What you don't understand is that it isn't just "one guy" but many many more. — dimosthenis9
Schopenhauer claimed that though we can do what we want, we can't want our wants; true as that may be, we can, at the very least, refuse to comply to our unchosen wants. — Agent Smith
He states that he finds them alive indeed even if the definition doesn't "cover" them. — dimosthenis9
And I answered you already. — dimosthenis9
Where exactly i stated that the only reason that I find possible viruses to have some kind of will is not to be humanly manufactured??? — dimosthenis9
Please back this up.
— Kenosha Kid
Sorry but I m not backing up on it. — dimosthenis9
I wasn't talking about intuition alone. It's as clear as day that the universe makes sense in a rigorously logical sense - there are laws, mathematical to boot, that govern the universe and that extends far beyond mere gut feelings. — Agent Smith
What I meant was that the emission of a photon produces a different photon field configuration as the field used for for exciting an atom. — Raymond
the field emitted looks different than that of a photon coming from it. — Raymond
You can't see though what direction time goes. — Raymond
For absorltion/,emission both photons have the same energy and angular momentum but their states differ. — Raymond
According to Daniel Dennett, those "unreal" pictures are projected onto the Cartesian Theater screen. — Gnomon
A curious question is, supposing consciousness comes first, how exactly does it tie into this? Are the cells what is conscious and does that mean we originally consisted of two consciousness that became one? Or is the very process our consciousness, making us, so to say, our parents sexual desire? — Hermeticus
In fact from the search that I did seems that the majority of scientists believe that. — dimosthenis9
The question of whether viruses can be considered to be alive, of course, hinges on one’s definition of life. Where we draw the line between chemistry and life can seem a philosophical, or even theological argument.
I stated that computers are human made no living things and can't be compared to living organizations. — dimosthenis9
If I don't believe in this approach (I do though), then one can say whatever they want about quarks and leptons, they existing whatever I think about them, but if I don't belief in the approach, or if I don't value it, the quarks will be non-existing for me. — Raymond
About absorption and emission. Isn't the emitted photon different from the absorbed? A creation and destruction operator are applied in asymptotically free perturbative approach, and can't be applied to a bound system like an atom. The photon absorbed is a different one than the emitted one. Only in Compton scattering they can be interchanged, so it looks. Do you agree with this? — Raymond
Whatever Tyson was talking about, it's obvious that the universe, save quantum physics, makes sense as in it behaves in ways that a sensible, intelligent being would — Agent Smith
I can always say that you see quarks because you only belive in them — Raymond
When quarks were introduced in the sixties it took another 10 years to prove their existence and Feynman didn't believe in them, though he believed in partons. — Raymond
But what spreads out? If it spreads out it can collapse. — Raymond
Something isn't a way? — Raymond
No it doesn't precludes will. Where did I mention that? — dimosthenis9
You find that it isn't alive? — dimosthenis9
No it isn't. Not everything man made is the same. Again, a clone is the same with computers? I can't understand why you find that so weird. — dimosthenis9
Not all. But RNA is. — dimosthenis9
The physicist wants his quarks and leptons (or subs within them, to which muon g2 anomaly seems to hint) to be real. What's thought real or not varies and there is, especially nowadays, no consensus, not even for the fundamental, what the right picture is. — Raymond
I don't think though that the absorption of a photon is the reversed process of absorption. The absorption involves a different photon state as the emitted photon. So one can see the difference. Or not? — Raymond
What about the evolution of the wave function? Reversing motion will still produce collapse. Collapse is insensitive to time reversal. Still, if you reverse the movie of a collapse, a superposition magically appears. — Raymond
Well yeah it is. — dimosthenis9
Even if the virus is man made it is a living thing. — dimosthenis9
Computers are children of the human mind. — dimosthenis9
If you want to distance yourself from Hitler, you don't go for a toithbrush moustache. Why muddy the already muddy waters? — Agent Smith
Viruses designed naturally or in a lab are both something alive (well it's an open issue if they are but let's assume yes). — dimosthenis9
Computers are children of the human mind. — dimosthenis9
They do are designed by humans and they aren't alive indeed. So this can never be a convincing argument for me. — dimosthenis9
If you are honest, then I wonder how the hell you determined going to a philosophy forum is "as rational as possible." — Yohan
I don't think the universe computes all these different histories, assigns them complex probabilities, and ĺets these interfere. All these procedures are human inventions, not truly present in nature. — Raymond
Well, in theory all processes are time reversible. Just reverse all motion present in the system... in practice this needs quite some effort, and the means you reverse all motion with go forward in time. — Raymond
You mentioned the 2nd law of thermodynamics — Agent Smith
And I can argue all day against comparison to the evolution of virus DNA, or any other competence without comprehension.Well no it is not will. But still I could never accept these comparisons with computers. — dimosthenis9
So are you saying that a virus genetically designed in a lab has no will but an identical virus naturally evolved does?Computers are children of the human mind. An alive creature and its mind manufactured them. — dimosthenis9
I also don't accept that computers have a will: I introduced them as an example of something with no will that can optimise. Saying "but they're designed" or "they're not alive" isn't a response. No one is willing the particular transmission of a particular message at a particular time. The underlying mechanics are opaque to most. No will involved, and yet it optimises.But computers aren't alive.
