There is some arrangement that is the source of what is experienced: I am ill-equipped to say what that might be — Paine
Life is sufficient. — Vera Mont
What is your explanation for existence? Why it occurred, what purpose or meaning it may or may not have? What are your ethical, epistemological or personal views related to existence?
How long have you had these beliefs/understandings, are they subject to reform, change, or have they been relatively static and unchallenged for quite a time? — Benj96
You are a moral realist. What remains to be determined is whether your universalism concerning this aspect of human nature grounds itself on an evolutionarily adaptive instinct or a metaphysical a priori. If the former , do you agree with psychologists like Jonathan Haidt that there are a number of innate moral foundations? He specifies at least 5:
Care/harm
Fairness/cheating
Loyalty/betrayal
Authority/subversion
Sanctity/degradation.
But the catch is that while each of us has all of these , we have them in differing concentrations. The result is a relativism and political polarization over values. — Joshs
For most of human history slavery was common and accepted , and I wager that if you were to ask slaves in periods of history when slavery was widely present if they believed that there were situations under which they themselves would be morally just in owning a slave they would say yes. — Joshs
Many slave owners sincerely believed slavery was not only just but benefitted the slave. So the idea that slavery is immoral and abusive exploitation that prevents overall
human flourishing is not a universal of history or human nature, but a contingent product of modern culture. I agree that humans have always desired ‘flourishing’ but this is like saying we want what we want. — Joshs
What flourishing or exploitation means is relative to a value system, and value systems change. I think what evolves is our ability to relate to the ways of others different from ourselves and this allows flourishing to be shared more widely among different segments of culture. — Joshs
There in no such thing as increased human flourishing, as though there were one objective linear scale of meaurement. For one thing, the understanding of what flourishing entails ,how and why it is important, changes from era to era, culture to culture and person to person. — Joshs
'Thinking' is not only known to be practised by these certain entities. we didn't discover 'thinking' and then look around for anything which had it. we made up the word 'thinking' as being 'that thing which these entities do'. — Isaac
I think from the perspective of non-duality the activity (thinking) and the entity (the thinker) are one in the same. There is no difference between a backflip and the one that performs it, for instance. The entity is the backflip. It's entity all the way down and any action is just the movements and contortions of that entity. So it is with consciousness. — NOS4A2
What? If I have doubts that proves that having doubt implies a thinking being? How? What is the process of logical implication? — Isaac
That's what it is - a tool for working through those apparent contradictions — Banno
I'll maintain that Metaphysician Undercover is mistaken and that an object's properties may be subject to change and that it makes sense to talk of essential an non-essential attributes. — Banno
A nonsense, again. Actually, it is in this room; Possibly, it might have been in the other. That's it. — Banno
A nonsense expression. — Banno
As if "The lectern might have been in the other room" were false. — Banno
Again, this odd interpretation has the result that when one says the lectern might have been in the other room, one is talking about a different lectern. — Banno
If the OP wanted a within-paradigm discussion, then drawing in biology, chemistry, electricity, and quantum mechanics mightn't be the best way to go about that.
As usual, a claim is made against science, then when a scientific paradigm is invoked in the defense of that claim, the argument shifts to a non-overlapping magesteria one.
Well, if a scientific paradigm has no place in discussions about consciousness, then will everyone please stop going on about neuroscience (the failings thereof) in relation to it. — Isaac
This is among the reasons why enactivism makes more sense to me than any other account of 'experience'. :up: — 180 Proof
It wasn't meant to. it was showing that the structure is not circular. — Banno
If P then Q, if ~P then ~Q. — Banno
So? Again, I'm not seeing how that prevents us from being mistaken about it. Deities (of various sorts) were equally central at one point, we're clearly wrong about (at least some of) them. — Isaac
I don't even know what that means. What kind of experience is 'experiencing myself as being aware'. What would experiencing myself as being unaware consist of? — Isaac
If you are not able to be conscious of your own awareness, then that says something about you, not about others or humans in general. — Janus
Ah. Back to the "If you disagree with Chalmers you must have a brain defect" argument. I appreciate your concern, rest assured I will get the possibility checked out forthwith. — Isaac
Neuronal activity and 'objects of conversation' are in two different worlds. The latter is constrained by the former, but not dictated by it. — Isaac
"We" means a collection of "I"... It's telling that you couldn't express your idea here without using a personnal pronoun.
If one doubts that there is a self, who is doing the doubting? A doubt implies a person having it, a "mind" rejecting a belief. It can't be an independent doubt, free-floating in the universe. — Olivier5
All the bright and shinny feathers of all the birds in the world are composed of the same material as your hair and your nails: keratin — Olivier5
You don't know for sure what just happened and could be wrong about it. You tell a story. — Isaac
What is generally disagreeable hereabouts is the thinking that begins with subject or introspection or private sensations. — Banno
As Descartes pointed out, who would be doing the "you" part, then? The doubter cannot doubt his own existence. — Olivier5
I'm not seeing the problem you're seeing here. History is littered with understandings and entities which seemed 'so obvious' to people at the time, but later societies consider them nothing but misunderstandings or superstition. I can't see how "everyone thinks it's obvious" presents any major barrier to neurological theories. — Isaac
Yes, because you've already done it again and again based on a real human body. — Olivier5
I'm just trying to pin down what this thing 'awareness' is that neuroscience has apparently failed to explain. — Isaac
Introspectingly, I realized that this image was not actually 'there' in my mind. — Olivier5
So. I look at my tea cup, and the claim is that in addition to the circuits processing the sensations I get from it, I also have this other thing called 'being aware' of it, which isn't simply the word we give to those circuits doing their job, but something else (which correlates with them). We assume bats have it (what 'it's like' to be a bat) even though they don't insist they do, but cameras don't have it (there's nothing it's like to be a camera)...because bats would be... offended? — Isaac
Then how do we know the machine isn't? — Isaac
