Creation ex nihilo means a creation out of nothing or from nothing. This is absurd.
Existence making something, namely that which is beyond itself (objectivity) is absolutely impossible for such a subjectivity could not even have the representation of an objectivity, much less be affected with the will to create it. — Blue Lux
Existence is not a subject. It doesn't seem to me that it is. — Blue Lux
Existence making something, namely that which is beyond itself (objectivity) is absolutely impossible for such a subjectivity could not even have the representation of an objectivity, — Blue Lux
There is a facticity of human existence. Existence does not mean anthropomorphic existence. It is the existence of being, which is clearly not limited to what is human or 'consciousness.' The essence of consciousness is existence and it is in a sense capable of being anything it is (of). We cannot do any possible thing because of our facticity. But existence, that is, the existence of everything can do any possible thing, but only if it can. For is it not true that what can happen will happen? — Blue Lux
So, realities independent of matter are realities that can act without depending on any material object. — Dfpolis
You are claiming that there are realities which are independent of matter here. — Metaphysician Undercover
Classically these realities would be understood as independent Forms. — Metaphysician Undercover
So what type of existence are you giving to these "realities which can act without depending on any material object? — Metaphysician Undercover
If it ever ceased to be in the vase, it would cease to be the form of the vase. — Dfpolis
This is not true though. It is how we have conceptions, blue prints, plans, these are forms of things which are not in the material thing which they are the form of. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the "form of the vase", without the accidents of the material vase, exists independently of the material vase. — Metaphysician Undercover
Something immaterial can be completely inseparable from matter... — Dfpolis
You keep insisting on this, and I've asked you to justify this assertion, which you have not. — Metaphysician Undercover
If something is completely inseparable from something else, then it cannot be identified as a distinct thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
If B is material, then by the law of non-contradiction, it is impossible that A is immaterial because this would indicate that the same thing is both material and immaterial. — Metaphysician Undercover
In order to provide that the immaterial is united with the material, you must allow that they are separable, and identifiable as distinct and separable parts, to avoid violation of the law of non-contradiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
it can exist apart from matter, it is called "spiritual." — Dfpolis
Should I assume that for you, immaterial realities which are independent of matter, are "spirits" then? How is a spirit not a form? Why do you assume that a spirit, which is immaterial, can exist independently of matter, but a form, which is immaterial cannot exist independently of matter Do you think that a form is a type of spirit, or that a spirit is a type of form, since you class them both as immaterial? — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't see how a process could possibly have a determinate end. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't remember your logical propagator approach, could you describe it again for me please. — Metaphysician Undercover
But order without any indication of an end ought not be mistook for a sign of intentionality — Metaphysician Undercover
Right, but the point is that to produce a separation in the mind, which is impossible to produce in reality, is to produce a piece of fiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
Activity (and change) is a characteristic of particulars, not universals. The number of atoms is simply a function of the water molecule itself, independent of human ideas about it. It is not merely potential information, it is actual information, even if the agent doesn't count the atoms or have a concept of numbers at all. — Andrew M
Our discussion reminds me of a past thread entitled Is information physical. I'm curious whether or not you would agree that information is physical, in Rolf Landauer's sense. — Andrew M
I am questioning whether information, generally speaking, is physical. I do have an argument as to why it not be considered physical, but I have found there is an influential point of view, from a researcher by the name of Rolf Landauer, that information is physical. The reason he says that, is basically because:
whenever we find information, we find it inscribed or encoded somehow in a physical medium of whatever kind. — Wayfarer
I told you, a work of music, or art. It must be a sign because it has meaning, as is evident from the emotions which it arouses. — Metaphysician Undercover
Emotions are not meanings in the intellectual sense... — Dfpolis
I am not the type to just regurgitate or resort to dogma. — Blue Lux
consciousness is a type of being, but is separate from just any type of being, like that of the phone I am typing on. There is a difference between the being that has being as a question and the being that being would question. — Blue Lux
