The question I need answers to... why would I not form a hypothetical line of causality based on abiogenesis? Is there a better theory at this time? I — Christoffer
I believe in a single substance, the mother of all forces, which engenders the life and consciousness of everything, visible and invisible. I believe in a single Lord, biology, the unique son of the substance of the world, born from the mother substance after centuries of random shuffling of material: the encapsulated reflection of the great material sea, the epiphenomenal light of primordial darkness, the false reflection of the real world, consubstantial with the mother-substance. It is he who has descended from the shadows of the mother-substance, he who has taken on flesh from matter, he who plays at the illusion of thought from flesh, he who has become the Human Brain. I acknowledge a single method for the elimination of error, thus ultimately eliminating myself and returning to the mother substance. Amen.
What philosophy of mind claims is IRRELEVANT. You will need to study Science, not philosophy in order to understand the ontology of an emergent biological property like Consciousness.Since life only begins at the molecular level, there is no need to search for life on all the scales below.
Since the philosophy of mind addresses consciousness as an entity in its own right, it fails to present it as an (emergent) consequence of life. — Wolfgang
I think abiogenesis is compelling because it blurs a fundamental distinction: that between life and non-life, or at least, makes it appear less fundamental. — Wayfarer
In my opinion it should be compelling for its epistemic value not just for being able to bring down our dogmas. — Nickolasgaspar
We still live in a deeply superstitious, religious and foolish world and I think that's why there's so much confusion surrounding science. — Christoffer
Our willingness to accept scientific claims that are against common sense is the key to an understanding of the real struggle between science and the supernatural. We take the side of science in spite of the patent absurdity of some of its constructs, in spite of its failure to fulfill many of its extravagant promises of health and life, in spite of the tolerance of the scientific community for unsubstantiated just-so stories, because we have a prior commitment, a commitment to materialism.
It is not that the methods and institutions of science somehow compel us to accept a material explanation of the phenomenal world, but, on the contrary, that we are forced by our a priori adherence to material causes to create an apparatus of investigation and a set of concepts that produce material explanations, no matter how counter-intuitive, no matter how mystifying to the uninitiated.
Moreover, that materialism is absolute, for we cannot allow a Divine Foot in the door. The eminent Kant scholar Lewis Beck used to say that anyone who could believe in God could believe in anything. To appeal to an omnipotent deity is to allow that at any moment the regularities of nature may be ruptured, that miracles may happen. — Richard Lewontin, Review of Carl Sagan, Billions and Billions of Demons
There's also a deep and underlying fear of religion which colors a lot of what you're saying. — Wayfarer
Your depiction of 'religious people' refers to a specific kind of religious mentality, most like fundamentalist or creationist Christians to whom science is threatening. But there are entire spectrums of 'religious people' who have completely different attitudes to the question. — Wayfarer
In the 19th Century there was a kind of popular movement among English intellectuals to portray religion and science as mortal enemies. It's called 'the conflict thesis'. Most of the so-called 'new atheist' authors, and many who preach scientific materialism on the Internet, adopt that view, but it is a very blinkered view. — Wayfarer
The sources I actually quoted in earlier in this thread were not 'religious people' at all but biologists and scientists. — Wayfarer
But in your view, to question materialism is to be 'a religious person', meaning, a fundamentalist or science-denying flat earther. — Wayfarer
In fact the kind of materialism you argue for is a direct descendant of Christian monotheism, in that it allows only one kind of fundamental principle, but now it's matter (or matter-energy). The 'jealous God' dies hard. — Wayfarer
An inadequate conceptual space can create problematic representational artifacts, such as the pre-relativistic notion of simultaneity. While hard to see from within a tradition, representational problems can be identified by comparing diverse cultural, disciplinary and historical perspectives. — Dfpolis
Mind/body should be examined together with the 'what is information' question..
Brain information is in the brain only.
Genetic information...I don't think it exists other than a shorthand for the people who study it and a pop culture concept.
Signal information...of the Claude Shannon type seems to reduce to physical matter only.
Physical information...such as distant galaxies, stars and planets having physical information associated with them...shorthand by practitioners but migrated to pop culture. — Mark Nyquist
Claude Shannon, the founder of information theory, defined information as a reduction of possibility, but there are many kinds of possibility. Imagine a binary message transmitted over such a distance that it is entirely transmitted before any of it is received. As each bit is received, the number of possible messages is reduced by one half, but physical possibility is not reduced, because the signal already exists. What has changed is logical possibility. Before reception, it is logically possible for a bit to be an a or a b, but not after reception. Thus, information is a logical, not a physical property.
We may speak of physical processes that bring us closer to understanding in terms of sending and receiving ‘information,’ but not univocally, because logical possibility is not reduced until the received bit is known. What exists before then is intelligibility, not knowledge. So, it is equivocating to say that both computers and minds process ‘information.’ — Dennis F. Polis
I'm not trying to get too focused on information other than observing that brain information and consciousness are inseparable.
So my view is brain information is the only information that should be relevant to mind. — Mark Nyquist
Because we conceptualize reality in a certain way, we tend to look for evidence consistent with that framework, ignoring or minimizing evidence that would undermine the framework. In the other direction, as selected evidence confirms our conceptual framework, it becomes more embedded in our neural net, and so more habitual and less reflective. — Dfpolis
This ignores the fact that some of the greatest scientists (e.g. Galileo, Newton and Laplace) were faithfully religious, and some deeply religious people (e.g. Bishop Robert Grosstesta, who defined the scientific method, and St. Albert the Great, the greatest botanist of the era) were excellent scientists. Even Darwin believed in God and "designed laws" of nature. — Dfpolis
What I mean is more that these scientists, because of their religious beliefs, have a religious mindset, and therefore all of them have to actively fight the filter of religious belief in order for it not to undermine their own scientific and philosophical findings. — Christoffer
My article is now published. Polis, D. F., "The Hard Problem of Consciousness & the Fundamental Abstraction," Journal of Consciousness Exploration & Research. (14) 2, pp. 96-114. https://jcer.com/index.php/jcj/article/view/1042/1035 — Dfpolis
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