are you going to explain, how something can make a representation without some sort of decisions or judgement as to what the representation will be of — Metaphysician Undercover
….you've told me… — Metaphysician Undercover
….I've shown you… — Metaphysician Undercover
demonstrate that what you belief is not the case. The evidence shows your belief is false. — Metaphysician Undercover
The "methodological self-contradiction" which you refer to is the result of your faulty definition of "judgement", which makes conscious thinking a necessary requirement for judgement. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you would divorce judgement from thinking, as the evidence of illogical, irrational, emotional, and random judgements necessitates, then this "methodological self-contradiction" would disappear. — Metaphysician Undercover
they don't really understand what words mean, they are just programmed to be able to put coherent sentences together, a facility which relies on their being able to mimic grammatical structure based on statistical data showing how certain questions elicit certain kinds of responses. — Janus
But what if we are hardware 'designed' by evolution to do roughly the same thing ? These things can reason. They can outperform humans on important tests. It's starting to look like humans are superstitious about their own nature. As far as I can tell, it boils down to the problem of the meaning of being, the problem of the being of meaning, the problem of the thereness of 'qualia'. And I claim we don't have a grip on it. — plaque flag
If we are confident, is such confidence logically justified or just mere meatbias ? For most of our history, we have done what we like with machines, without worrying about their feelings, excepting of course some of the the 'machines' provided by biological evolution.
If 'sense of meaning' is understood to be immaterial and invisible to scientific and perhaps even conceptual approach, it's hard to see how such an assumption can be justified. — plaque flag
Programming or designing is an intentional act, so I don't think the analogy holds. — Janus
You can claim we are just being "superstitious" about our natures, and there may be cases of that, but I don't find it convincing as a general explanation for being reluctant to impute consciousness to AIs. — Janus
I have no idea what the "thereness of qualia" could be referring to. Perhaps you mean something like the immediacy of experience? — Janus
I doubt you really believe that machines feel or care about anything. Animals are not merely machines in my view, any more than humans are. The two concepts 'machine' and 'animal' are distinct enough. Machines are not self-regulating metabolic organisms, for a start. — Janus
Sense of meaning is an affect, and machines are not sentiently affected. Sense of meaning is an experience, and we have no reason to think that machines experience anything. I think 'immaterial" is a loaded term and so not helpful here. That said sense of meaning is not a physical object that can be publicly observed. We can talk about it; but only imprecisely. — Janus
What exactly is this ghost intention ? — plaque flag
Wrap up a clever bot in a soft warm android body that purrs and see what happens. — plaque flag
We can't find the souls of our cats in this or that location. Where is this divine spark ? Imagine a young man falling in love with woman who treats him wonderfully who then discovers she's an android, a fact which she's concealed for fear of losing him. How does he determine whether she is 'in' there and worth of love ? — plaque flag
It's true that I don't currently project feelings on or having feelings toward machines. I just don't see why I couldn't in principle --- if those machines were more like my cat or wife with respect to my sense organs. It's not logically impossible that my cat is already a machine made by crafty aliens. — plaque flag
You claim that meaning can't be observed. I don't see how that claim is justified. Bots have learned to talk with us. I agree that it's difficult to talk about, but how is 'affect' to be understood ? But what is special about the human brain ? Is it the meat ? Or is it just a structure of a function ? And how does 'affect' get a meaning at all if affects aren't essentially public ? — plaque flag
I once heard John Searle say something which I believe prevents one moving down the road to confusion.
Words do not refer, but human being use words to refer.
I think sometimes folk forget this which causes folk to think a word is magically "connected" to some object. — Richard B
Is the bot going to feel what happens to that body? — Janus
Are synthetic organisms that feel things like we do,, and care about what happens to them like we do, possible? Maybe, but we are a long way from that right now. — Janus
Who knows what is special about the human brain? Is it fundamentally meat? Does it produce consciousness or is it a kind of transceiver? How could we tell the difference? — Janus
Whatever meaning bots produce is just regurgitation of what we have programmed them with. — Janus
This is from another thread, and it makes the same point I did to you earlier about semantic reference being entirely dependent on our understanding that words do refer: — Janus
What does it mean to feel ?
