processes behind thought do not appear to be consciously accessible, what does it mean to attribute the source of thinking to consciousness? — InPitzotl
If you are interested in my view, you are welcome to read my posts. — Banno
Are they compulsory now? — Banno
So, my position is that thought is neither created by nor is taking place in the brain.
And my three part question is "Who is thinking, how thought is created and where does it take place?/b]. — Alkis Piskas
The entropy of you and me is about the same — Prishon
Nevertheless, we are completely different forms. — Prishon
I’m saying that a vague, qualitative difference of potentiality/significance/value arises from the most fundamental level of reality, and that mind or thought isn’t even in the picture yet. — Possibility
But that science won't thank you for spreading information woo, based on confusions about physics. — bongo fury
Not at all. Possibly it argues why physics is not enough, and we need a science of complex systems. Fine. — bongo fury
As well as being a term that strictly speaking says all sorts of interesting things that can and should be stated perfectly well in terms of entropy — bongo fury
I think. It was a feeling that she was showing her love. Waiting for us and her to be one befors leaving to who knows where. It was a kind of religious experience. Only god knows the true Nature or something like that. :cry: — Prishon
I just realized. Maybe the force is the feeling! In physics gauge fields ( taking care of interactions) are strange fields. So maybe you're right! :up: — Prishon
after I mentioned somewhat similar to this on philosophy stack exchange my answer was deleted and downvoted a number of times... — Prishon
However complicated the inner and outer Forms are (with the bodily mixed Form in between), it cant account for actually FEELING stuff. — Prishon
Maybe it's a logic problem. Fundamental thought is the only tool we have to explore fundamental reality. But the tool itself seems to emerge from fundamental reality. — Mark Nyquist
I don't think so. There is no fundamental thought That assumption assumes the existence of a fundamental. What is considered as derived from the fundamental in this view can in fact be equal to all forms. It could be that there is no hierachy. With fundamental slaveforms at the bottom and and a tirant form at the top. — Prishon
I don't think this is in keeping with neuroscience, is it? — frank