wonderer1         
         I see there is a need to distinguish between "process" as a particular process, a particular event which is happening to a particular physical object, or objects, and "process" in the sense of a generalized, or universal, type of event which may happen with objects. The former is a physical event, the latter is not, being conceptual and applicable to many different physical events, in a descriptive way. If "time" is said to be a sort of process, it is the latter, a generalized or universal conception, and therefore not physical. — Metaphysician Undercover
jkop         
         I don't think they know the causes of psychosis or even claim to know. It's like they are sure it must be physical but they can't show the mechanism. — Mark Nyquist
Mark Nyquist         
         
AmadeusD         
         
flannel jesus         
         
AmadeusD         
         even if it does just rule out <one thing that isn't physicalism>, that's still loosely evidence for physicalism. It would be evidence for everything that's not pure idealism, which physicalism isn't. — flannel jesus
You're running with MUs line because you and he share a conclusion, or because you like what he has to say about evidence? — flannel jesus
Wayfarer         
         However the form,
Brain; (mental content) — Mark Nyquist
Mark Nyquist         
         
Wayfarer         
         
Mark Nyquist         
         
RogueAI         
         The way I do it is information (the story) only exists as,
Brain; (information) — Mark Nyquist
Mark Nyquist         
         
Metaphysician Undercover         
         You're waffling too much for me. It seems like you're deliberately trying not to understand, but it's possible this is really just all too much for you. Since you can't answer my straight forward question, I'm going to bow out of this conversation with you. I don't see it going further if you cannot give a simple answer to my simple question. — flannel jesus
Simply asserting that conceiving of a universal is not the outcome of a physical process is unpersuasive in light of understanding things like this: — wonderer1
Wayfarer         
         The person who wrote the book is the source of the information (in his brain). He encodes it into a book. The book is encoded physical matter. The person reading the book hopefully decodes the book in the way it was intended. — Mark Nyquist
Simply asserting that conceiving of a universal is not the outcome of a physical process is unpersuasive in light of understanding things like this: — wonderer1
Mark Nyquist         
         
Wayfarer         
         I'm guessing public education taught you wrong and you just need to reset. — Mark Nyquist
I'm guessing public education taught you wrong — Mark Nyquist
flannel jesus         
         like that he seems to grok my issue with using unrelated findings to go toward confirming physicalism to some degree or another. — AmadeusD
flannel jesus         
         Your question is simple trickery as I explained, like the old example 'have you stopped beating your wife?' Answering it would be to agree to your terms which demonstrate a gross misunderstanding of the nature of "evidence". — Metaphysician Undercover
it is incoherent to claim the very same object to be evidence both for and against the truth of a particular statement
Metaphysician Undercover         
         Literally any other person would be able to answer the question with ease. It's not trickery, you're just weird. — flannel jesus
I'll explain what I did say again one last time and allow you a fair chance to be more honest next time you post to me: what I said was not "it is EVIDENCE for and against a claim", I said you can have something that is evidence for one claim and COMPATIBLE with another claim. If you want to know the difference, feel free to ask — flannel jesus
flannel jesus         
         If the object is judged as consistent with S, (supporting S, is evidence of S), then it cannot also be judged as COMPATIBLE (consistent) with not-S without contradiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
AmadeusD         
         You think the finding is unrelated? The finding in question seems very very related to me. — flannel jesus
flannel jesus         
         
AmadeusD         
         I understand that most 'evidence's for physicalism amount to mainly evidence that mental states are 'intertwined' with, or 'closely related to' neural activity. — AmadeusD
flannel jesus         
         
AmadeusD         
         
flannel jesus         
         
AmadeusD         
         Though, i guess my position is that I think Physicalists are wrong for making the claim you're making. — AmadeusD
flannel jesus         
         because of preclusive evidence in another position, isn't evidence for any of them, imo. — AmadeusD
AmadeusD         
         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.