How are you so sure? — Shawn
But, I'm focusing on sentient computers. — Shawn
I completely agree with you, it was just a composition error that I forgot to mention it. — fishfry
a dog knows, through its own sort of common sense, that it cannot leap over a house in order to reach its master. It presumably knows this as the directly given meaning of ‘houses‘ and ‘leaps’ — a meaning it experiences all the way down into its muscles and bones.’ — Steve Talbott
It is clear that consciousness can arise (some like to say emerge) from piles of atoms; specifically, in living creatures made of meat. It may be that consciousness can ONLY arise in bags of meat, but it's more likely that it could arise in some other kind of substrate as well.
I do believe that. — fishfry
It would be possible in principle to set out on a deterministic process of mechanically identifying every possible idea, — Pfhorrest
What is a program? — Shawn
Do you think it is true that consciousness can arise from Generalized or non-Generalized Artificial Intelligence? — Shawn
I’m just telling you what I believe — NOS4A2
So it makes no sense to assert that there are only three colors that a human eye can see. It's just that our eyes are more or less sensitive to certain wavelengths. — Harry Hindu
The decisions and actions begin and end in the self and nowhere else. — NOS4A2
So, the overriding veto is almost instantaneous, and barely conscious. Then, we can construct more elaborate reasons for our behavior after the fact. — Gnomon
With all due respect, this merely tells me that you have not thought very deeply about social resistance and its ramifications. — JerseyFlight
You are probably an American, — JerseyFlight
which means you are part of a young political system — JerseyFlight
you manifest a complete ignorance of any form of class awareness in your consciousness. — JerseyFlight
I will not debate this with you because I have more important things to do with my time, — JerseyFlight
...but what I will do is discuss Lukács, History and Class Consciousness, if you are serious. (That means you need to read the book). — JerseyFlight
Psychasthenia can especially make free will hard to understand — Gregory
Non-conformity nearly always seems to come at a social price. — JerseyFlight
But I think Michael Shermer made a pragmatic point : accepting that Neuroscience has revealed that even the behavior of rational humans is motivated primarily by emotional subconscious processes. — Gnomon
Since liar sentences can be formed in natural languages, then the linguist must provide a semantics for these sentences (on the assumption they are meaningful). But we cannot give such a semantics for such sentences, despite their being meaningful. This is a reason we need an alternative to the concept. — Kornelius
It seems to me that more distinctions we can make, the more information we have, and the more information we have, the better decisions we can make. — Harry Hindu
The experience isn't what is socially constructed. Babies experience colors before learning how to use colored scribbles to refer to those experiences. — Harry Hindu
Those three components aren't just in an on/off state. They are stimulated in varying degrees — Harry Hindu
Our minds are part of the world and color is part of our minds, therefore color is in the world. — Harry Hindu
I accept the rule of law but only where it is just. — NOS4A2
t have you read David Gamez?, — darthbarracuda
Uncanny has the link to knowing that I wanted. — Banno
Of course intentionally infecting others with disease is a serious crime ...
But there is no right to not be infected by others, — NOS4A2
Every duty of the person must be the duty towards some person, in whom the right is vested and conversely every right must be against some persons upon whom a duty is imposed.
the linguistic topology becomes... uncanny. — Banno
Didn't know Dr Jay Neitz talked about tetrachromic vision. — TiredThinker
For whatever reason the golden ratio is most desirable. — TiredThinker
These things are more complex than colors, but we can make conclusions about them outside of particular contexts. Am I right? — TiredThinker
There seems to be a relation of sorts anyway; implications of "a bridge" might shed light on other things. — jorndoe
So, it's not so much that "my red is the same as yours", more that there's enough interactional stability that we can find coherent ways to talk about it. — jorndoe
While we might agree to disagree about its colour, that would be more problematic for its mass. — Banno
Reasoning involves mediation, and this mediation requires that the object be not given in contemplation. This thesis is exemplified by Peirce through the case of tactile perception, where feeling a piece of cloth actually requires the comparison of different moments of the experience of the piece of cloth and the comparison is achieved by moving one’s hand over it:
17 EP1: 15.
A man can distinguish different textures of cloth by feeling; but not immediately, for he requires to move his fingers over the cloth, which shows that he is obliged to compare the sensations of one instant with those of another.17
For Peirce, cognition, at every level, is always the product of inference, and the basic structure of rational thought is already at work, albeit unconsciously, in sensation. Empirical research in this context is used to illustrate and support a radical philosophical thesis: that all knowledge is mediated and the product of some previous cognition; and that to talk of an absolute start or first cognition is both intellectually and perceptually unintelligible.
It seems like shape provides one bit of information while the color provides a different bit. — Harry Hindu
Red becomes orange at around 480Thz. Wether we use the word “red” or “orange” for a 480Thz light might be a matter for contention. That we are talking about light at 480Thz, less so. — Banno
They can't see a factor of 100 more colors than trichromic without literally that many more cones. — TiredThinker
I know you can't "prove" that one person's red is the same as the next person's. But is it conceivable that the brain tries to keep sensory sensations efficient as the collection of wavelength information itself? — TiredThinker
Tetrachromic people have more distinction in the yellow/green parts of the spectrum. Like I said more color information can maybe lead to more exact information, — TiredThinker
It is also said the color blind people (2 fully functional cones) can see camouflage better than normal visioned people. But that is likely a matter of needing less brain power to identify with less vision. — TiredThinker
As far as how the brain and eye works your best bet is to use a visual aid like youtube. — turkeyMan
Our eyes and brains interpret frequencies. — turkeyMan
Cameras see your red as my red however i suppose its possible i see red as blue and you and a friend of yours sees red possibly as someone elses yellow. — turkeyMan
I often see physicists say things like "we discovered some math that helps with problem so and so" and stuff like that. — Gregory
In my opinion absolutely everything can quantified. — turkeyMan
To speak loosely at an intuitive level (invoking a pseudo-teolology), it's a misnomer that the color visual system is attempting to reconstruct wavelengths, or model the wavelengths of light. Our color visual system apparently does not care one iota what the wavelengths really are, and why should it? What our visual system seems to focus on, instead, is recognizing and distinguishing objects. — InPitzotl
Those have been around for a long time as well. — creativesoul
