Sure. And Darwin did not espouse it. So please don't call it Darwinism, philosophical or otherwise.it’s ‘philosophical Darwinism’.
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But as an explanation for why there is anything at all, it is a pseudo-philosophy. — Wayfarer
There were several questions above that you avoided. I'm trying to get at WHY you think that your mind isn't part of your body. You simply saying that we disagree doesn't answer my questions or improve my understanding of your position.When inside the car and the car moves, do you not move with the car? A radio is inside the car and can be removed. Does that make the radio not part of the car? Do you even think before typing and submitting a post, or are you simply trying to pull my leg? — Harry Hindu
OK, so when you are inside your car you believe that you are part of your car. I don't, so we have a difference of opinion on that. — Metaphysician Undercover
I never said that I don't see a difference between a mind and a body. The mind is not the body. It is a process of the body.I know what we are disagreeing about, it's stated right above. You think that because a mind is inside a body it is part of a body. I do not. You don't see a difference between a mind and a body. I do. So we disagree. — Metaphysician Undercover
There were more questions that you ignored, yet Wayfarer quoted them and took a stab at trying to answer. Go figure. If you can't answer questions, MU, then don't bother striking up a philosophical conversation with me. I'll continue this once you have answered my questions.When I first engaged you in conversation, it was because I didn't agree with your claim that if the mind and the body are two distinct things, they couldn't interact. Is that why you claim that you a part of your car when you are inside it, because you believe that if you were not part of your car, you wouldn't be able to interact with it? — Metaphysician Undercover
My position isn't dualism. It wasn't me that was saying the mind and body are separable. It was MU. I was asking those questions of MU to get at how a mind can exist independent of a body, as if the mind isn't caused by the body and it's interaction with it's environment.I understand your perplexity. The dualism of body and mind - the idea that these are separable - goes back to Descartes. He depicted the human as a composite of the physical, res extensia, which has size but no intelligence, and the mental, res cogitans, which is intelligent but has no extension.This can be depicted as body and mind, physical and mental, body and spirit, and so on. — Wayfarer
To say that everything is composed of atoms is off the mark. Atoms themselves are the interaction of protons, neutrons, and electrons. Protons are the interaction of quarks, and who knows what quarks are the interaction of. It seems that science doesn't describe objects at all, as there isn't anything object to point to - only interactions, or processes. If everything is a process, which includes cause and effect, then there really isn't any substance at all, only processes, or another term we could use is, information.I have noticed that you often refer to the 'cause and effect' relationship between objects and perception - that objects cause perceptions - and that your view is very similar to what is described in the above passage. And it is the common-sense view which I think many people would naturally accept. Part of this view, is that the fundamental constituents of being, are the physical elements which comprise objects, namely atoms. In this view, everything, including the mind itself, is ultimately atoms and can be ultimately explained in terms of physics. Evolution itself can be understood in similarly physical terms, although in that case higher-level factors are said to supervene on the physical, so as to give rise to living organisms and eventually the evolved intelligence of h. sapiens even though these might seem not to be purely physical. However, the only real entities are physical entities.
So that is the view of the 'neo-darwinist materialism' which Thomas Nagel is setting out to criticize. But it might be helpful to spell all of this out so it is clear what is being criticized by this book, and on what grounds. — Wayfarer
I'm trying to get at WHY you think that your mind isn't part of your body. You simply saying that we disagree doesn't answer my questions or improve my understanding of your position. — Harry Hindu
The mind is not the body. It is a process of the body. — Harry Hindu
If you can't answer questions, MU, then don't bother striking up a philosophical conversation with me. I'll continue this once you have answered my questions. — Harry Hindu
Both idealists and physicalists are saying the same thing but don't seem to realize it - that the mind and body interact, and if they interact they must be of the same substance, the same reality of cause and effect. — Harry Hindu
It seems that science doesn't describe objects at all, as there isn't anything object to point to - only interactions, or processes. — Harry Hindu
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