If answering this is no more than a matter of whether typical public criteria are satisfied, then I expect that we will indeed attribute feeling to such bodies as the technology gets better. — plaque flag
Do you imagine 'mind' being summoned into existence 'within' 'matter' as this happens? Will something that can already talk better than most humans begin to 'overhear' itself ? What would convince you from the outside ? What level of performance ? — plaque flag
No, they absorb structure (norms) and generate novel sentences.. That's also what we do. — plaque flag
What the representation will be of? Hell, that’s a given: an intuitive representation, a phenomenon, can be nothing other than whatever is an object of perception, or a manifold of objects. — Mww
Phenomena represent only what the senses provide, regardless of what that provision is. Hence…..imagination. That we make mistakes is also given; just that we must be conscious of them in order to know them as mistakes, which makes explicit we don’t make them right here right now. — Mww
That conscious thinking is a necessary condition for the activity of judgement, does not serve as definition of it. — Mww
Ok, fine. All those are still judgements. We don’t care about kinds; we want to know what any kind is, what all kinds are. What is it that makes any kind of judgement, a judgement. How did this kind come about; how did that kind come about, which inexorably reduces to how does any kind come about, or, how do all kinds come about. Only then can sufficient reason be given for why a self-contradiction might disappear, which would seem to require from you a proof that thinking is not a requirement for any kind of judgement, in spite of at least a logical proof I gave that conscious thinking is a necessary requirement for at least one kind, that being with respect to phenomena. — Mww
So you’d have it that, e.g., an irrational judgement, is that judgement entirely divorced from thinking, but I would maintain that an irrational judgement is that judgement concluded from improper thinking. — Mww
Your way cannot explain the irrationality itself, whereas mine stipulates it necessarily. You, therefore, haven’t alleviated a methodological self-contradiction, but in fact enforced it. — Mww
The survival of the pattern is its persistence. We reason back from this. What kind of patterns persist ? — plaque flag
So instead we get those that replicate. In biological cases, we have variation, and this explains increasing complexity. — plaque flag
That's what the representation is, an object of perception. — Metaphysician Undercover
Of the vast possibilities available to be represented….. — Metaphysician Undercover
……there is a specific representation which is produced which represents a particular portion of the available possibilities. — Metaphysician Undercover
Obviously it is not random as to what will be represented, so don't you think there must be some sort of decision as to which possibilities will be represented? — Metaphysician Undercover
So consider what you say here "phenomena represents only what the senses provide". There must be something which determines "what the senses provide". — Metaphysician Undercover
You see the body is composed in a specific way…. — Metaphysician Undercover
…..but the question is how could the body get composed in this way without some decisions, judgements. — Metaphysician Undercover
Take the process of trial and error for example, this process can only proceed through judgements. — Metaphysician Undercover
Would you agree that judgement requires possibilities, and is in some way a selection from possibility? — Metaphysician Undercover
That you think you can stipulate, necessarily, what irrationality is, indicates that you misunderstand irrationality. — Metaphysician Undercover
I used those examples to demonstrate the possibility of judgement without thinking, so that you might allow this as a possibility. — Metaphysician Undercover
As an aside, do you believe in free will? If so, do you see that a true, freely willed act would necessarily be free from the influence of thinking? — Metaphysician Undercover
No. The object of perception is that which is perceived. It is external to the senses, and is merely that by which they are affected, depending on the mode of their presence. Technically, empirical representation is an object of intuition, which is called phenomenon. Herein lay the proverbial “veil of perception”, from which arises indirect realism, and in which much ado is made of nothing. — Mww
That there is a vast quantity of objects possible to perceive, and therefore become possible phenomenal representations, is true, but irrelevant. — Mww
That which determines the possibility of being represented, is the type and structure, the physiology, of human sensory apparatus. No decisions need be made; if an object is present to perception and a sensation follows, there will be a representation of it. And the need for decision for mode of sensation is already determined by the physiology itself, in that it is impossible to see with the ears, and so for each of the senses. — Mww
True enough, but the question of how an object is composed in such and such a way is not possible from the mere fact it has a certain extension in space, which is all that can be represented in a phenomenon. The questions of the how of composition require conceptions relatable to the object, and intuition contains only two conceptions of its own, space and time. — Mww
True, but that doesn’t say trial and error occurs in intuition, which is the source of phenomenal representations, or that there is trial and error going on in the first place, anywhere. — Mww
Rather than an object having its composition somehow represented, trial and error then suggesting attempts to find out what that composition entails, why not just attribute properties to objects in conjunction with its representation, in which case the object’s composition conforms exactly to our understanding of its representation. If this is the way it works, this certain thing of this certain composition, is called a sun comprised of hot burning gas only because we say so, hence how that thing is to be known by us. — Mww
Judgement isn’t defined by the necessity of conscious thought; it is conditioned by it. That conscious thought is necessary for judgements regarding phenomena, says nothing about what judgement is or does in this regard. — Mww
No. There are possibilities and selections from them, but they been examined and selected by the time judgement intervenes. — Mww
Here it becomes clear why the presence of an object removes possibility for it, but still leaves possibility for what it is. This moves possibility to being considered in thought, which is not that there is an object, which is never questioned, but what possibilities are there for how the object is to be cognized such that it accords with its sensation. Turns out, judgement is that by which the relations are validated. — Mww
I hear a loud boom, so it cannot be denied I heard something, from which arises a mere phenomenon. — Mww
So it is that I have been given the phenomenon via sensibility... — Mww
I never said every judgment required conscious thought, but only those judgements having to do with empirical cognitions. Those judgements concerned with knowledge of real physical objects. The reason I wanted us to get away form perception, sensation and implied deceptions thereof.
