Is camouflage passed down? Is it not a solution to a problem? Of course there is no final solution, as the environment is dynamic.No, solutions aren't passed down genetically. Not only are actual final solutions immensely rare, they are not passed down through our genes. — Thanatos Sand
This is utter nonsense. Either we are a product of a natural process, or we aren't. God (if it exists) is just as natural as what it creates.No, we are more than the product of natural causes. We are also the products of ideologies that have no direct correspondent to natural causes. And I never said it wasn't natural; you incorrectly said I did. And either way, those causes and ideologies give us information our genes do not. — Thanatos Sand
And that is the problem that evolutionary psychology attempts to solve. Do we have minds and other animals don't? If so, then why? Why would minds evolve in humans and not other species? What problems were minds meant to solve?The problem is not the mind body relationship but how mind comes to exist at all. — Andrew4Handel
No, solutions aren't passed down genetically. Not only are actual final solutions immensely rare, they are not passed down through our genes.
— Thanatos Sand
Is camouflage passed down? Is it not a solution to a problem? Of course there is no final solution, as the environment is dynamic.
No, we are more than the product of natural causes. We are also the products of ideologies that have no direct correspondent to natural causes. And I never said it wasn't natural; you incorrectly said I did. And either way, those causes and ideologies give us information our genes do not.
— Thanatos Sand
This is utter nonsense. Either we are a product of a natural process, or we aren't. God (if it exists) is just as natural as what it creates.
Why would minds evolve in humans and not other species? What problems were minds meant to solve? — Harry Hindu
And that is the problem that evolutionary psychology attempts to solve. Do we have minds and other animals don't? If so, then why? Why would minds evolve in humans and not other species? What problems were minds meant to solve? — Harry Hindu
The issue at hand is that I seem to be arguing with one of those holdouts that simply won't accept the theory of evolution by natural selection and the field of genetics/heredity. I'm done arguing with idiots.You said the solutions were passed down genetically. I said they weren't. You still have failed to show they are. And camouflage is neither a solution for many things nor a perfect solution for one. So, my argument there is correct, too. Try to address the issue at hand. — Thanatos Sand
Instead of quoting, why don't you reflect on your own mind and the skills you wouldn't have if you didn't have one - and how you would survive if you didn't have one.Maybe the kinds of problems which the theory of evolution is not equipped to tackle. 'If the only tool you have is a hammer then the only problems you're interested in involve nails' ~ Abraham Maslow. — Wayfarer
You said the solutions were passed down genetically. I said they weren't. You still have failed to show they are. And camouflage is neither a solution for many things nor a perfect solution for one. So, my argument there is correct, too. Try to address the issue at hand.
— Thanatos Sand
The issue at hand is that I seem to be arguing with one of those holdouts that simply won't accept the theory of evolution by natural selection and the field of genetics/heredity. I'm done arguing with idiots.
Is the brain part of the body? Is not the mind what the brain does?Biochemistry is the field that explains how body's are created. I don't see how evolution could give a causal explanation of the mind? — Andrew4Handel
Other animals have adapted their anatomy and behaviors that initially evolved to solve a different problem. Ostriches don't use their wings to fly. They use them in mating dances and to scare off predators. We are no different in using our higher intelligence for new purposes. We do religion, art, etc. but doing these things can all be explained in evolutionary terms of passing on your genes, and even filtering the genes that get passed down to new generations.The mind in the humans goes beyond solving a few survival problems. There is a difference in explaining the benefit of a feature and describing how it emerged. Having wings is obviously beneficial to a bird but that is not an account of how the come about.
At bottom evolutionary explanations rely on things like genetic mutations and emergent properties, when something emerges it can then be propagated or made defunct by the environment. — Andrew4Handel
If you aren't willing to expand your knowledge, then your loss, not mine. — Harry Hindu
How you would survive if you didn't have [a mind]. — Harry Hindu
Why don't you think about what your consciousness enables you to do, and what you can and can't do while you aren't conscious. — Harry Hindu
You said the solutions were passed down genetically. I said they weren't. You still have failed to show they are. And camouflage is neither a solution for many things nor a perfect solution for one. So, my argument there is correct, too. Try to address the issue at hand.
Harry Hindu
No, solutions aren't passed down genetically. Not only are actual final solutions immensely rare, they are not passed down through our genes.
— Thanatos Sand
"Is camouflage passed down? Is it not a solution to a problem? Of course there is no final solution, as the environment is dynamic."
You said the solutions were passed down genetically. I said they weren't. You still have failed to show they are. And camouflage is neither a solution for many things nor a perfect solution for one. So, my argument there is correct, too. Try to address the issue at hand.
Thanks but I have already read the discussion earlier. You'll need to reform your statement because it's unclear what is it that you want me to address.
I had came to the conclusion that you're saying solutions are not passed down genetically, which would be disproven by showing a solution that is clearly passed down genetically. Is there something so far in this paragraph I've misunderstood?
This is like saying that in a discussion of religion it's okay to talk about religion when all you know is the religion you practice, and not anything about all the other religions. It's not. It's arguing from ignorance.You know that sounds very judgmental and insulting, right? For no reason that I can think of either. You're free to pursue whatever course of interests you find appealing, as am I. Just because a particular area of interest isn't one we share isn't call to say that I'm "not willing to expand my knowledge", implying that I embrace ignorance for some reason. I don't appreciate the implication. It's not called for, and on top of that, it's also intellectually lazy. The flaw in the logic behind "RN isn't interested in pursuing information about X, therefore RN isn't interested in perusing knowledge period" should be obvious. Have some pride. Be smarter and kinder. — Reformed Nihilist
So you have clear and cut evidence that lizards and fish don't have minds? Where is Reformed Nihilist and his criticism of conjecture?Lizards and fish survive just fine. Honestly, asking 'what's the point of having a mind' is one of those questions that makes you wonder whether the person asking it is worthy of one. — Wayfarer
No it isn't. You need to know why minds exist to understand how they are produced, especially in a world where there is evolution by natural selection. You do believe in that don't you? Why were mind selected? What problems did having a mind solve? These are questions that need to be answered if there is evolution by natural selection and selection pressures apply to minds. I'm trying to get you to think, but it seems that you don't want to. Just make an attempt to answer the question. What is it that you can and can't do when not conscious as opposed to being conscious?That is a irrelevant to explaining how consciousness is produced. — Andrew4Handel
(Y)So are you claiming that camouflage is not a solution or that it is not passed down genetically? I've shown it is a solution, and I wish you are not going to deny animals' colour patterns being genetical. — BlueBanana
No it isn't. You need to know why minds exist to understand how they are produced, especially in a world where there is evolution by natural selection. You do believe in that don't you?
I don't understand the aversion to watching a Youtube video in order to better understand what it is that you all are actually talking about. What are you all scared of? — Harry Hindu
This is like saying that in a discussion of religion it's okay to talk about religion when all you know is the religion you practice, and not anything about all the other religions. It's not. It's arguing from ignorance.
It's not conjecture. It's obvious you won't take my word for it, which is why I provided links, which you won't even then pursue. That is what being intellectually lazy is. — Harry Hindu
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