This sort of argument strategy you are using, if it was taken serious by a court or an authority figure could basically make nothing matter in terms of right and wrong. — turkeyMan
Note that I am only trying to demonstrate the problems with precritical thinking about consciousness by showing what such thinking implies.
I don't think my own view implies a nihilism of some sort. Indeed, my view is that all speakers of English (for instance) are profoundly connected just by sharing that language.
The larger idea here is that society is primary, and that man is an especially social animal who is made possible as an interesting individual by his membership in a community.
As far as determinism goes, I don't think a scientific worldview implies philosophical determinism. From what I understand, there is still some controversy on this delicate issue.
Personally I am OK with determinism or its absence.
Even if my actions are all in principle determined, I do not know what I am going to do yet, and I am forced to live with the burden of decision whether or not it is illusory (forgetting for a moment all of the ambiguities here.) — Yellow Horse
That is a fascinating theology that I haven't seen before.
Another view is just that we humans taken together in our environment are God, which would also explain God's justified depression.
People who have held this view liked to think that we (as God) were figuring out how to do better. God (through and as us) would be a work-in-progress, largely through our shared language.
From this perspective, both you and me would be little pieces of God, developing God's self-knowledge through conversations like these.
Personally I'm inclined to think that it's all here in this world.
At the same time, we don't know this world all that well yet. We might not know ourselves that well yet. — Yellow Horse
Well but your OP talks of "consciousness", not "feeling and awareness", so it depends on how these terms are defined. If by "feeling and awareness" you mean only the ability to detect and respond to external stimuli, then the statement is correct but trivial (as the ability to respond to stimuli is part of the biological definition of life, and therefore of necessity common to all forms of life past or present). If you mean "consciousness" in something more like the sense we typically use in the philosophy of mind, then the statement becomes highly problematic. — Enai De A Lukal
Are you familiar with Spinoza he was a jew rejected by the jews. — turkeyMan
That theology i was speaking of is common to some Christians. I am a christian. — turkeyMan
Are you familiar with Spinoza he was a jew rejected by the jews. — turkeyMan
Yes, somewhat, and also with thinkers influenced by Spinoza.
That theology i was speaking of is common to some Christians. I am a christian. — turkeyMan
I was raised Christian. Lots of the thinkers I have read have tried to transform Christianity into something new (more compatible with science and critical thinking, basically.)
This can be charitably described as taking the incarnation more seriously than more traditional Christians take it. (In other words, God is really and only down here with us -- as us.)
I am not trying to proselytize, and the philosophers who think this way will also emphasize that it's metaphorical or symbolic (perhaps also emphasizing that human cognition is largely metaphorical and symbolic.) — Yellow Horse
Are there any flaws in the logic of this quote?
Are you open to Pan-psychism? — turkeyMan
Are there any flaws in the logic of this quote?
Are you open to Pan-psychism? — turkeyMan
I answered the first question. Which question is the poll for?
The quote extends the irreducible complexity argument. One could take it as meaning that any sensitivity to environment (such as in bacteria and elementary particles) is consciousness, but from the name pan-psychism (is this a religion? A lot of people bang on about it here) that is clearly not the kind of consciousness meant. Therefore one has to conclude that the argument is that a conscious multi-celled organism cannot be the distance descendent of a non-conscious single-celled organism, which is patently false. — Kenosha Kid
Does dna cause feeling/awareness? How complex does dna have to be to have feeling/awareness? — turkeyMan
If you and i don't 100% understand the math and lab results behind the scientific theory, right/wrong/or indifferent you and i are putting our faith in scientists. — turkeyMan
Once again you and are making assumption about viruses and bacteria that react in a similar way to stimuli which is similar to robots. — turkeyMan
Yet we are conscious, and rocks are not. If your point is that both emergentism and panpsychism assume some sort of hierarchy, which we might be able to do without, then we agree. — Banno
Does dna cause feeling/awareness? How complex does dna have to be to have feeling/awareness? — turkeyMan
This equates "causing awareness" with "having awareness", which is not valid.
If you and i don't 100% understand the math and lab results behind the scientific theory, right/wrong/or indifferent you and i are putting our faith in scientists. — turkeyMan
That is a choice, not a condition. Everyone is free to understand the maths and results.
Once again you and are making assumption about viruses and bacteria that react in a similar way to stimuli which is similar to robots. — turkeyMan
The major differences are a) bacteria are biological, and b) robots have function. Bacteria can have uses, but they have no function. A better comparison would be between bacteria and non-living organic chemicals, since both are at least organic and neither have function, even if they have uses.
Pan-psychism is the assumption that all things have or are part of a consciousness. A valid argument to support that assumption cannot be: well, that's just an assumption. — Kenosha Kid
Does dna cause feeling/awareness? How complex does dna have to be to have feeling/awareness? — turkeyMan
This equates "causing awareness" with "having awareness", which is not valid.
If you and i don't 100% understand the math and lab results behind the scientific theory, right/wrong/or indifferent you and i are putting our faith in scientists. — turkeyMan
That is a choice, not a condition. Everyone is free to understand the maths and results.
Once again you and are making assumption about viruses and bacteria that react in a similar way to stimuli which is similar to robots. — turkeyMan
The major differences are a) bacteria are biological, and b) robots have function. Bacteria can have uses, but they have no function. A better comparison would be between bacteria and non-living organic chemicals, since both are at least organic and neither have function, even if they have uses.
Pan-psychism is the assumption that all things have or are part of a consciousness. A valid argument to support that assumption cannot be: well, that's just an assumption. — Kenosha Kid
I mean, just replace "consciousness" in the quote with something else- say, flight, or sight. Is it true that flight or sight were present "at the very origin of things"? Of course not, the earliest organisms could not see nor fly. — Enai De A Lukal
Yes, really, and these things being related (as they obviously are) isn't the same thing as them being synonymous and interchangeable, such that you can swap them out as needed to help your argument. So again, if you are only talking about e.g. the ability to respond to external stimuli, then the proposition is true but trivial/tautologous, but if you are talking about consciousness in a more robust sense, something like the sense we mean in the philosophy of mind, then there's absolutely no reason to think it must have existed "in some shape since the very origin of things" and that it did not emerge at some point like other traits that are lacking in earlier life-forms. — Enai De A Lukal
You know, I read that twice and still have no idea what your point is. — Banno
Beyond that, there is no point of view that persists for things to emerge. Rather, it is some form of simples (e.g. strings, quarks, leptons, etc.) arranging themselves in various ways. — schopenhauer1
When things arise, they are arising into something. When experience arises, "where" is it arising? — schopenhauer1
It's a process we can say, but that is just linguistic equivocating. Making something a process doesn't banish the phenomenon to just "another phenomenon" like the formation of sand dunes. — schopenhauer1
This process is the context for all other phenomenon to arise in the first place. — schopenhauer1
Emergence needs to take place with an observer. Otherwise it is just simples doing what they do... — schopenhauer1
Emergentism is the thesis that things doing what they do produces an observer. — Banno
Actually, it's quite sensational... — Banno
Putting aside your own "incredulous stare" at the mere idea:The argument here is that panpsychism does not help. — Banno
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