Well this is prima facie not the case since the materialist explanation, whatever it is, is changing all the time and is nothing more than a spaghetti bowl of ideas that are tossed about as much as finding will allow. In other words, it is an outright mess without any proof and any hope for proof. But if you are satisfied with "it" (no one can describe what "it" is), then that is your choice. Personally, I never subscribe to obvious obfuscation. — Rich
As far as animal minds are concerned, they are much different from human minds. They are evolving in different directions. Bats, whales, homing pigeons, all very different. None more for than any other. — Rich
That's all it is. The mind is creatively adapting to changing circumstances, the mind operating at all instances of life. There is nothing more to the Elan vital. — Rich
One of the few things that can be considered proven is the existence of atoms and molecyles and how they interact with each other, — BlueBanana
What is spaghetti is the jumble of scientific theories of biological evolution which is continuously growing, changing, and morphing into new theories — Rich
Just observe the vast varieties of an species - say dogs. — Rich
Just because there are electronics interacting in a TV set does not mean that the source of the pictures is inside the electronics. — Rich
It's not any more complex than the nature it's trying to describe, which is pretty damn complex. That's because those theories are there to describe, not to explain. Any of the selected few explaining theories are very simple and neat. — BlueBanana
And what observations should I make from them? — BlueBanana
Furthermore, this can be easily proven by opening up the TV and inspecting its parts and how they work because of how advanced our technology is. We can do the same with living organisms or cells for example. — BlueBanana
Observe the brain. There are no images. There is no memory. There are no thoughts. There are no colors or sounds. There is no instinct for survival. — Rich
It's what you observe, not what I observe. Everyone observes differently depending upon their history (memory). — Rich
The problem is that science had become goal seeking, that is anything but the mind. The Church Inquisitor use to use the same tactics in order to preserve its dogma. Science no longer just observes and reports, now markets and creates theories for funding purposes. NGOs operate in the same way. This is euphemistically referred to as research bias. — Rich
If I was to continue further into the materialistic direction, I'd argue that yes there is. Look into a computer, can you see the images? No, but they're still within the computer. We already know how memories are in the brain. — BlueBanana
How about plants? From what you've said I've gotten the picture that according to you, mind exists in all living things and parts of our body, not only brain. What is that based on? — BlueBanana
So how do you know I'll observe a proof to your opinion? What were your observations and how do they imply that the difference in mind causes differences in evolution? — BlueBanana
Do you have any actual first hand experience on microbiology research? Afaik we know how living organisms work and there are no gaps that élan vital would fill. — BlueBanana
There are no images in a computer anywhere. Just on-off states. — Rich
I have no idea what you will observe. However, in life, developing skills in observation, curiosity, and questioning (skepticism) can be very rewarding and helpful. — Rich
I had friends who will because they could no longer stomach it. — Rich
That form the image. With TV you had a point because the images aren't stored in the TV but they come from outside it. Why couldn't the mind, images or memories be stored in the brain as electric signals or chemicals? — BlueBanana
So if you din't know that I'll observe an answer to my question, why the advice? Could you give the answer? — BlueBanana
Ask those friends whether a movement of a signal in a nerve can be explained by the chemicals interacting with each other or whether there's a need for a force that isn't explained by science. — BlueBanana
It is the mind that forms the image. The computer like the TV set like the brain are receiving/transmission tools, but the brain is living and this can adapt. — Rich
If the computer is the receiver, what sends the image? Nothing, it exists in the computer, just in another form. — BlueBanana
The image is information and as that information is there, the image is there as information. — BlueBanana
Natural selection is just a nice story, without a shred of evidence, that appeals to those seeking fitter and not fitter. — Rich
Materialism does not allow for a mind. — Rich
It just happens. Denying scientific truths because they are too messy and chaotic or don't reveal a big reason and explanation behind everything is disturbingly close to creationism and conspiracy theories. — BlueBanana
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