Hence the question back on pg 6, hinting at the domain of judgements grounded on how a subject feels about that which he thinks, and while conscious thought is still present, it is no longer a necessary antecedent condition and judgements of this aesthetic form are therefore not validations of it. — Mww
But no, I reject the notion of free will as a conjoined conception. There is freedom and there is will, but it is the case the will is not free in regard to the objects representing its volitions in accordance with laws, but in another, absolute autonomy, which is a type of freedom, by which the will determines the laws by which it shall legislate itself. — Mww
Now it should become clearer that discursive judgements concern themselves with the condition of the intelligence of the subject, but aesthetic judgements concern themselves with the condition of the subject himself, his intelligence be what it may. Under these purely subjective conditions, judgement validates that which the subject does, in accordance with his inclinations, which are therefore contingent, in relation to what his obligations prescribe him to do, in accordance with his principles, which are therefore necessary. — Mww
Are we done now? — Mww
The question is, is it not a necessary requirement for some judgements or decisions to have been made in order for a body which senses to be created, or to simply come into existence, to become? — Metaphysician Undercover
This (evolutionary theory) ought to incline us to look at "intuition" more closely, to see if perhaps there is judgement inherent within it. — Metaphysician Undercover
I hear a loud boom, so it cannot be denied I heard something, from which arises a mere phenomenon.
— Mww
Your premise presumes what you claim, that is known as begging the question. When you state "I hear a loud boom", that premise dictates that you actually heard something. But we cannot start with that assumption unless we are certain that it is correct. — Metaphysician Undercover
Once we see that a coherent philosophy can be produced which denies the reality of "the object", then the "possibility" of an object must replace the "necessity" of an object — Metaphysician Undercover
And the object cannot be taken as a given, it may be created by the cognitive act, as a sort of judgement imposed on the possibility of an object — Metaphysician Undercover
Isn't "how a subject feels" just a matter of sensation? — Metaphysician Undercover
feelings are just another way, (other than through conscious thought), that sensations affect us. — Metaphysician Undercover
Sure, that there may be a decision-making process out there somewhere, is not impossible. But even if there is, what difference would it make to that which is, now. — Mww
We are what we are, and everything is as it is, whether there was or was not a decision-making process. — Mww
We? Who the hell is we? — Mww
I’m not ever going to experience a merely possible object, from which follows a coherent philosophy which denies the necessity of objects, with respect to my experience, is a contradiction. — Mww
The reality of perceived objects, is necessary; the reality of a priori objects, is contingent. — Mww
Take any A-HA!! moment of your life…..assuming you’ve had at least one…..compare it to stubbing your toe. The latter requires a real physical incident, the former does not, insofar as you can have your epiphany over a merely possible incident and of course there’s no sensation in a possible incident. So you could get away with saying feelings are concerned with possible sensations, but the problem then becomes the certainty of that feeling, however it manifests, but without the certainty of the thing that caused it. Then the best you can do is tell yourself you don’t know why you feel the way you do, the very epitome of confusion and doubt. — Mww
that there may be a decision-making process out there somewhere, is not impossible.
— Mww
To say it's not impossible, is to miss the reality that it is logically necessary. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's not impossible that the earth orbits the sun, but to say that this is not impossible misses the reality that it's logically necessary. — Metaphysician Undercover
Understanding that conscious decision-making is just the tip of a much bigger process helps one to understand what it means to be a human being. — Metaphysician Undercover
We are what we are, and everything is as it is, whether there was or was not a decision-making process.
