Nope. It has something to do with your allergy to conceding even that which would benefit you, for who knows why.It has everything to do with you not reading carefully or not understanding what you read — Bartricks
Yes, it did. Exactly as I said last post:It said 'if', matey. If. — Bartricks
There's the if, right before the underlined antecedent, the italicized consequent, and the bolded parenthetical.What I am arguing is that if all of our faculties are bot-built, then they won't create any beliefs, just 'beliefs' (where a 'belief' is introspectively indiscernible from a belief, but nevertheless isn't one). — Bartricks
Oh what narratives!And you ignored that. Willfully ignored it, or didn't understand its significance. — Bartricks
...oh what poetic drama!If the latter then i cannot rephrase my argument in a way you'd understand. I don't know what grunts and howls would do the trick — Bartricks
Yeah yeah... Plantinga is a total amateur.↪InPitzotl
Greatest thinker since Plantinga?!? Now that's an insult! — Bartricks
Ahem...To recap: I have never, ever, ever said that we are not introspectively aware of things or not aware of things generally. — Bartricks
...and that means, well, what it says it means.(where a 'belief' is introspectively indiscernible from a belief, but nevertheless isn't one). — Bartricks
So you just said something you didn't mean. Maybe you should rephrase it.Read the OP! I think we ARE aware of things. — Bartricks
LOL! And round and round and round we go!What are you on about?? — Bartricks
Sure I do. Indiscernible means not able to discern. Introspectively is an adjective, meaning by means of introspection.You clearly don't understand English — Bartricks
Denial, contradiction and disinformation are key ingredients to gaslighting.You clearly don't understand English. — Bartricks
That's not what the problem is. The problem is:Again, no rephrasing necessary. You don't understand words.
...you absolutely refuse to clarify. It is not your intent to be clear. You'd rather be dramatic than do a simple reasonable thing. I won't speculate as to why, but you're making at least these things crystal clear.I don't know what grunts and howls would do the trick — Bartricks
Because:Why are you telling me what introspectively indiscernible means? — Bartricks
...your claim ipso facto introspectively discerns two things (belief and 'belief') you claim are introspectively indiscernible. Because:What I am arguing is that if all of our faculties are bot-built, then they won't create any beliefs, just 'beliefs' (where a 'belief' is introspectively indiscernible from a belief, but nevertheless isn't one). — Bartricks
...you pretend not to realize that claiming something is introspectively indiscernible means you cannot introspectively be aware of it.Where did I say that I am not introspectively aware of things? — Bartricks
No, which is why I didn't say you were committed to that view. I said you claimed something you didn't mean.Again, why do you think I am committed to the view that we are not aware of things? — Bartricks
And yet, you are distinguishing them. That leads to my response to this:my claim that states of awareness are introspectively indiscernible from otherwise identical states that lack representative contents. — Bartricks
...which was this:Thus if we are bot built we will not know anything.
We do know we exist and a whole lot else, of course. — Bartricks
...in the case of Van Gogh, maybe we can pull out a magnifying glass. Maybe we can carbon date. Maybe we can check certificates of authenticity. But here you claim that "of course" we know versus 'know', which suggests we just naturally, introspectively know it. That leads to the first challenge.Of course not. By your own admission you cannot even introspectively tell if you know things. So how could it possibly be obvious enough to say "of course"? — InPitzotl
...and in the case of Van Gogh, if you cannot introspectively distinguish the genuine from the fake you ipso facto are not introspectively aware.Where did I say that I am not introspectively aware of things? — Bartricks
1. If our faculties of awareness are wholly the product of unguided evolutionary forces, then they do not give us an awareness of anything
2. Our faculties of awareness do provide us with some awareness of something
3. Therefore our faculties of awareness are not wholly the product of unguided evolutionary forces — Bartricks
You don't seem to understand the argument. — Bartricks
Visual sensations cannot tell us about the world unless they have representative contents.
That is, unless they are telling us something. — Bartricks
And they will only have those, if the faculty that created them in us was designed by an agent for that purpose. — Bartricks
It's pointless arguing with you, but anyway, in the hope that someone somewhere will get the point - imagine a portrait artist paints a picture of you. That's a pictorial representation. Now imagine a monkey in a room randomly flinging paint at a canvas. And imagine that by some pure fluke the image the monkey's mad antics create exactly resembles the portrait painter's painting.
Is it a portrait of you? — Bartricks
Our visual sensations are random monkey-flung paintings if our visual faculties are bot built. And thus lookingin the oven is not something one can do with bot built faculties. All one can do is 'look' in the oven. — Bartricks
Shall I help you to see how dumb you are being? (Or willfully ignorant) — Bartricks
Nope. You made that up.No, you said my view was that we are not aware of anything. — Bartricks
That's incoherent. Introspection employs self observation and implies self awareness.My claim that there can be introspectively indiscernible states from those that give us awareness, yet that do not give us any awareness due to lacking representative contents. — Bartricks
This is so muddled I can't interpret it. What is "it", what claims (plural) are you talking about, and why are you telling me what I think?You think it is, indeed you seem to think the claims are synonymous. — Bartricks
The problem would be if you claim both that they are visually indiscernible and to have visually confirmed which is the real one.Which iseverybody(?)as confused as thinking that if there can be a visually indiscernible image of sunflowers from that painted by van Gogh, then I am claiming that the actual Van Gogh is a fake. — Bartricks
I'm sure that passes for wit in a Burger King or a Kentucky Fried Chicken, but you are talking to a champagne drinking truffle muncher, so you really need to up your game. Thicky. — Bartricks
And the monkey-flung painting is clearly not a portrait of you. However, if your reason says otherwise, then i think it is too badly corrupted to be of any use. — Bartricks
After I reviewed the two I came to the same conclusion. It isn't entirely clear.I don't understand your edit. My premise assumes no such thing. — Bartricks
The rant about clouds and pie? Yeah, lets say I'm missing the correct tools to really give that it's proper treatment. I'm going to address the words in the premise only, because that's how a premise works.I defended it in the OP. You need to address the argument I gave in support of it. — Bartricks
If our faculties of awareness are wholly the product of unguided evolutionary forces, then they do not give us an awareness of anything.
Now, at first glance this appears like a contradiction. If we have awareness by way of X we do not have awareness. The reason is because of the contradiction. We can not both have awareness and not have awareness. — Cheshire
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