ou say 'talking meat', I prefer 'embodied mind'. It's not exactly controversial or even original. — unenlightened
Whence the religious language? Angels? Soul? You are arguing with your fantasy of what I have been saying. — unenlightened
my mind pours out here and drips onto your screen, to be absorbed by your mind — unenlightened
Without embodiment there would indeed be nothing but a sea of mind — unenlightened
mind is like water; each of us has their separate cup of water, some muddy and some salty and so on, but the separation is temporary, and somewhere is the Great Sea of Mind whence we all came and to which we all return. — unenlightened
The point is that if you want 'minds', then have at them, but if they're this spooky stuff which cannot be seen, touched or otherwise amenable to empirical investigation, then they're not constrained by the world of objects (bodies, skulls, space-time). If they are that way constrained, then they're constrained by all of the empirical world, not just the biology you learned in college. — Isaac
If the distinguishing characteristic of spooky stuff is that which cannot be seen or touched, then your worldly examples of space and time would actually be spooky stuff. — Hanover
You assert without explanation why a thing that is constrained by some physical forces must be constrained by all physical forces. — Hanover
for a mind to exist, it must exist in space and time, but because it shares the requirement with brains that it exist in space and time doesn't mean it is subject to all the same scientific descriptions. — Hanover
I assume you're comfortable with the fact that we have empirical observations demonstrating space and time? — Isaac
Not asserting. Asking. If a thing is constrained by some physical laws, why not all of them? — Isaac
Do you not find it at all odd that the physical restrictions people tend to think the mind shares are all the easy ones they learnt in school (it's in a body, we can't read other people's, it stops when you're unconscious...) and the ones they reject are all the hard ones that only neuroscientists and cognitive scientists tend to understand? — Isaac
Demonstrate time for me. — Hanover
Because I don't think time and space are simply physical laws, but they are part of a most fundamental conceptual framework that nothing can be understood without their presumption. Existence is not a property of something and time and space are fundamental components of existence. If you have a dog without hair, you have a hairless dog. If you have a dog outside space and outside time, it exists no where at no time, meaning you don't have dog at all.
And this is part of the bigger question about objects generally in terms of how much is the physical object and how much is imposed by our perceptions and conceptual framework.
So, the reason you can't have an existing mind that does not occur in space or time is because such a mind is by definition not in existence. — Hanover
we don't read other people's minds. — Hanover
Don't we? When I feel I know what someone else is thinking, maybe I'm reading their mind. Why not? — Isaac
I did mean that, I was just wondering why not. — Isaac
you know this, so what is the real question here? — Hanover
unenlightened has a theory about minds, that minds might all be part of a sea of minds to which they return. Can we similarly use our college science to say - that theory can't be true, brains don't work that way? — Isaac
You don't seem to know the difference between a theory and an analogy, which i used to try and make sense of what other people have been saying. So I'd prefer that you just leave me out of your discussions altogether. — unenlightened
If I've misinterpreted what you said, you could just say so. — Isaac
I ask you, again, not to talk about me, as you do "misinterpret" me rather too often. I hope that, at least, is clear and understandable. — unenlightened
If you don't want the members of it to interpret and respond to your posts then I suggest you stop posting them. — Isaac
I don't want YOU to MISINTERPRET and MISREPRESENT my posts. — unenlightened
I will endeavour to continue my conversations with careful readers and charitable interpreters — unenlightened
The person suggesting minds can do something (mind-read) which is denied by college science is a crackpot. A lunatic, not to be taken seriously. A woo-merchant. — Isaac
I deny it because I've never seen it done nor seen a study of it being done nor been made aware of a reliable account of when it's been done. — Hanover
If you're going to argue in support of the paranormal, bigfoot, or the elusive white penguin, you need evidence. Your psychological evaluation that I'm just stubbornly committed to the status quo isn't evidence of anything, even if it were true.
And it's not like there isn't extensive literature attempting to prove the paranormal that I'm unaware of. I am very much aware of it, and it's extremely unpersuasive. — Hanover
If you're already of the opinion that science fully constrains our theories about minds then you're not in a position to answer my enquiry. — Isaac
I'm not of that opinion.
In any event, I disagree that you can't debate varying epistemological theories just because you already have one you rely upon. That is, the fact that I use science to answer certain questions doesn't mean I'm closed minded to considering other epistemological methods. — Hanover
So, make your argument for why you believe in mind reading and establish how your method of knowing that is consistent with how you know other things, and if it's not, why such is a special class deserving of special rules. — Hanover
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