It seems the two are tied together intrinsically, but this connection or entanglement is not transparent. — Blue Lux
Philosophical thought up until now, I think, takes for granted the conclusions made by Descartes about the subject, and furthermore about objectivity. — Blue Lux
There is this contention that consciousness is a subject and the world is outside of consciousness as object. This seems obvious. — Blue Lux
Kant has shown this is illusory. Being is not a predicate: being is the foundation of such a statement and is not a quality that one can have or lack — Blue Lux
Consciousness is what it is conscious of; however, it always escapes itself. — Blue Lux
Consciousness is not a thing. — Blue Lux
How is there something finite and singular that one can be aware of instead of simply everything? — Blue Lux
"Nothing is finite without an infinite reference point." This infinite reference point is consciousness. — Blue Lux
Consciousness is 'founded' upon nothingness, and only upon this foundation can anything be. This is why we ask the question of why anything exists when it doesn't seem to have to exist, because consciousness, this transphenomenal being of 'the subject', is not unless it is (of) something it is not. — Blue Lux
This is why Husserl's Intentionality is so significant. — Blue Lux
Consciousness is 'founded' upon nothingness, and only upon this foundation can anything be. — Blue Lux
Knowledge of something is inevitably infinite. — Blue Lux
One can not absolutely know an object so to be that object. This is why the primacy of knowledge is an illusion. — Blue Lux
This is not to say that we do not know anything, but that we know the Nothingness that is the foundation of our being so to have a conception of what we are not — Blue Lux
So what are we if there is no absolute subject? — Blue Lux
In knowing thyself or knowing anything it seems that an ascertaining of infinity is essential. — Blue Lux
The appearance of something does not hide the reality of that thing. It shows the series of its appearances: it is in itself an infinite series of appearances, contained finitely within an appearance. One can ascertain something, and thus apprehend its essence, which is its existence. The essence of existence is existence. — Blue Lux
the active and the passive is fundamentally athropomorphic — Blue Lux
Our being is not something active or passive, the result of something or its own cause. It is uncreated — Blue Lux
Which is precisely what Descartes wished to do... Found being upon the primacy of knowledge. — Blue Lux
For is it not true that what can happen will happen? — Blue Lux
Emotions are not meanings in the intellectual sense... — Dfpolis
No, they aren't. But when humans encounter or consider meanings which they find to be significant, they become emotionally attached to them. So the presence of these emotions is evidence that the humans involved have recognised meaning. OK? — Pattern-chaser
Of the ones I enumerated, I would only call Platonic Ideas "independent forms," and, as you know, I have no reason to think Platonic Ideas exist. — Dfpolis
So, again, while related, the form embodied in the blueprint is different from the form of any actual vase.
So, there is no single entity, no reified form, that passes from plan to physical vase to concept. — Dfpolis
In the same way, the "form" in a plan is not the same as the form of a real vase, but, as food contributes to health, the plan contributes to the making of a vase. In the same way, the "form" in the concept is not the same as the form in the vase, but it is a sign of the form of the vase. Thus, we are not dealing with one form moving from plan to implementation to cognition, but with three, dynamically related, analogically predicated, kinds of form — Dfpolis
All I can do is ask you to put aside your commitment to Platonism and consider the facts of the matter without preconception. If you cannot do that, we had best agree to disagree. — Dfpolis
They need to be logically distinct. They need not be separable in reality. — Dfpolis
I said a determinate end at any point in time. — Dfpolis
No, fictions are statements that do not reflect reality. — Dfpolis
gave it in my second post on this thread (the third post on page 1). "Logical Propagators" is printed in bold at the beginning of the section. — Dfpolis
Of the ones I enumerated, I would only call Platonic Ideas "independent forms," and, as you know, I have no reason to think Platonic Ideas exist. — Dfpolis
OK, so you do not believe that immaterial things exist. — Metaphysician Undercover
How can we know that there is a being of anything other than consciousness, for is that not the 'method' by which anything supposedly 'other' materializes at all? — Blue Lux
I think it is true that consciousness is consciousness only (of) something it is not — Blue Lux
I am questioning whether information, generally speaking, is physical. I do have an argument as to why it not be considered physical, but I have found there is an influential point of view, from a researcher by the name of Rolf Landauer, that information is physical. The reason he says that, is basically because:
"whenever we find information, we find it inscribed or encoded somehow in a physical medium of whatever kind."
