1. "The knife is the murder weapon" becomes "the banana is the murder weapon" by variable substitution.And that's confirmed what I thought - you don't have a clue what follows from what, or what it takes for one argument to be the same as another. — Bartricks
No, I'm saying that they're exactly the same argument. Which they are. X causes Y, therefore X is Y. It's stupid.
— Bartricks
A knife is a viable murder weapon. Brain functioning is a viable explanation of mind.
A banana is not a viable murder weapon. Alcohol, apparently just being alcohol, is not a viable explanation of mind. — InPitzotl
So educate me.And that's confirmed what I thought - you don't have a clue what follows from what, or what it takes for one argument to be the same as another. — Bartricks
So educate me. — InPitzotl
No, it's not stupid. Yes, it doesn't follow.is stupid, yes? The conclusion doesn't follow. — Bartricks
But you're biased. Any reasonable person would agree with the statements above.Given me an argument in support of the thesis that mental events are brain events (and thus that the mind is the brain) and I'll tell you if it is stupid or not. — Bartricks
No, it's not stupid. Yes, it doesn't follow. — InPitzotl
I don't need you to think for me. Let me answer since you're avoiding it.Like I say, you're beyond my help. — Bartricks
Wrong tool. This isn't about deduction. This is about evidence.Here's what you need to do. Present an argument -a deductively valid argument — Bartricks
I don't need you to think for me. — InPitzotl
You phrase a perfectly valid inductive argument as a deductive argument, and argue that it's stupid on the basis that it doesn't follow. — InPitzotl
Again, you're just nay-saying. The Dunning Kruger effect is a cognitive bias where a person's meta-cognitive awareness of an area is low, and as a result they overestimate their knowledge in the subject.You really do. But as I say at points like this, Dunning and Kruger. Dunning. And. Kruger. — Bartricks
Present an argument -a deductively valid argument - that has 'therefore my mind is my brain' as a conclusion. — Bartricks
Dunning and Kruger. Dunning. And. Kruger. — Bartricks
Perhaps you think that there cannot be causation between different kinds of object, and thus if our brain events cause our mental events this would be evidence that brain and mental events must be events involving the same kind of object. Well, although I think that the claim that there cannot be causation between different kinds of object has nothing to be said for it - it doesn't seem self-evident and how could one ever offer non-question begging evidence in support of it? - even if it is true, it would not entail the conclusion. It would entail, as I have said, that the mental events and the brain events must be events involving the same kind of object. But it would leave open what kind of object that was - that is, it would leave open whether the object in question is material or immaterial. For one could just as well infer from it that the brain is a mental object - that is, that the brain is not physical, but mental - as the opposite. — Bartricks
Again, you're just nay-saying. — InPitzotl
The Dunning Kruger effect is a cognitive bias where a person's meta-cognitive awareness of an area is low, and as a result they overestimate their knowledge in the subject. — InPitzotl
That does not apply here. — InPitzotl
But Bartricks... the mind-is-a-function-of-the-brain argument is inductive. — InPitzotl
Sure. Add a premise near the claim you want to make and presume it. But that exercise is pointless unless you're rationalizing. The point of induction is to try to let the evidence guide you, not to try to derive what you already want to claim.You could turn it into a deductively valid argument if you knew how. — Bartricks
I do not believe there is a single good argument for the proposition that our minds are our brains. — Bartricks
Sorry it took so long to reply; I had to go on the internet and hurriedly look this up:You didn't know that you can turn any inductive argument into a deductively valid one until approx. 5 minutes ago, after you hurriedly looked it up on the internet, yes? — Bartricks
You seem to be a bit confused. I'm not arguing for the mind being material. I'm arguing that you're rationalizing instead of reasoning.Now, once more: what's your argument? Lay it out for all to see, and then I'll take you to the cleaners. — Bartricks
Perhaps you think that there cannot be causation between different kinds of object, — Bartricks
...but as you pointed out, brains are soggy, grey things and mental events are quite different....and thus if our brain events cause our mental events this would be evidence that brain and mental events must be events involving the same kind of object. — Bartricks
Indeed, as you pointed out, and as I agreed.Well, although I think that the claim that there cannot be causation between different kinds of object has nothing to be said for it — Bartricks
Indeed; nor necessary; it's obvious twaddle. The bat moves the ball....it doesn't seem self-evident... — Bartricks
Exactly.and how could one ever offer non-question begging evidence in support of it? — Bartricks
Would it? But what about the bat and the ball? They are different kinds of objects, but one can move the other...even if it is true, it would not entail the conclusion. It would entail, as I have said, that the mental events and the brain events must be events involving the same kind of object. — Bartricks
Ah. Immaterial brains.But it would leave open what kind of object that was - that is, it would leave open whether the object in question is material or immaterial. For one could just as well infer from it that the brain is a mental object - that is, that the brain is not physical, but mental - as the opposite. — Bartricks
You may be hanging out with the wrong people, then.Yet whenever I have asked for evidence that our minds are our brains, the above is all I have been offered. — Bartricks
Sure. But when I decide to move my hand, the damn thing still moves...So, my working hypothesis is that there is no good evidence that our minds are our brains. — Bartricks
Widespread? Goodness, I hadn't noticed.There's just a widespread assumption that our minds are our brains — Bartricks
There is? What, all those ghost stories?By contrast, when it comes to evidence that our minds are immaterial soul there is an abundance of it. — Bartricks
Argument 1:
1. It is self-evident to our reason that it makes no sense to wonder what colour, smell, texture or taste, or sound our minds have.
2. It makes sense to wonder what colour, smell, texture, taste or smell any sensible object has
3. Therefore, it is self-evident to our reason that our minds are not sensible objects — Bartricks
Another (2):
1. It is self-evident to our reason that it makes no sense to wonder what a sensible object thinks like (it makes sense for me to wonder what the olive will taste like, but it makes no sense to wonder what it hopes).
2. If minds were sensible objects, then it would make sense to wonder what a sensible object thinks like.
3. Therefore, our minds are not sensible objects — Bartricks
Another (3):
1. If our reason represents our minds to exist indubitably, but at the same time represents all sensible objects to exist dubitably, then our reason is implying that our minds are not sensible objects
2. Our reason represents our minds to exist indubitably, but at the same time represents all sensible objects to exist dubitably
3. Therefore, our reason implies that our minds are not sensible objects — Bartricks
Another (4):
1. If I am morally responsible, then not everything I do traces to external causes
2. I am morally responsible
3. Therefore, not everything I do traces to external causes
4. If I am a sensible object, then everything I do traces to external causes
5. Therefore, I am not a sensible object — Bartricks
Another (5):
1. If my reason represents me to be intrinsically morally valuable irrespective of any of my sensible properties, then my reason is implying I am not a sensible object
2. My reason represents me to be intrinsically morally valuable irrespective of any of my sensible properties
3. Therefore, my reason is implying that I am not a sensible object — Bartricks
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