And all the intention required is that of water to run downhill. — unenlightened
This is where we have a difference of opinion, as to what constitutes "purposeful". I think that the carbohydrates produced by photosynthesis are useful in the plant's future, perhaps in the flower, to attract bees. Therefore the plant produces this sugar with the intention of producing a flower, and that is done with the intention of attracting insects, and that with the intention of fulfilling reproductive needs. — Metaphysician Undercover
You restrict "intention" to "that which is carried out with conscious determination". But there is no need for such a restriction. Intention has been observed to go much deeper than the conscious level. Habitual acts are carried out intentionally, without conscious direction.
So, in my post, I questioned:
"the activities of DNA, such as mitosis, whatever it is which "acts" at this level. I don't think biological science has properly identified what it is which is acting, because it must be acting at a sub-atomic level to produce such molecular changes".
Consider activities such as mitosis and meiosis. What do you think is the active agent in such activities, what is acting? We could say that the cell is acting, then we assume an internal cause. What is this internal cause, or force?
. I can see, that is how it makes sense that the asymmetries allow for self-organization but not howthese asymmetries [...] account for self-organizing tendencies which do not violate the second law. — StreetlightX
these asymmetries basically 'force' organization to happen. — StreetlightX
selection, in the short term of plant breeders and so on does not rely on novel mutations but variability within the gene pool of populations. — unenlightened
An entirely symmetrical universe would dissipate symmetrically, foreclosing any sort of self-organizing capacities. The exact source(s) of cosmic asymmetry are hotly debated, but it's these asymmetries which account for self-organizing tendencies which do not violate the second law. — StreetlightX
I suppose the (I guess we must think universal?) operation of entropy is itself the most basic asymmetry, since it would seem to produce temporal directionality. You say that a symmetrical universe would dissipate symmetrically.Thinking about this the question that comes to mind is whether in an absolutely homogeneous, that is absolutely symmetrical, universe any dissipation of energy would occur at all. — John
I still don't see why an asymmetrical universe might not simply dissipate chaotically without producing any order. It still seems to be the case that order, in terms of the invariant behavior of matter/energy in its various forms must be inherent, for entropic dissipation in the form of ordered complexification to occur. — John
I don't see how you get from "X successfully achieves Y" to "A intentionally uses X to achieve Y". — Michael
To say that I intend to do something but that I haven't consciously decided to do that thing strikes me as a very obvious contradiction
What, exactly, do you mean by the word "intend"? What does it mean for an habitual act to be carried out intentionally? — Michael
Mitosis and meiosis are reactive events that occur in response to physical changes in their environment. It's not much different to a computer turning on in response to a button being pressed. — Michael
What, exactly, are you suggesting? You haven't been very clear. Are you arguing against the notion of physical causation and in favour of a supernatural explanation? If so then what's the evidence, and if not then what view are you attacking? — Michael
So, we look for the designer. The computer has an external designer. The living cell appears to have an internal designer. — Metaphysician Undercover
We simply see "nature" in a different way, a more comprehensive way, one which allows intention to be a natural thing.
I might point out, because it is not clear in the thread, that selection, in the short term of plant breeders and so on does not rely on novel mutations but variability within the gene pool of populations. There is a nice sloppiness about a gene pool that allows the peppered moth to adapt to the industrial revolution and then adapt back without having recourse to happy accidents of mutation and then of re-mutation. — unenlightened
It's not even that genes can be 'turned on and off'; it's that even when they are 'on' they can do 'different stuff'. — StreetlightX
No, I am arguing for an agent which carries out the act of reading DNA and doing such things. It is your assumption, that anything which could carry out such an intentional act must be "some sort of intelligence", which makes you conclude that I am arguing for "some sort of intelligence that makes genetic mutations occur".A designer is someone who makes conscious decisions to achieve some desired end. So, again, you're misusing words (or arguing for some sort of intelligence that makes genetic mutations occur). — Michael
Intention is understood to be non-physical. We understand the intentional agent, a human being for example, to choose the appropriate efficient causes (physical causes), required to bring about the desired end. This is a free will action. Thus intention is understood as a cause which creates a physical activity (efficient cause), without itself being such a thing. What is not understood is how the intentional agent starts a chain of efficient causes. A determinist doesn't allow such a chain of efficient cause to start in this way. That is the difference.What's the difference between X being the result of a natural, non-conscious intention and X being the causal consequence of prior physical phenomena? — Michael
That is, something deeper than the genes, which actually interprets the genes, like a mind is necessary to interpret words. And it is due to this factor, the necessity of something which "interprets", that words, nor genes, have a fixed meaning. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, I am arguing for an agent which carries out the act of reading DNA and doing such things. It is your assumption, that anything which could carry out such an intentional act must be "some sort of intelligence", which makes you conclude that I am arguing for "some sort of intelligence that makes genetic mutations occur". — Metaphysician Undercover
Intention is understood to be non-physical. We understand the intentional agent, a human being for example, to choose the appropriate efficient causes (physical causes), required to bring about the desired end. This is a free will action. Thus intention is understood as a cause which creates a physical activity (efficient cause), without itself being such a thing.
