We have ours and our brother's and sister's loquaciousness whenever we like. Maybe better to be succinct, here, and give our guest the space? — tim wood
I certainly think it would be a shame if people put in the amount of time and effort they have for Prof. Pigliucci only to be disappointed again.
Live and learn, as they say.
In the meantime, thank you to everyone who did put time and effort in. As a member of the peanut-munching crowd, it was appreciated. — Artemis
It is not likely that I will put in similar effort in future.
Indeed, it is an ongoing puzzle why I still participate in any philosophy forum.
So very tiresome...all efforts seem to disappear down a deep, dark hole.
I guess I need another break... — Amity
It is not likely that I will put in similar effort in future. — Amity
So very tiresome...all efforts seem to disappear down a deep, dark hole. — Amity
It is an ongoing puzzle why I still participate in any philosophy forum.
So very tiresome...all efforts seem to disappear down a deep, dark hole. — Amity
What I want to insist on, ceaselessly, is that one can accept the obvious facts of physics – for example, that the world is made up entirely of physical particles in fields of force – without at the same time denying the obvious facts about our own experiences – for example, that we are all conscious and that our conscious states have quite specific irreducible phenomenological properties. — John Searle
C.S. Peirce has suddenly become so influential particularly in biological sciences; because his work on semiotics... — Wayfarer
A recent Aeon publication by Prof. Piggliuci, Consciousness is Real. (I lost interest at mention of Dennett.) — Wayfarer
I think of consciousness as a weakly emergent phenomenon, not dissimilar from, say, the wetness of water (though a lot more complicated). Individual molecules of water have a number of physical-chemical properties, but wetness isn’t one of them. They acquire that property only under specific environmental circumstances (in terms of ambient temperature and pressure) and only when there is a sufficiently large number of them.
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