I'm guessing you're not a realist. Is an object of the senses different to an object in the world? — Andrew M
The logic of our experience, common sense, says such unknown facts must exist, but how can it be intelligible to say that they exist if there is no mind or consciousness for which they exist? — John
I agree with that too, but it conceals more than it reveals, especially in the way it is used by Ryle and Dennett. In effect, the ghost is declared unreal, and all that is left is the machine. — Wayfarer
But you seem to accept that it is possible, in principle, to create a sentient machine — AndewM
Would there be some immaterial substance or properties in addition to the matter [the machine] is composed of? — AndrewM
I'm asking for precision here. If you're referring to future laws of physics, then you should say so. If you are referring to them, how can you know what will be in them? — mcdoodle
Well, panpyschic material is not more nor less undiscovered than your 'unification of quantum mechanics and general relativity'. They're both speculations. — mcdoodle
This is the particular area I'm reading about at the moment in fact - those sciences where a mixture of mental and physical terms are accepted in scientific discourse, like the study of placebo effects — mcdoodle
This 'position' of mine really is not either idealist or realist in the commonly understood sense, because I do not posit either mind or matter as constitutive. — John
The other way to go is to say that it is a fact now that dinosaurs existed back then, but it could not have been a fact then, because there were no minds back then that it could have been a fact for. But then it would seem to be unintelligible to say that dinosaurs existed back then, because if they existed it must have also been a fact that they existed. — John
That is nothing more than an expression of ignorance. Yeh sure, the Standard Model and fairy-theory are intellectually equivalent. — tom
Or would our mental terms be abstractions over the matter it is composed of? — Andrew M
So, for you there are no unknown facts about the universe that are yet to be discovered? Such as for example, whether some particular distant galaxy has a black hole at its center or is some very precise number of light-years across, or contains exactly so many stars? — John
Anyway, my working definition of mind is 'that which cognises differences'. — Wayfarer
I hope I can butt in to ask, one puzzle for me in this area is why some terms are deemed 'mental' and some 'physical' and where the border falls. For instance, a description of a chemical compound, while arguably an abstraction over more primitive physical terms, is deemed physical, but words like 'thought' are deemed mental. I presume the one is vertically constitutive of and the other is just supervenient on the physical, but I'm not clear. To describe someone's character I might call them 'hot-blooded' or 'cold-hearted' but these are understood to be mental descriptions. — mcdoodle
I'm interested for instance in the practising medical scientist's use of terms. In dealing with pain in a phantom limb, for instance, the patient's belief seems central, and we have no idea what the physical equivalent of their belief in their limb is. So the working scientist has to engage in methodological dualism. And yet a different, theoretical scientist argues that this 'belief' is non-primary, even though they can offer no empirical model of explanation. — mcdoodle
What I'm trying to suggest is an alternative to the idea that it is either the mind or body that does things. It is instead human beings that do things. — AndrewM
So, what was the fact prior to its discovery? — John
If the territory is utterly a-conceptual then how could our conceptual judgements bear any relation to it whatsoever? — John
It was Wittgenstein who said "the world is the totality of facts, not of things". I take that to mean the world is the totality of states of affairs, not the totality of epistemic facts. The totality of states of affairs constitutes the total nexus of relations between things, and things themselves are also, unless they be some kind of posited, but really incomprehensible, atomic simple, further complexes of relations. Relations are not physical, but rather conceptual, which leads to the conclusion that the world must be, at bottom, not merely brute non-conceptual entities, if the idea of such entities even makes any actual sense, but also the conceptual relations between them. — John
So we have abstractions of matter. But the abstractions are not something separate from, or additional to, the matter. They are ways of looking at matter. However it still requires a cognitive process to actually look at and conceptualize matter in that way. — Andrew M
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.