What is not understood is how the intentional agent starts a chain of efficient causes. A determinist doesn't allow such a chain of efficient cause to start in this way. That is the difference.
Yes, there is always some type of foresight or projection toward the future with intention, but it may be very basic, to the extent of the will to continue, to subsist. The will to subsist is a projection toward the future. This projection into the future, intention, causes the act of self-nourishment.I fail to see how one can intend without foresight which is based on memory and projection to a future. — unenlightened
So there you have your evidence, survival is itself a projection into the future. With respect to "genetic interpretation", we still need to assume something which does the interpreting. This "something" is the thing which acts with intention. What do you think performs genetic interpretations? I think it's the soul.I see no reason to impute such things without evidence at the intra-cellular level at which genetic interpretation occurs. — unenlightened
I'm not assuming this. It simply follows from the common definition of "intention"/"purpose"/"design". You're misusing these words. — Michael
I already answered this. Plants are clearly not conscious, yet they carry out intentional acts such as photosynthesis. The plant produces sugar, with the "foresight" that it needs sugar within the flower to attract bees for reproduction. The plant produces seeds with the "foresight" of future generations. Foresight is defined as regard or provision for the future.What is an intentional agent if not a conscious thing with (as unenlightened explains) a motivating foresight? — Michael
Purpose is defined as an object to be obtained. — Metaphysician Undercover
There is no reason to assume, that necessarily, what is referred to by "one", is a human being. Therefore a beaver may intend to build a dam. A bird may intend to build a nest. .
I already answered this. Plants are clearly not conscious, yet they carry out intentional acts such as photosynthesis.
The plant produces sugar, with the "foresight" that it needs sugar within the flower to attract bees for reproduction. The plant produces seeds with the "foresight" of future generations. Foresight is defined as regard or provision for the future.
Though you may be a competent scientist, I don't know, you are simply uneducated, and in complete denial with respect to the facts of life. You attempt to justify your denial by claiming that I am misusing words. But no manner of restricting the use of words can change the reality of living beings.
I'm saying that the intentional agent must be conscious. — Michael
Plants don't intend to do anything. — Michael
You can deny that self-nourishment and photosynthesis are acts of providing for the future, and that producing seed is an act of providing for the future, all that you want, but you're only fooling yourself.Plants have no regard for the future. — Michael
You can deny that self-nourishment and photosynthesis are acts of providing for the future, and that producing seed is an act of providing for the future, all that you want, but you're only fooling yourself. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'm sorry to have to shatter your illusions, but you're just plain wrong. And the fact that you will go to the extent of redefining words, to support your incorrect premise, indicates that you are steadfast in your refusal to recognize how wrong you are.
It seems to me that entropy just is symmetry-breaking, which just is energy flow, which just is efficient causation. — John
Why does my heartbeat speed up when I run?
Efficient cause: sympathetic nerve
Final cause: to speed up CO2 removal and glucose distribution — Mongrel
All the parties involved are following the path of least resistance. I'm not sure what entropy has to do with it (or if entropy is just a feature of the way we experience events.) — Mongrel
Michael, I'm really tired of your childishness. You have an off-handed way of defining words for whatever suits your intention, with total disregard for accepted dictionary definitions. This only demonstrates that you are not well educated on the subject.I'm not saying that they don't provide for the future. I'm saying that they have no regard for the future. To have regard for something is to think of or consider it. — Michael
Raining provides water for people to drink, but it doesn't then follow that the clouds have a regard for the well-being of living things. It doesn't then follow that the clouds intend for plants and animals to drink and survive. — Michael
I never claimed that intention is essential to foresight, so I do not pretend that anything with foresight necessarily has intention. Unenlightened brought up foresight, and I agree that foresight may be an indication of intention, in the sense that foresight might be an essential aspect of intention, as unenlightened implied. But all this means is that anything with intention, also has foresight. It does not mean that everything with foresight has intention. So if you want to argue that rain, and laptops, provide for the future, and therefore have foresight, this does not necessitate that they have intention.My laptop has foresight. It tells me it will shut down unless I plug in the charger, and then if I don't, it shuts down. — unenlightened
That's right, I totally agree, and we went though this already, the difference between intention imposed from an external designer, and intention of an internal source. This is when Michael asked if I was making an appeal to the supernatural. So long as we maintain strict principles which define intention as inherent, immanent, intention remains as a natural thing, inhering within living beings, and not the property of an external, transcendent, designer of living things.But I suspect the intention lies with the programmer. — unenlightened
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