However, I do appreciate this quote - very much - and would like to know more about it - source ? — Amity
The Aeon chucklehead article by Nakul Krishna, edited by Nigel Warburton — Amity
Ah, the internet. In less than a minute I can learn not only something new - that at first sounds like a disturbing effluvium from orifices to remain unnamed - but also what it is where it comes from and from Youtube videos how to make it - no effluvent orifices required. — tim wood
I can't well take my mind out of my brain and confirm that it has no mass. — Manuel
It's Sellars distinction. I think it's a good one. Manifest reality deals with mental entities. Science, if our theories are correct, deal with mind-indepdent entities. — Manuel
DO you lose weight when you go to sleep? — Banno
Can you explain this distinction to me? Are mental entities things like desires or beliefs? — Banno
The concept of a laptop is in your head, but not the object you are typing on, that's in the world. — Manuel
What sort of thing is a concept? — Banno
As Aristotelians and Thomists use the term, intellect is that faculty by which we grasp abstract concepts (like the concepts man and mortal), put them together into judgments (like the judgment that all men are mortal), and reason logically from one judgment to another (as when we reason from all men are mortal and Socrates is a man to the conclusion that Socrates is mortal). It is to be distinguished from imagination, the faculty by which we form mental images and from sensation, the faculty by which we perceive the goings on in the external material world and the internal world of the body. — Feser
If mind is matter, and consciousness is mind, then when one is unconscious, one ought be lighter, because one would lack the mass of one's mind. — Banno
Is it? What sort of thing is a concept? — Banno
One cannot type on a concept-of-laptop; one types on a laptop. — Banno
is not quite right, since the capacity to talk about and use laptops presupposes laptops to be talked about and used, and laptops are not in heads.The concept of a laptop is in your head, — Manuel
I don't think there is anything more to "the concept of a laptop" than the ability to talk about and use a laptop. — Banno
Spot on. Mass and mind do not seem to be related in this way. As if we could measure the mass of your love for your mother.
Talk of mass does not fit talk of mind. — Banno
But if you didn't have the concept of a laptop, you wouldn't know you have one in front of you. — Manuel
I'd say certainty rather than faith. That serves to step away from the hegemony of religion.It carries some connotation related to faith. I don't actually believe that when I get up I'll melt through the floor, I understand that I wont. "Understanding" does not have that connotation, for example, nor does "comprehend". — Manuel
Computers are entirely reliant on conceptaul analysis - binary data processing, high-level languages, machine code, transistors - developed over many decades and the intellectual efforts of millions of people. — Wayfarer
...differentiating concepts from imagination and sensation... — Wayfarer
Well, I don't know of any cases of disembodied minds, if that's what you are asking -- although there are many folk who claim there are such things, their examples strike me as wishful thinking. — Banno
I'd say certainty rather than faith. That serves to step away from the hegemony of religion. — Banno
Ah, but if you didn't have the concept, what is it that you would be missing?
I suppose it would be the ability to talk about and use the laptop as a laptop. — Banno
I think that laptops were designed by a person before he had the physical object in the world. So there was no laptop prior to the first one. — Manuel
If we didn't have a concept of a laptop, we couldn't come up with it in the first place. — Manuel
Think carefully about that. The same applies to everything else of which you conceive. If it is true, then we have no explanation for how we might learn anything.
And yet we do learn.
SO it seems something has gone astray. — Banno
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.