— Wayfarer
This seems to me to be confusing intelligibility with actual information. I follow Claude Shannon in defining information to be the reduction of possibility, and clarify by saying "logical possibility." Before we receive a bit in a message, the bit has been encoded and so in the real order it is actually a 1 or a 0, but to us, who have not yet received it, it is logically possible for it to be either. So, the kind of possibility that information reduces is logical, not physical. — Dfpolis
But Shannon's definition of 'information' was wholly and solely concerned with what is required to encode and transmit information. — Wayfarer
the term itself is polysemic, i.e. its meaning varies, depending on the context and intention. — Wayfarer
the fact that biological systems encode and transmit information has also been used by intelligent design advocates as an argument for an originating intelligenc — Wayfarer
the fact that biological systems encode and transmit information has also been used by intelligent design advocates as an argument for an originating intelligence — Wayfarer
The argument revolves around the idea that the same information can be represented in a variety of ways. — Wayfarer
the faculty which does this, is not itself physical - in fact, it seems closely related to Aristotle's intuition of the 'active intellect'. — Wayfarer
So as that is not a physical capability, then it suggests a form of dualism, which is close in some respects to hylomorphic (matter-form) dualism. — Wayfarer
mine is a novel metaphysical argument, although I would be happy to be proven wrong in this regard. — Wayfarer
When Landauer said ""whenever we find information, we find it inscribed or encoded somehow in a physical medium of whatever kind," was he using "information" in a different sense? I do not see that he was. — Dfpolis
naturalists are certainly wrong in saying that evolution shows that nature is mindlessly random or that order can emerge from ontologically random processes. — Dfpolis
the logical independence of intellectual (intentional) and physical operations does not justify substance dualism a la Descartes. There is no reason a unified human person cannot act both intentionally and physically. — Dfpolis
There is no reason a unified human person cannot act both intentionally and physically. — Dfpolis
The example I gave in the OP was that of the transmission of a single item of information across different kinds of media - semaphore, morse code, and written text. — Wayfarer
This 'extra ingredient' is itself reason, which is not explained by science, but which science relies on. It is nowadays almost universally assumed that science understands the origin of reason in evolutionary terms but in my view, this trivialises reason by reducing it to biology — Wayfarer
Again he is using 'information' in terms specific to 'information science' whereas I'm considering it in a broader and more philosophical sense and in relation to the metaphysics of meaning rather than information science as such. — Wayfarer
This 'extra ingredient' is itself reason, which is not explained by science, but which science relies on. It is nowadays almost universally assumed that science understands the origin of reason in evolutionary terms but in my view, this trivialises reason by reducing it to biology ... — Wayfarer
my view is that mind/body or mental/physical is a real duality so I'm a lot nearer to dualism than the alternatives. — Wayfarer
But that is still a dualistic way of expressing it. — apokrisis
The scientific question is how to actually model that functional unity — apokrisis
I say this has been answered in the life sciences by biosemiotics. Howard Pattee's epistemic cut and Stan Salthe's infodynamics are formal models of how information can constrain material dissipation or instability. — apokrisis
these are just different ways of spelling out some word. — apokrisis
So the analysis has to wind up back at the question of how human speech functions as a constraint on conceptual uncertainty. — apokrisis
...So "information" in the widest sense is about both the interpretation and the marks together — apokrisis
So given that any semantics depends on material marks - meaningfulness couldn't exist except to the degree that possible interpretations are actually limited by something "solid" — apokrisis
As physical marks, that can be intentionally expressed, how do they constrain states of conception to make them just about "some single item"? — apokrisis
Biology ain't trivial. It is amazing complexity. — apokrisis
But anyway, reason is explained by the evolution of grammar. — apokrisis
Animals can abstract or generalise — apokrisis
So psychological science can explain the evolution of reason. — apokrisis
Eventually that mechanical or reductionist narrative form became completely expressed itself as the new habits of maths and logic. — apokrisis
reason is explained by the evolution of grammar. The habit of making statements with a causal organisation - a subject/verb/object structure - imposes logical constraint on the forming of states of conception. — apokrisis
Biology ain't trivial. It is amazing complexity. — apokrisis
Dennett's natural history does not deny reason, it animalizes reason. It portrays reason in service to natural selection, and as a product of natural selection. But if reason is a product of natural selection, then how much confidence can we have in a rational argument for natural selection? The power of reason is owed to the independence of reason, and to nothing else. (In this respect, rationalism is closer to mysticism than it is to materialism.) Evolutionary biology cannot invoke the power of reason even as it destroys it.
