Take a proposition that is determinative - the instructions for constructing a device or formula or recipe. That means that, no matter how it is represented, the output or result is invariant - otherwise the devise or meal or chemical substance won't turn out correctly. So the information is quite exact - it is deteminative. But the means of representing the information, in terms of which language, which media type, and so on, can vary enormously. — Wayfarer
The argument is that the information and the representation are different. — Wayfarer
Would you agree that if two people put coins in a vending machine, and got out the same snack foor, the outputs would be identical? — Wayfarer
It simply provides a way of managing the debate from a point of view which is understandable by the physical sciences, in the absence of any other agreed normative framework. — Wayfarer
His position is woefully incoherent, but he stubbornly refuses to see it. If someone makes a valid point against his position he evades or changes the subject; — John
Well, I never made any such overt promise. — John
The question you are asking seems to boil down to 'Do we have good reason to believe that there is a real brain, independent of our representations, that is being ( more or less) accurately presented to us via perception?'.
Does that sound about right? — John
but don't provide any arguments; — John
If you don't buy the kinds of ideas which are the fundamental foundation stones of any discussion at all, such as identity across time, — John
It might get back on course. — John
You really need to ask yourself why others respond to you in the ways that they do — John
Doing something for a long time does not, by itself, constitute any guarantee of mastery or even competence. — John
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.