I got what you mean and the analogy you use here. But though there are many similarities sometimes I can't accept them working exactly the same. — dimosthenis9
But it's us who vary the path, it's us who determine the track. It's not that the particle chooses it beforehand. more paths are in fact possible. — Raymond
Does determinism need a first cause? I think it does. At the BB singularity particles needed a first push to come in existence. Without such a first push, nothing could have come into existence.The initial pushes determined the subsequent development, which would result in life for a wide, maybe continuous and infinite set of initial conditions. Maybe these pushes were even determined by a previous big bang, where time has reached infinity (I tend to think that once the universe has accelerated away to infinity, this triggers a new big bang behind us). — Raymond
In reality, there exist practically no reversible processes. — Raymond
The will is a determined one. Will can't exist without determination. Determination doesn't rob the will from its freedom. The determined action of a will can impair the will of fellow men though. It's in this context that we can speak of a free will, or a free wont. — Raymond
Whoever runs the place. But what influenced them to make all the choices? — Yohan
But maybe I'm just clinging to an excuse to believe I have some power over my life. — Yohan
What's reference frame? — john27
OK, but the second law of thermodynamics, is a practical view of determinism. Would then, the second law of thermodynamics necessitate a first cause? — john27
Like genes playing puppeteers of our body, as I once saw depicted? This exists in the mind only. — Raymond
Ok better put, how can determinism exist without a first cause? — john27
If you consider my wife a natural law, then yes. But a real existing law, like a god? — Raymond
Remove the master and there is no slave. Remove the slave and there is no master. They can't exist, as slaves or masters, without each other. — Yohan
How then can determinism verify itself? A deterministic view necessitates a first cause, does it not? — john27
Even if we are determined sums over histories, and if bound systems could be described non-perturbatively, or if some truly fundamental particles were found, do the laws of qft govern us? — Raymond
Could determinism not incorporate non-deterministic free will? — john27
I did arrive wanting to believe in free will.
I still do, but can't. Free will doesn't appear to have any explanatory power. — Yohan
Master and slave is a co-dependent relationship. — Yohan
where is this principle situated, and how does it determine? Is there some mad Principle Puppeteer directing processes with strings? — Raymond
Well in terms of the predictability of humans and their choices, regarding the analysis of consciousness and thought I'd say 2. is simpler. — john27
So in general, if I got it right, your point is that as everything, viruses variants are just an automatical mechanical procedure and includes no transmission of any kind of information as to go on existing?Right? — dimosthenis9
Free will, as we all know, is central to ethics. Does ethics make scientific/mathematical sense? The 2nd law of thermodynamics (entropy) implies that disorder (evil) is more likely than order (good). — Agent Smith
If I act contrary to the principle, which I do, by every action I perform. My will is nor free, nor tied to determinism or any other abstract principle. The will simply is. — Raymond
Even if it were so, the principle doesn't hold for real processes, maybe by approximation only. Are we approximately subjected to it? — Raymond
The principle is even teleological, as it supposes a final point in spacetime that can't be known at the start, except for isolated systems. — Raymond
I did arrive as a non-physicalist but that is unrelated. — Yohan
My partial ignorance could be funded by an enormous chain of deterministic causes, or I could just have free will. Occam's razor? — john27
But wouldn't a human's partial ignorance be funded by his free will? — john27
Is she subject to the principle — Raymond
After the launch friction will influence the motion, so the principle is not applicable anymore, as only conservative forces are implied. — Raymond
I just can't see mechanistic domino effects producing symphonies or the works of Shakespeare.
I'm convinced! — Yohan
Like a primal mechanism of making the virus "decide" to go on existing. To include the information as "to know what to do" as to keep existing. If that makes more sense. — dimosthenis9
Human behavior, if you'll take the time to notice, breaks this easiest route rule - we do things in very inefficient ways, most of the times failing to take the shortest route between beginning (of a project) and its end. In essence we violate the Principle of Least Action. — Agent Smith
The alternative then would be some Beckettian purgatory in which everyone is obliged to sleepwalk through the same debate again and again, regurgitating the same irrational, meritless arguments and rational, patient dismantlings thereof until the racists and sexists, frustrated at their own inevitable intellectual impotency, hit the reset button. — Kenosha Kid
But on this issue, irregardless of the fact that there is nothing close to a scientific consensus on the issue, and that there are obvious arguments for either side, if you argue for inequality, you get labeled a racist and/or sexist — Qmeri
I used to very strongly associate myself with the equality movement of the time… — Qmeri
One book, which looks at this is, 'The Myths We Live By', by Mary Midgley. She queries the neutrality of science, saying,
'It struck me as remarkable that people answer questions about science in two opposite ways today.
On the one hand, they often praise science for being value-free: objective, unbiased, neutral, a pure source of facts. Just as, as often, however, they speak of it as being itself a source of values, perhaps the only true source of them.' — Jack Cummins