— Mww
This is a fatalist, determinist saying. In reality, the power of choice allows us to change, and become something new at each passing moment — Metaphysician Undercover
There is no such thing as "what we are", or "as it is" — Metaphysician Undercover
The decision-making process is what allows us to be moving on rather than what we are. — Metaphysician Undercover
Your experience appears to be self-contradicting. You told me the object is not the phenomenon. What you experience is the phenomenon. You do not experience objects so your experience produces no necessity of objects. You ought to realize that objects are merely possibilities. — Metaphysician Undercover
The reality of perceived objects, is necessary; the reality of a priori objects, is contingent.
— Mww
If the object is not the phenomenon, as you told me, yet the mind is known to create objects, which are contingent objects, show me how your mind derives a necessary object please. — Metaphysician Undercover
Take any A-HA!! moment of your life….. compare it to stubbing your toe.
— Mww
Here's a better comparison. Let's compare when I stub my toe, with when I suddenly get a cramp in my leg. — Metaphysician Undercover
But in the case of the cramp in my leg, there's nothing for me to point at and blame. — Metaphysician Undercover
Likewise, pointing out external things, and saying that these things are the cause of any sort of sensations, is a mistake. — Metaphysician Undercover
I should have left it at human sensory apparatus, in which, being a father, I’ve witnessed the construction of my children’s sensory apparatus from absolutely none at all, to fully functional, under purely empirical, decision-less, conditions. — Mww
For a thing to be not impossible is sufficient for its possibility, but to be merely sufficient is very far from being necessary. The necessary does not logically follow from the not impossible, but from that which is not contingent. Your logic is flawed. — Mww
Gaspsputterchoke) Wha???? A pitiful sophism. Observations prove/disprove logical constructs. If a guy can observe some condition, he has no need for logical constructions regarding the reality of the observation, but he may construct logical explanations for them, iff he actually wants to know. — Mww
Unless conscious decision-making just is what it means to be a human being, in which case that process is all he needs, and if there happens to be a bigger process takes nothing away from his being one. — Mww
This reminds me of something you said about a coherent philosophy. A philosophy for which the understanding of the human conscious decision-making process is complete and unabridged, for which there remains no questions that process could ask even of itself, would necessarily be the most coherent philosophy possible. — Mww
You say fatalist, determinist; I say logically incontestable. Even to be something new is to be what we are. We can be forced to change just as much as we can choose to change, therefore the means for of change has no necessary implication; we’re just as new whether the means is one or the other. Evolutionary change is neither forced nor chosen, but recognition of evolutionary change is not immediate, so carries no more necessary implication regarding newness than either of the other means that are. — Mww
So…you’re not what you are? If you constantly change into something new, then you are constantly not any thing but only some thing not what you were. But even what you were was only that which was not something before it. You have not much other choice than to say what you are not. To complete the circle, what remains from all of what you can say you are not, is what you can say you are. Which is where you started. — Mww
But he really does himself no favors by making a complete mess of it. — Mww
If I perceive an object, and if that perception forwards a sensation in conjunction with the mode of its perception, and if the sensation is the means by which a phenomenon is given, then the object is necessary for all that. An object satisfying this criteria cannot be a mere possibility. It is utterly irrelevant that I as yet may not know what this object is from which these internal events follow, but because they do follow it is immediately contradictory to suppose it is only a possible object affecting me, and while the as yet indeterminable object grants the possibility of how it will eventually be known, such undeterminability does not take away from it being a necessary physical presence. — Mww
The mind….properly theoretical pure reason a priori…..derives its necessary objects in conjunction with the conceptions under which they are to be subsumed. A necessary object is that object for which the negation is impossible, which makes any necessary object, a logical construct. — Mww
That being established, necessary objects the mind derives are not contingent; the reality of them, is, and such reality depends exclusively on the possibility of the phenomena that represent them. — Mww
It is not a better comparison when only to like kinds when properly it should be unlike kinds. — Mww
So you don’t immediately and automatically rub the muscle in the exact location of a charlie horse? You rub the muscle far removed from it? Even if you do neither, your brain locates it, which represents as an image of that very location in fact being rubbed, because muscle extension as relaxation is already understood as the most feasible relief. It follows, with respect to empirical judgements, you’ve made the first regarding that a rub is feasible, and second, where the rub must occur in order for its feasibility to properly manifest. — Mww
Because the decision-making process is not empirically observable, in any situation where it exists, it will not be apprehended by an observer, unless the observer proceeds from the appropriate premises, required to determine its existence. — Metaphysician Undercover
