What does being a mother have to do with this? — whollyrolling
Claiming someone is "blabbing" is not contributing to the conversation, it's just ad hominem nonsense intended to discredit what is misunderstood. — whollyrolling
But it is interesting, to many others, because philosophy is little more than neuroscience but without the science or the tools. — YuZhonglu
Technically you're not responding to what I wrote. You're actually responding to a memory of what you believe I wrote. — YuZhonglu
But it is interesting, to many others, because philosophy is little more than neuroscience but without the science or the tools. — YuZhonglu
You didn't seem very interested when I gave you my definition of "horse" and validly drew a few logical consequences.
You're doing the same thing with "fact". — S
n order to respond, your brain had to interpret and remember the visual input coming in from your retina. Then, based on this interpretation, neurons in the brain send signals back to the muscles in your fingers to respond. In other words, as you typed this, sections of your brain are responding to input and stimuli from OTHER sections of your brain.
The same applies to me, too, of course. — YuZhonglu
In order to respond, your brain had to interpret and remember the visual input coming in from your retina. Then, based on this interpretation, neurons in the brain send signals back to the muscles in your fingers to respond. In other words, as you typed this, sections of your brain are responding to input and stimuli from OTHER sections of your brain.
The same applies to me, too, of course. — YuZhonglu
It means every so-called "fact" that any human has ever learned or thought about is the product of neuronal activity. If there are no brains, then there will also be no "facts."
If humans disappeared, the Earth might still revolve around the Sun. But there would be no "facts" regarding this phenomenon. "Facts," as people understand them, do not exist independent of the mind that created it.
EDIT: This has significance because when two people look at the Sun, they're not seeing the same "Sun." Similarly, when two people react to a post, they're not reacting to the "same" post. — YuZhonglu
Then they would have their "facts," but these "facts" would not be comprehensible to us. When I talk about "facts" I mean "human facts." — YuZhonglu
Being a mother isn't some qualifier for higher knowledge, that's absurd. — whollyrolling
Blabbing" implies incoherence or idleness or superfluity or that what a person is saying doesn't qualify as worthwhile. Your lack of understanding doesn't qualify or disqualify my commentary. — whollyrolling
All basic primary instincts are a function of biology and can be modified once people finally begin to understand how the brain works. Just because something is "basic" doesn't mean it can't be changed. — YuZhonglu
That "all sane parents" and "some non-parents" are privy to certain pieces of knowledge solely by virtue of parentage not only contradicts what you said earlier about instinct, as opposed to knowledge, but is also just baseless opinion. — whollyrolling
So what? Describing in detail how I responded to what you wrote doesn't do anything, logically. — S
It means every so-called "fact" that any human has ever learned or thought about is the product of neuronal activity. If there are no brains, then there will also be no "facts."
If humans disappeared, the Earth might still revolve around the Sun. But there would be no "facts" regarding this phenomenon. — YuZhonglu
Parental nurturing instincts are a good thing... today. But people may not think so in the future. Desirability is the product of biology and biology can be changed. — YuZhonglu
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