In other words some paradoxes are unsolvable through logic. — TheMadFool
Give up logic, its laws, and paradoxes vanish. — TheMadFool
But perhaps all this abstract talk would be more fruitful if you gave a specific example of a paradox you think has some merit despite it's apparent logical incongruity. — NKBJ
sldSo, if you can't question the "status quo" even in principle, how are you questioning the status quo? — Πετροκότσυφας
What's sld? — Πετροκότσυφας
How? What's the question? Can the heart, liver, whatever think? No, it can't. — Πετροκότσυφας
I know ''current'' scientific knowledge has no room for my theory but science is a work in progress right? — TheMadFool
What's the theory? What's something that points to it and against our current understanding? — Πετροκότσυφας
Yes, that's right. Same neuron-state, different thoughts. Therefore neuron-state does not equal thought. — Cuthbert
I'm not so sure that the "establishment" shares my anti-mereological stance and not the mereological one you seem to espouse. It's pretty common to read about the brain (or other parts of you) doing all kinds of stuff. Something relevant (if you need help to read the paper, pm me). — Πετροκότσυφας
There must be some value in nonsense. It shocks the brain into exploring different dimensions. — TheMadFool
You seem to be avoiding defending your original claim: that the heart, or non-logical part of the mind, could "understand" something about paradoxes. You haven't yet explained an example of that. — NKBJ
So, you see, even iur rational side must accept some paradoxes let alone our nonlogical side. — TheMadFool
Brain B in Human B. Brain B is in exact same state S in 1967 - every neuron, every chemical reaction identical Brain B in Human B. Brain B is in exact same state S in 1967 - every neuron, every chemical reaction identical. Human B is not wondering where his phone charger is. — Cuthbert
Can the heart think? — TheMadFool
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