Start here, you get epiphenomenalism; start there, you don’t. — Mww
That is the first option: the attempt to makes sense of social constructs (or mental processes) is potentially useful because social constructs (or mental processes) are sometimes reasonable, useful and improvable. — Olivier5
the study of social constructs concludes that social constructs are possible, reasonable, useful and improvable — Olivier5
...you missed the option that some might not be even improvable (ie be irredeemable nonsense). I suppose you could stretch the meaning of 'improvable' to include changing almost every single aspect but... — Isaac
So I don't think you can make the omelette of this particular improvement without breaking some eggs. — Isaac
Good old Romans disagreed, and routinely abandoned their unwanted newborns on trash dumps, as not yet human anyway. I suppose one could argue the case either way. There is no empirical evidence that one should care for babies. It's a social construct. At best a feeling, right?... — Olivier5
You seem to be arguing against your own point here as you clearly consider our modern ideas of the sanctity of life better, that the Roman idea should be discarded. — Isaac
epiphenomenalism is for the epiphenomenal among us, those of us who have no impact on anything whatsoever and are quite happy about their own irrelevance. The theory may logically be true for them, as a self-fulfilling prophecy is: they don't matter because they don't want to. But otherwise, it is logically self-contradictory. — Olivier5
I wouldn't break the egg of my own consciousness for any omelette — Olivier5
Some social constructs may be based on insufficient empirical evidence but it does not make them total nonsense. — Olivier5
There is no evidence we should care for babies though, that much is true. We do it for other reasons than strictly material. And therefore, not all social construct can be evidence-based. Some are a priori stated. — Olivier5
Your "egg of consciousness" is different from most people's because you don't say "the mind is non physical" or anything like that. — khaled
There is no evidence we should care for babies though, that much is true. We do it for other reasons than strictly material. And therefore, not all social construct can be evidence-based. Some are a priori stated.
— Olivier5
And when an a priori assumption clashes with modern findings which should we favor? — khaled
Your "egg of consciousness" is different from most people's because you don't say "the mind is non physical" or anything like that.
— khaled
That is correct. — Olivier5
As for old assumptions that do clash with modern scientific observations, well, they should be discarded I suppose. — Olivier5
The model where the mind is non-physical, yet has top to bottom causation, and also mental events are private — khaled
determinism — Olivier5
Well, it seems to me like I think and wonder in language, if that's any different. I'm never aware of myself thinking and wondering using neurons.
— Luke
No, I don't suppose you would be. I don't suppose you're aware of your kidney's functioning either, but that doesn't mean they don't. — Isaac
Whatever goes on in your brain, you're going to post hoc re-tell the narrative to fit the model you're expecting it to fit, in this case "all my thoughts were words". — Isaac
You think too fast to form full sentences, but we're so embedded in language that the language centres of our brains convert the stuff we think into words as we go assuming we might need to communicate it at any moment. Since the thoughts are too fast, it only has time to select a few key words - hence the incomplete sentences. Your brain (if it has been enculturated to do so) interprets this association as 'thinking in words' and so it suppresses the data with the alternate sequencing because it's not expecting it. You end up with the narrative that you thought in words. — Isaac
I'm not disputing that your use is common. — Isaac
What I was trying to highlight is the (what I believe is unjustified) special pleading with which 'awareness' os used differently with regards to the mind than in all other cases. I don't dispute it's common use, I dispute it's revealing anything useful about the way the mind works. — Isaac
Give me an example answer to the question "how are you conscious of your brain activity?" that you would accept as a satisfactory series of steps. — Isaac
I don't think determinism/indeterminism matters much. — khaled
Way I see it is it is the only way out for a dualist who wants to respect the science — khaled
and still today, more than a hundred years after the double slit experiment. — Olivier5
There is no qualitative difference here. — Olivier5
It ends our hopes of actually determining the future, but it doesn’t end the idea that it is determined. — khaled
With strong emergence, you can’t do that. Which is why I think it’s magical bullshit. — khaled
I don't understand what you mean by "it goes both ways". The mind, like everything else is both a cause and effect. So the state of some mind is both caused by the state of the world, and the mind can be the cause of some state in the world. That is what I said.I agree, but it goes both ways: the state of my mind also determines what I will physically do, like when one decides to do or write something. — Olivier5
The mind, like everything else is both a cause and effect. So the state of some mind is both caused by the state of the world, and the mind can be the cause of some state in the world. That is what I said. — Harry Hindu
What should be done is irrelevant and imaginary. All that matters is what is done, and what is done by humans is ultimately dictated by natural selection. The fact that most mothers do care for their babies is the outcome of natural selection.No scientist is going to prove to you in a lab whether or not you should dump a baby in the trash. It's not a scientific question but a social and moral question. — Olivier5
What should be done is irrelevant and imaginary. — Harry Hindu
I agree with that. — Olivier5
Just like everything else in the world, you know enough about that thing (person), you can understand how they work (think) and predict their behaviors. — Harry Hindu
What if that baby grows up to be the next Hitler or Stalin? — Harry Hindu
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