There's no such thing as a mind which thinks. Thinking is the mind! Mind is an activity (thinking), not an actor (thinker). — Agent Smith
That is a false statement in common English. Again, not up for debate, it's a fact of the language. I will reiterate that if your method leads you to having to reinvent the English language in order to justify your views, then I think your method is flawed, and suggest you rethink it.
You're also free to just keep insisting that your new and novel use of language is the better one and hope we all adopt it, but I'm not optimistic for you if you can make no better case than just insisting it is so by fiat. — Reformed Nihilist
Because I insist, perhaps dogmatically, on speaking English, and in English, the word "thinking" isn't a synonym to the word "mind". You seem to want to insist that either they are synonyms, which is blatantly and demonstrably (check any dictionary) false, or that they should be, for which you have offered no justification. Do you see what I am saying? I'm really not sure that you do. — Reformed Nihilist
but Information is also an immaterial function. — Gnomon
All I can say is you're hung up on language. — Agent Smith
I made it clear to you that language isn't the only way to understand my point. — Agent Smith
Qualia are caused by physical processes, but have no causal powers of their own. — Gnomon
If mind is a verb, why do we use it as a noun so often (e.g., my mind is made up)? — RogueAI
Let's start over.
For me what we call mind is an activity like walking & talking , and not an object, like legs & mouth. To think the mind is an object and not an activity is an error that's committed by many. That's about the gist of what I want to share. — Agent Smith
Once you interpret the sensory data correctly the illusion disappears — Harry Hindu
Minds are things, not activities, no matter how often you want to say otherwise, and the only way to change that is to change the English language... — Reformed Nihilist
Do you understand why I say that "Mind" being a noun isn't a matter open for debate, but a fact of the English language? — Reformed Nihilist
Look, adding "For me" doesn't fix the problem you have here. — Reformed Nihilist
I merely made explicit something that's true for everyone, including yourself unless there's someone who's omniscient. Are you omniscient? I hardly think so. — Agent Smith
If you want to say that minds are activities or actions, then you are speaking nonsense — Reformed Nihilist
Why isn't it ("mind" being a noun) open for debate. Even the great Aristotle made mistakes. — Agent Smith
If you want to say that minds are activities or actions, then you are speaking nonsense — Reformed Nihilist
Do you agree that in English, to say "I was thinking about Aristotle" is a sensible sentence, but "I was minding about Aristotle" isn't?
Or we can do it the other way. "I heard the song in my mind" is a sensible sentence, but "I heard the song in my think" is not.
Do you dispute these? — Reformed Nihilist
You're hung up on language — Agent Smith
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