The "human sensory apparatus" is structured in such a way that decisions would be required for its creation. — Metaphysician Undercover
Furthermore, empirical observation of the results of decision-making, the consequences or effects of decisions, indicates that one person's decision-making process is not the same as another's. — Metaphysician Undercover
However, as I tried to explain earlier…… — Metaphysician Undercover
From what I've been explaining, judgement is necessarily prior to conscious thought, therefore conscious thought must be understood as conditioned by judgement, not vise versa. This is why our conscious judgements are often overwhelmed by biases and prejudices. Prejudice is base in prior judgement which may not have involved conscious thought. — Metaphysician Undercover
However, as I tried to explain earlier, it's not necessarily the logic which is flawed here. It's more likely that the premises are what are flawed. The premises, generally, are derived from our empirical observations, and the flaw is in how we generalize from observation. This — Metaphysician Undercover
The way that you present things is exactly the reason why Socrates and Plato argued so fervently that the senses deceive us. Sense observations do not give us reality, they give us possibilities. This is very evident from the fact that a multitude of different people observing the very same event will always provide differing descriptions. — Metaphysician Undercover
These description, sense observations, are taken by the thinking mind as possibilities for reality. Then we must employ logic to determine which we want to accept as certainties, necessities. — Metaphysician Undercover
The problem is that understanding the conscious decision-making process reveals that it is flawed. It is flawed for the reasons exposed above, much of it is carried out by the non-conscious, as exposed above, with the "hidden premises", and all sorts of premises which are simply taken for granted without being consciously thought about to validate them. — Metaphysician Undercover
Observations prove/disprove logical constructs.
— Mww
You've got this backward. Logic is what provides certainty, not empirical observation. That's the point of my example about the earth orbiting the sun. Empirical observation provides us with possibilities concerning the reality of things, and we use logic to produce certainties, which we call necessities. — Metaphysician Undercover
When I get a cramp in my leg I stand up and walk to relieve it. I do not rub it, there is no external stimulus required, nothing which fulfils your description of "real physical incident". — Metaphysician Undercover
Then there is no sufficient reason to think….. — Mww
If a process is not empirically observable there’s no reason to look for the initial premises sufficient to find it. It isn’t observable, so how would it be known what to look for? — Mww
I add 12 to 30, get 42. You add 18 to 6, get 24. We got different results, but used exactly the same process. — Mww
All you say here is uncontested, but says nothing with respect to origins. — Mww
And how we generalize from observation, is in fact, how the observation, and by association, the real thing, is understood. From which follows that the premises used for logical conclusions, arise in understanding, therefore whatever flaws there may be in the construction of our premises, also arise in understanding. — Mww
For me to misjudge is merely for me to think conceptions relate to each other when some other judgement or some empirical observation, shows my error. — Mww
Sense observations give reality... — Mww
Given a representational human cognitive system, these descriptions taken by the thinking mind….properly understanding itself….are not the observation, which gives nothing but phenomena, but are conceptions, as possibilities for how the phenomena are to be thought. Logic is employed with respect to judgements made on the relation of conceptions understanding thinks as belonging to each other (plates over holes should be steel and round, re: manhole covers), or, the relations of judgements understood as belonging to each other, in the case of multiple judgements regarding the same cognition (plates over ditches should be steel but must not be round, re: ferry ramps). — Mww
Yes, there are flaws possible in the conscious decision-making process, but that does not say the process is flawed, but only the use of it, is. — Mww
And whatever “hidden premises” there are in conscious decision-making cannot be the responsibility of the conscious agent making the decisions, insofar as it is contradictory to arrive at a conscious decision grounded by premises of which I am not conscious. — Mww
To simply take for granted bias and prejudice as premises for conscious judgement, is a flaw in the subject’s character, not in the process the agent employs in his decision-making. — Mww
One can be tutored in correcting erroneous judgements, but if he is so tutored, yet decides to disregard the corrections, he is called pathologically stupid. If tutored, and receives the corrections and thereby judges in accordance with them, that is called experience, and serves as ground of all empirical judgements. — Mww
No, I don’t. Logical certainty may not require empirical proof, and indeed, may not have any at all afforded to it, this being a limit of forms, re: A = A. But for any logical certainty, using constructed objects of its own manufacture and representing empirical conditions, only observation can serve as proof of those constructs, re: the sun doesn’t rise or fall as the appearance from certain restricted observation warrants. — Mww
Logic, on the other hand where observation is not presupposing anything because there’s nothing to observe, dictates the possible reality of things. — Mww
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