I suppose I could ask you the same question. Heads and tails being throw are each as likely, so how does knowing that you'll wake up twice if it's tails change that? — Michael
There are two wins with every tails — Michael
All you're saying is:
If 100 people asked then it was tails [the rule of the game]
100 winners [the outcome]
Therefore, it was tails
But that's obvious, and not relevant. — Michael
For any given person there's a 50% chance that they're right, so it doesn't matter if they pick heads or tails. It's just that if it's tails and they pick heads then there's a greater number of losers and if it's tails and they picks tails then there's a greater number of winners. — Michael
But you don't say that if there's more winners under tails then tails is more likely. That's a non sequitur. — Michael
There aren't more winners because it's more likely but because you asked more people. — Michael
She's given it twice: once on Monday and once on Tuesday. — Michael
If I offer you one free lottery ticket if you correctly guess heads and two free lottery tickets if you correctly guess tails then tails is the better bet even though equally likely. — Michael
You're conflating "more likely to win if tails" and "more likely that tails". — Michael
A rejection of God entails a rejection of existence. — Marcus de Brun
Hesperus = Venus
Venus = Phosphorus
Therefore Hesperus = Phosphorus — MetaphysicsNow
Art is simply a social trait that enables one to acquire resources, mates and friends - which is why we do most of the weird social things we do. — Harry Hindu
Disregarding the numbers between — BlueBanana
When figuring probability repeated values are very important, if you remove them then you will misrepresent the distribution. Repetition is not a valid reason to remove a datum. — Jeremiah
Having memory means you have a mind. — Harry Hindu
What is a mind if not memory that stores and processes sensory data? — Harry Hindu
Many people on this thread are being inconsistent and attributing minds to humans but not to computers. Why? How do we know that humans have minds but computers don't? — Harry Hindu
Like I said, p-zombies cannot be programmed. They are dead inside. Humans are more like robots, where p-zombies are more like a mechanical contraption without any capacity for programming. Humans are programmable. P-zombies are not. — Harry Hindu
You're missing the reality that the Robot would most definitely need the concept of cupness to operate in the general world of things. Knowing the color of the handle of one particular cup might help with that cup. In the real world the Robot would need to understand cupness in order to find a cup in the first place. Then when it finds a cup it can determine what color it is. — SteveKlinko
From a Buddhist perspective the ego/self is the ultimate cause of suffering. — TheMadFool
In addition, from a moral perspective, altruism (the highest good) is to put others before you. So, people see value in diminishing the role of the self/ego in ethics. — TheMadFool
Nirvana is literally the realization that there's no self (anatta); this realization is considered a liberation from samsara (cycle of rebirth and suffering). — TheMadFool
But Humans don't work like Robots. — SteveKlinko
The Conscious Visual experience contains an enormous amount of information that is all packed up into a single thing. The Neural Activity is not enough. — SteveKlinko
When I reach out to pick up my coffee cup I see my Hand in the Conscious Visual experience. If my hand is off track I adjust my hand movement until I can touch the handle and pick up the coffee cup. — SteveKlinko
I can't see how it could maintain the pretence of being, well, 'a being', for very long, as all it can do is regurgitate, or combine, various responses and information that has been uploaded into it (how, by the way? Is it a computer? If so, could it pass the Turing Test?) — Wayfarer
Take for example Determinism and the freedom of the will. The question has been sufficiently answered by Schopenhauer (one cannot will to will. All events in nature are caused, human actions are events in nature, ergo, human actions are caused/determined). — Marcus de Brun
I'm hurting, I'm dying, I'm losing, etc. — TheMadFool
Yes, it’s a vague definition, because our use of the word “Consciousness” is imprecise. Really, “purposeful-responsiveness” is a better, more uniformly-used term. — Michael Ossipoff
some Spiritualist notion of a separate entity, separate and different from the body. — Michael Ossipoff
Any device that can do what a person or other animal can do has "Consciousness". That's how it does those things, you know. — Michael Ossipoff
Consciousness is the property of being a purposefully-responsive device. — Michael Ossipoff