Of course there is the laws of nature. We experience it in any moment of our lives. Mind is however dominate to the laws of nature. — bahman
I followed you through the point where you argued that if State A changed to State B, there had to be some amount of time between those states where either A and B existed simultaneously or where neither existed, but I don't follow your solution that the mind is able to exist without being subject to the same problem. — Hanover
I have no idea what Laws you are experiencing. I am (my mind) is experiencing all kinds of things, but certainly not Laws. The Mind made up the Laws of Nature as it did God. It is a story. A myth. The Mind likes creating myths and stories. It's fun. — Rich
This requires a mind which experiences S when there is no S and S'. That is mind which creates and annihilates. — bahman
I don't think you're paying enough attention to what you wrote. The experience of S is not S, and the experience of S occurs only in the mind that experiences it. — tim wood
There are then two sorts of changes to account for. First, the real change in the experience, and second, the presumed change in S itself. — tim wood
Both accounts are tedious to reproduce. — tim wood
Mainly, your argument is just a riff on Zeno: the arrow doesn't move, Achilleus never crosses the finish and never beats the tortoise, and so forth. The trick is usually in having a correct understanding of the sum of an infinite series. But it's all a twice-told story. Why bring it up (again) here? — tim wood
My argument has nothing to do with Zeno argument. What I am arguing is that you need a mind with ability to annihilate and create in order to have motion. — bahman
I have no idea what Laws you are experiencing. I am (my mind) is experiencing all kinds of things, but certainly not Laws. The Mind made up the Laws of Nature as it did God. It is a story. A myth. The Mind likes creating myths and stories. It's fun. — Rich
There Mind is creating new forms by use of will and it is recognizing and conceiving forms by use of memory but it is not annihilating. The universe is more like a clay of energy that is constantly being manipulated and changing.
There is no series. The universe is a continuous and entangled. Using symbolics such as words, mathematics, or logic cannot be used to represent a continuous universe in flux. The only b way to understand it is via observation. — Rich
Strange. You say that you experience no laws, yet every post you created in this thread is espousing some objective state-of-affairs (laws). In telling us how things really are and work, are you not espousing laws?There are no states. Everything is continuous. This idea of states is a symbolic concept that may be of practical use but does not describe the universe. If you insist on states, then you cannot understand or explain what is transpiring. This is where academia education goes off on it's on track. — Rich
objective state-of-affairs (laws) — Harry Hindu
There are many discernible states of change within the "one BIG STATE" of change that we call the universe. That is what science studies states of change, rates of change and regularities of change. Do you find a problem with that? — Janus
Take your pick; whatever you choose, you will find plenty of others that disagree. — Janus
I don't believe that mind can be observed — Janus
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.