Please enlighten us!! Oh wait, you're just trolling again. LOL — 3017amen
Challenge: Paradox and uncertainty are not the same thing. What is an example of a paradox in nature? (Noun, not adjective.)Natural is what exists and either is or gives rise to our experiences.
— substantivalism
Which is full of paradox and uncertainty, and are provably incomplete and inconsistent (Godel). And so how does your natural experiences help you in your argument? — 3017amen
That explanation doesn't seem to square with the laws of nature themselves, nor does it square with the existence of a conscious being known from history as Jesus. — 3017amen
For instance, we've already agreed that the laws of nature are paradoxical, contradictory and incomplete. And we also know that the nature of consciousness is outside the parameters of formal logic, thus also paradoxical, contradictory and incomplete (unconsciousness, consciousness and subconsciousness all working together). — 3017amen
And so either Platonism, mathematics, or something that transcends the natural laws of existence must be considered. — 3017amen
Otherwise, we are back to simple wonderment, and the physicists questions that help him discover things from asking: 'all events must have a cause' as a means to his end. Accordingly, you said that a similar sense of wonderment is in itself, from consciousness, and thus is mysteriously unknown. — 3017amen
So why and how did we get here? Everything seems mysterious or unknown(?). And from what you are telling me, all we have are metaphysical abstracts and ideas (mathematics) which in turn are incomplete and paradoxical. — 3017amen
It's pretty much as conventional as our consciousness would allow. The model would consist of the historical account of Jesus, the mystery of Love and consciousness, and inductive reasoning (the religious experience) to say the least. Most of which includes metaphysics and phenomenology. And of course all of which exists/existed. — 3017amen
Okay, you don't know some features or attributes from your own conscious existence. Is self-awareness something that just is? What about Love and other sentient/metaphysical attributes from consciousness, how do they confer any biological advantages? — 3017amen
There seems to be a lot that you don't know that is seemingly natural. — 3017amen
Paradox and uncertainty are not the same thing. What is an example of a paradox in nature? (Noun, not adjective.) — tim wood
And nothing natural about Godel's undecidability proof. He described systems that meet certain criteria and proved that within that (those) systems it is possible to create a proposition, often called G, that from within the system neither it nor its negation are provable, thus undecidable from within the system. This is, however, far from being undecidable, and indeed G is easily decided, from outside - it's true. — tim wood
Godel's ideas, then, or those that make it to public awareness, are for the ignorant, apparently yourself, a kind of snake oil/voodoo in the same sense that many other difficult ideas are for people who cannot or will not understand them but like to ignorantly use them to attempt to prove nonsense.
So, no. I am not trolling, but rather calling out the ignorant troll, you! Lol. — tim wood
Time. Do your homework Timmy!! LOL — 3017amen
I'd also preface that you do not seem to note the difference between that which is merely undecidable and that which is paradoxical with both being rather distinguished ideas. — substantivalism
What laws of nature? You mean the regularities or patterns in our experience because if that is what we value to navigate our experiences then contradictions explicitly would put a wrench in doing anything if we didn't pay attention to what predictably occurs or is. — substantivalism
The model would be contradictory or incomplete but to say consciousness is paradoxical or doesn't abide by formal laws of logic would be childishly over the top nearly violating the explicit wall there is between our experiences and the nature of what gives rise to them. — substantivalism
What have I been saying this whole time? That our experiences are the only data we can use and speculate about the experience of the unexperienced (skeptical scenarios) will result in arbitrariness. Only that which informs us of what may happen next or what happens in the case of this collection of experiences or questions about or within our abstract models themselves are all that seems to matter here — substantivalism
It seems that way but we're (especially you) asking meta-questions about our system and we can only remain within this system to ask questions with the system — substantivalism
Why you would add anything as such is up to you and your arbitrary/restricted preferences. — substantivalism
It's right now (however we've defined it to be) and if I didn't give rise to them then what isn't me did. — substantivalism
Only what I experience as all that gives rise to our experiences or is those experiences I consider natural. — substantivalism
You could read too! I said noun, not adjective. Agreed there is much that seems paradoxical in nature. But the question was to provide an example from nature of a paradox. You misread - happens to all of us. 3017, however, long ago wore out any presumption of innocence. — tim wood
I'd also preface that you do not seem to note the difference between that which is merely undecidable and that which is paradoxical with both being rather distinguished ideas. — substantivalism
Mathematics. You know, mathematical abstracts, Platonism, etc.. — 3017amen
Great. we agree! Logic can't help us!!! Does that mean super-natural is an alternative? — 3017amen
Sounds like existential angst of some sort. No exceptions taken. — 3017amen
In other words, you don't know the nature of your own existence. I gotcha. — 3017amen
Is that another form of a subjective truth or objective truth? — 3017amen
Okay? — 3017amen
But if what is natural is an experience that is unknown, how do you know that experiences are real? — 3017amen
Oh, well let's also then add to Gödel, Heisenberg (uncertainty principle). LOL — 3017amen
Non-sequitor, fool. No one asked you about time. — tim wood
Challenge: Paradox and uncertainty are not the same thing. What is an example of a paradox in nature? (Noun, not adjective.) — tim wood
Yes, descriptions of our reality and further arbitrary abstractions to model its behvaior. — substantivalism
In all cases IF a true paradox exists in one that may not mean that it exists in another. — substantivalism
In all cases IF a true paradox exists in one that may not mean that it exists in another. — substantivalism
Ahem, are we on repeat now? — substantivalism
state it and believe what i've stated so it's objective. . . what would make it subjective? — substantivalism
Experiences are what they are. . . recall the mirage of palm trees out in the distance with a pool of water. Whether or not our abstract models makes such an experience consistent with previous ones and the meanings of the words involved the experience of said mirage is as real as you'll get. What gives rise to experiences is truly unknown but the experiences themselves and the relationships they have to each other are not. It's just as real to experience an imaginary friend as your actual friend but while they are just as "real" it would be a rather large lapse in judgement to designate them as the same experiences simpliciter. — substantivalism
But mathematics is an objective truth. I don't understand how they can be arbitrary? Please explain!! — 3017amen
Does that mean consciousness may be explained in one person's mind, but not in another person's mind? — 3017amen
Well, not sure what your argument is then, or do you have one? — 3017amen
Yourself perceiving it's objectiveness. — 3017amen
Ok, great! — 3017amen
All right. Assuming that time is in nature, how is it a paradox? — tim wood
Might as well, it's all you seem to want or understand: Fuck you, 3017. — tim wood
It's arbitrary what axioms you accept and the conclusions you draw given a previous system within which to do so. — substantivalism
I was talking generally about the categories of our experiences, the nature of them, and the abstractions covering them in which perhaps a contradiction does reveal itself to one but not to all nor pervades an entire category. Though, it isn't too far a stretch to say that other conscious experiences could be so distinct to the point that even the logical structure of them was different (different axioms are accepted). — substantivalism
Okay. — substantivalism
Back when I wasn't alive and William Lane Craig didn't seem as much of a dunce. — substantivalism
But math itself is an objective truth, just like Platonism and abstract ideas. How does that square your circle? — 3017amen
But those logical structures seem illogical once axioms are applied to them. — 3017amen
Great God exists then. Or did I get that wrong? — 3017amen
Are you reincarnated? — 3017amen
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