Generally, you'll find that, although you think the definitions of terms such as these are obvious, other people will think they mean something different. Those types of differences often spin discussions into confusion here on the the forum. The terms "gestalt" and "reductionism" also have more complex implications and applications than your over-simple definitions indicate. You've given us very little to work with. — T Clark
Suggest you define your terms; describe the issue; and give your own thoughts. — T Clark
Haldane predicted that in 2074 70% of all births would stem from artificial wombs, from fertilized egg to baby. A 150 years away from him (1924). Dream on... — Goldyluck
What do you mean with seeds? Just a fertilized egg in a test tube, so no more... eeeh, well you know.... needs to be done on Mars. Would be a pity. The seed needs to grow though and the only place where it can grow is.... the womb of a woman. For the first four months at least. Any artificial womb that you have seen in movies is fiction. It can't be realized. It takes people to grow people in. That's the reason you will never be able to create life without life, cause you need it in the first place. — Goldyluck
Then I will run with it. A crop of humans from seeds? Are you serious? — Goldyluck
As for the former (there's nothing going on), you'll have to always consider the possibility that our ignorance prevents us from/precludes the identification of a pattern. — Agent Smith
Advanced gestalt is pre word, consider the big bang as an advanced gestalt. — Varde
Wow! I had no idea where the name "Gestalt" came from. My eldest works with a visual group named Gestalt! He does digital art that frames stages with moving effects at Lalapalooza in Chicago and now in Minneapolis for the New Years celebration! His visuals are going to be the count down visuals as well!
Exciting! And now the name of their group makes a lot more sense! Thank you :flower: — ArguingWAristotleTiff
which is why its impossible to create an artificial intelligence without a body. — Miller
If there was no change at all at one point in the multi-verses history, then how can that state of non-change cause change? It's the old question of how something can come from nothing. How can space-time come from a state of no space and no time? — Harry Hindu
I expect many colonists/explorers would die. Eventually they would find a way to make it work and I think Elon Musk is certainly overly optimistic in terms of how to make the colony self-sustained ... but given that we get there I see no reason why trail and error will not eventually lead to success. His plan is basically to rotate people on and off of Mars. You can pretty much guarantee some people will stay and some will be born there. The ethical question of allowing a baby to grow up on Mars would likely mean they would have to undergo medical changes if they were to come to Earth ... I think in 50 yrs such procedures will be almost second nature given the potential that CRISPR has to offer.
In comparison to colonising Mars CRISPR is FAR FAR FAR BIGGER, even if it lives up to just a miniscule of what many in the field say is on the way. — I like sushi
For longterm stability and independence Mars has much more going for it purely due to the gravity. Most of the first colonists will likely die/suffer a lot, but many (including myself) would happily take the risk. Should we go? Sure! Why the hell not? What good reason is there not to explore and stretch the human story to see what can be achieved? Every adventure opens up new avenues for humanity as a whole.
I still believe I’ll live long enough to see humans land on Mars (or at least attempt to!). — I like sushi
If Mars or anywhere else is to be colonized, it will probably be the poor, disenfranchised and/or insane that will be the first group to go. The rich will stay at home until it's demonstrated to be safer and more comfortable than on Earth (or in their private orbital station above Earth). — _db
But even this would not be the biggest difficulty, it's simply that space is so damn big. It would take 4.3 light years just to reach our nearest neighboring star system.
Andromeda, the nearest galaxy, would take 2.5 million years, travelling at the speed of light to get to. That's just too much. — Manuel
Doing something significant in Mars or the Moon, seems impossible.... — Manuel
Send AI-driven robots to build underground space habitats (to start with) on Luna and Mars and maybe the moon-like asteroid Ceres. Meatbag payloads (i.e. mission specialists & megamillionaire / billionaire tourists) to follow years later for short duration stays rather than long duration or permanent stays (due to hazards of prolonged hard radiation surface exposure and bone-loss / heart-enlarging degenerative low gravity). I'm betting on our 'intelligent' machines to "colonize" this solar system and over the next few centuries spread an interplanetary (& L5) network of habitats from Venus to the Kuiper Belt for endless pilgrimages of visitors from Earth. — 180 Proof
I'm convinced that colonising other planets is a fantasy. Mars is totally inhospitable to any form of life as we know it. Mars has a very thin atmosphere; it has no magnetic field to help protect its surface from radiation from the sun or galactic cosmic rays; it has no breathable air and the average surface temperature is a deadly 80 degrees below zero. Anyone living there would have to occupy a totally artificial environment imported at enormous cost from Earth.
We have a well-equipped spaceship that could potentially sustain us for millions of years more on our long journey through space, but it's dangerously over-heated and resource-depleted. And that is Spaceship Earth. Our only hope is to tend to it if we want to survive. — Wayfarer
where would humanity go if we had a warp drive? — The Opposite
Everyone who says that we should focus on Earth is correct. It is not controversial and is evident. — Manuel
Equally real, but not more real. — Pantagruel
So, I'd say that originally, philosophy came first. But, as others have pointed out, different philosophical traditions use psychology in different degrees and ways. — Apollodorus
Feynman's great paper, There's Plenty of Room at the Bottom. — fishfry
So instead of knowledge we may be better off using "understanding" or some other term. — Manuel
So my question is: what makes Tom's justification method to be superior to Sam's justification method? Or in other words, why Tom is more justified to believe "it is called outside" then Sam? — Curious Layman
With philosophy, as it is about ideas, it is easy for people to think that they can say anything they wish to. However, in the twenty first century, it does seem to me that any serious discussion needs a certain amount of academic rigour. — Jack Cummins
Reading serious philosophy is hard work. So you have to push yourself to do it, it's like training. Academic training can be useful in that it makes you articulate your thoughts and consider objections and different points of view. — Wayfarer
He said, during the course of the conversation, and somewhat tongue-in-cheek, 'the Greeks, the Medievals, the Germans - that's all you have to know, the rest is rubbish!' :-) — Wayfarer
I also suspect that often the mind is partially closed before the reading even begins. — Tom Storm
The only problem which I end up with is that the reading life can be so lonely because most of the people who I interact with daily barely read, and definitely believe read philosophy books. — Jack Cummins
I think in many cases people read to confirm and build upon what they already think. — Tom Storm
So, I am asking people what they think about this, and how they find the right balance for themselves. — Jack Cummins
I think there is content in philosophy, not just talk about words. — Manuel
I'm only arguing that the example of a car and a garage, or an apple and its seeds, are word games and are not actual examples or counterexamples to your own thesis. — fishfry
Oh no, that is quite false. The air molecules must be displaced by the car. Surely you understand that. You can't possibly think that the metal molecules of the car occupy the same space as the air molecules bounded by the car's boundary. Surely you can't be claiming that. You've brought me up short. I'd been thinking we're arguing semantic games, but now you're violating the laws of physics. — fishfry