it is confused to talk about a "single item of information" being transmitted in different mediums. — apokrisis
Yes, and inescapably so, because we have two orthogonal (non-overlapping) concepts. — Dfpolis
But intellect and will do far more than "constrain material dissipation or instability." They have the power to actualize intelligibility and to make one of a number of equally possible alternatives actual while reducing the others to impossibility. — Dfpolis
This is just backwards. Thought is temporally and logically prior to its linguistic expression. If this were not so, we would never have the experience of knowing what we mean, but not finding the right words to express it — Dfpolis
If we only thought in terms of existing language, we would never need to coin new words. — Dfpolis
And where does thought not expressed in marks or sounds fit into your theory? I have just shown its priority, but it finds no place in your model. — Dfpolis
Animals and neural nets can generalize by association. Forming associations is not abstracting. Generalization is a kind of unconscious induction — Dfpolis
As always, the devil is in the details. As a moderate realist, I agree that there is a foundation in reality for the concepts of <human intentional acts> and <human physical acts>. So, they indicate really different aspects of the person. Still, these are aspects of a single person, of a single substance. — Dfpolis
But what does orthogonality itself mean? They are two non-overlapping directions branching from some common origin. — apokrisis
So that is the secret here. If we track back from both directions - the informational and the material - we arrive at their fundamental hinge point. — apokrisis
This is what physics is doing in its fundamental Planck-scale way. It is showing the hinge point at which informational constraint and material uncertainty begin their division. — apokrisis
We can measure information and entropy as two sides of the one coin — apokrisis
biophysics is now doing the same thing for life and mind. — apokrisis
Finding the scale at which information and entropy are freely inter-convertible — apokrisis
That lack of a physicalist explanation has been the source of the mind/body dilemma. — apokrisis
What is constraint except the actualising of some concrete possibility via the suppression of all other alternatives? — apokrisis
So intellect and will are just names that you give to the basic principle of informational or semiotic constraint — apokrisis
fully articulated thoughts take time to form. — apokrisis
Then - like all motor acts — apokrisis
when thinking in the privacy of our own heads, we don't actually need to speak out loud. — apokrisis
The inner voice may mumble — apokrisis
So you want to make this a case of either/or. Either thought leads to speech or speech leads to thought. — apokrisis
Homo sapiens is all about the evolution of a new grammatical semiotic habit. — apokrisis
Making up new rules or rule extensions can be part of that game. — apokrisis
In your dreams you have — apokrisis
Get it right. Generalisation is the induction from the particular to the general. For an associative network to achieve that, it has to develop a hierarchical structure. — apokrisis
Isn't it the case that many physical acts are intentional? — Metaphysician Undercover
And, aren't all intentional acts physical because we cannot conceive of non-physical activity? — Metaphysician Undercover
How could an act be non-physical? — Metaphysician Undercover
Don't you find this distinction to be very impractical? — Metaphysician Undercover
As I have said many times, 'the law of the excluded middle' didn't come into existence with h. sapiens. — Wayfarer
The reason is, that viewing reason as an outcome of biology reduces it to a function of survival - which is the only criterion that "makes sense" from a biologists perspective. — Wayfarer
What I mean is, the same proposition, idea, formula, or whatever, can be represented in different symbolic systems, and in different media - digital, analog or even semaphore. I can't see anything confused about that. — Wayfarer
What I'm arguing is that while in each case the representation is physical, the capacity to understand and interpret the meaning of those signs can't be understood in physical terms. What is doing that, what has that capacity, is not itself physical. — Wayfarer
If science can see matter and information as two faces of the same physics, then why can't it understand even interpretation as a physical act? — apokrisis
If you do share the view that individuation is always contextual - the big theme of Buddhist metaphysics? - then you would likely be keener to stress the socially constructed aspect of the LEM, not its Platonic reality. — apokrisis
So my approach is based on accepting that we are only ever going to be modelling - whether talking about matter or mind. — apokrisis
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