I'm not sure what was the problem with that??? — ssu
Yes, basically when we have a new way of looking at issues (or questions/problems), that is the easiest way for us to change the premises. It doesn't have to mean that the earlier thinking was wrong, it just that we didn't think about the issue from the new perspective. — ssu
Thank you for that. I didn't intend to be a vampire; it must have happened in my sleep. — Vera Mont
Two extremely simple ideas - sufficiency & necessity — Agent Smith
EVEN IF we are fallible — Bylaw
‘90’ is sufficient to tell us about the temperature, but the temperature is not sufficient (but can potentially) give us 90 (temperature) — invizzy
rising’ is sufficient to tell us about the temperature, but the temperature is not sufficient (but can potentially) give us rising (temperature) — invizzy
Progression of physical matter.
Clocks are physical matter that can delivery a number.
The idea of duration of time can exist in your mind and it's very useful but duration ( time initial to time final ) can't exist in the physical present. All we are doing with the idea of time is piggybacking on the progression of physical matter. — Mark Nyquist
As for psychology, there can be endless models of time and there are. So what is time physically? I see continuity of physical matter. Continuity of time could be just a psychological add on. In physics time is what the clock says. — Mark Nyquist
Instead, let us imagine an infinitely small piece of elastic, contracted, if that were possible, to a mathematical point. Let us draw it out gradually in such a way as to bring out of the point a line which will grow progressively longer. Let us fix our attention not on the line as line, but on the action which traces it. Let us consider that this action, in spite of its duration, is indivisible if one supposes that it goes on without stopping; that, if we intercalate a stop in it, we make two actions of it instead of one and that each of these actions will then be the indivisible of which we speak; that it is not the moving act itself which is never indivisible, but the motionless line it lays down beneath it like a track in space. Let us take our mind off the space subtending the movement and concentrate solely on the movement itself, on the act of tension or extension, in short, on pure mobility. This time we shall have a more exact image of our development in duration.
It doesn't feel right to me to cause animals to suffer and die just because we like the way they taste etc.
I think we should be nice to animals. — Down The Rabbit Hole
I don't have the inclination or the energy to argue against unimaginative and downright wrong propositions ad infinitum. — god must be atheist
I'll merely mention that the cultural "force" I had in mind is human Intention, which has physical effects in Nature — Gnomon
bring it if you got it, and expect me to give back as good as I get. No fear, kid. — 180 Proof
And, besides, only Gnomon can answer for himself/herself — 180 Proof
Compatible, but like knitting is compatible with geology; consistent, no contradictions arise, but simply because they are talking about different things. — Constance
Ah, now please complete your post with a short paragraph telling us what (a) cause is. Back when we all had paper dictionaries, cause took up a lot of column inches because it's not-so-simple. For present purpose, that you or I might agree with or subsequently adjust or refine, what do you say it is? — tim wood
You suppose wrong — 180 Proof
For example, you've just asked if I am a Christian. Now, I said I wasn't, didn't I? — Bartricks
And this thread is not - not - a request for historical or psychological explanations of why most Christians believe that God created the world. — Bartricks
So, clearly what I am wondering is if there is any philosophical reason why a Christian should believe such a thing. — Bartricks
I'm sure I've missed that "force". Please cite where in any of the equations or formal models used in QM there is a notation for mind/observer (and not the Hermitian operator for measurenent). You're not talking "over my head" and out of your bunghole again, Gnomon, are you? :sparkle: :eyes: — 180 Proof
Read the people I mentioned in my posts, from what you write it is clear that you will learn a lot — Raul
An interaction event would tend to slow-down the photon by absorbing some of its momentum energy. But I'm not sure what would cause a photon to slow-down without interacting with another massive/momentum particle. So, I was hoping you could shed some light on that aspect of the Energy/Momentum/Mass/Matter equation. — Gnomon
No one is saying quantum physics is not contributing, I'm saying it is not needed to explain consciousness because consciousness is a macro-phenomena — Raul
(no one really understand it well — Raul
Like you claiming consciousness requires quantum physics to be explained? — Raul
Okay — 180 Proof
Have you ever taken a single university physics course? or read any substantial work on quantum theory by a (popularizing) working physicist? Expertise is not required to refute 'quantum pseudo science' as I point out in the links above. I stand confidently by my "nope". :wink: — 180 Proof
Nope — 180 Proof
Yes, consciousness and even the self could be one day created artificially by us... But we re far from that. — Raul
So far consciousness requires a brain, full stop. — Raul
Consciousness is a macroscopic phenomena... — Raul
No biology, no thoughts! — Raul
Not really, all those things are material, those things (symbols, meanings, etc.) are in our brains within neural-traces that combine always following physical laws (in some case deterministic, others are not, ... physics and biology are very complex).
And as such those things can be manipulated, like we can eliminate or induce ideas, words, concepts in your brains, we can as well see where and how they re located, etc... we can induce and create a "religious" brain since religious thinking is quite understood today (see Ramachandran's studies), and a long etc... And we can manipulate in traditional ways (talking, educating, ...) or in more sophisticated ways (using chemicals, electromagnetic fields, brain-surgery, etc.)... — Raul
Yes, it's an important distinction to make I think. In a lot of conversations about consciousness, 'losing consciousness' when brain function is disrupted is taken as overwhelming evidence that consciousness is a brain function. Understandably so, if we don't make this distinction between consciousness and identity. It's also understandable that identity is seen to persist when someone 'loses consciousness', because from everybody else's point of view, the living body remains. There still is a sleeping bert1, with legal rights and spatio-temoral location etc, from Benj96's point of view. bert1 seems to still exist. But there is no bert1 from bert1's point of view. The deeply sleeping body has no point of view of its own, temporarily, and it is in that sense that identity is lost. — bert1
The problem isn't two explanations, the problems is that they have to end up in the same sphere - the material — GLEN willows
Science and philosophy are completely different fields of inquiry. — Constance
The relation one has with the world in philosophy is about the presuppositions of science, not the usual assumptions, and these presuppositions are not in the usual sense, observable. — Constance
Not mine. On my view, identity is lost, not consciousness. So I no longer exist. But the functional unities that persist are conscious still, just as they still have mass. I'm a functionalist about identity, but not about consciousness. When I die I lose the functional unity that is bert1 forever. I might also lose it when I am in a deep sleep perhaps, or get knocked out. But it gets rebooted again.
9m — bert1
Kant’s notion of time is a critique of Newton’s. Time is neither an absolute quatitative constant for Kant, not a relationship between material objects. It is the passive exposure of subjective intuition to an outside, to something existing. We generate time in apprehending, and must have something outward if there is to be apprehension. Time is the activity of pure self-affecting. — Joshs
As ↪jgill has pointed out, this is just incorrect. The scare quotes probably indicate that Benj is aware of this, but thinks of pointing to some alternative use of "energy" and "time". But then, why the pretence of talking about physics? — Banno
But then, why the pretence of talking about physics? — Banno