Have you read the CPR or any Kant? (Rhetoric question.) :roll: — 180 Proof
Philosophy, dimo, isn't theoretical and doesn't consist of propositions (truths) about the physical world or nature (like e.g. logic, mathematics, theology, etc). — 180 Proof
Explain how we/you know this to be true. — 180 Proof
First we have to know what makes something science — but leaving that aside: we don’t observe photons — are they not physical? What about forces? They’re identified, certainly — but so is the mind, and love, and morality. All “identified” as such. — Xtrix
So we can talk in everyday terms, or we can talk in technical terms about things. The former gets us nowhere, in this case, and the latter doesn’t exist.
So there is no problem, and the question is meaningless — Xtrix
First we have to know what physical means. Which we don’t. So the statement is meaningless. — Xtrix
No, it isn’t. The question of whether the mind reduces to the activity of the brain is a variant, and it presumes we know what we’re talking about when we discuss the “physical.” But we don’t. — Xtrix
We have no idea what “material” or “physical” or “body” mean.
So there is no problem. — Xtrix
why it is that when opposed we feel angered/annoyed rather than intrigued by another's perspective. The more another's belief contradicts our own the stronger the feeling becomes. The more this belief matters to us personally (for our own wellbeing and the wellbeing of those we care for) the more inclined we are to veer away from logic and rationality — I like sushi
A bunch of condensed cowards whining is shameful. — StreetlightX
So for the love of Oprah and for the sake of baby jesus would you fucking morons quiet you stupid fingers and shut up about it already?!
I cant believe you idiots are STILL arguing about this.
So so dumb. — DingoJones
Idealism is a broad church. But if you mean idealism in terms of some synonym of soul, spirit or consciousness as a monistic substance - one that stands opposed to matter as the other candidate monistic substance underlying reality - then no way am I making any argument in that direction. — apokrisis
Triadic logic says there is an interaction. And then two distinct realms are what develop out of this fundamental connection. — apokrisis
They can complain that the surprise a human feels is nothing like the surprisal - the free energy metric – that Friston's formalism minimises. — apokrisis
. It gets neuroscience off computation - the Universal Turing Machine formalism - as the general theory of everything it has been employing. It underwrites the whole shift back to an embodied, enactive and semiotic approach to mind science. — apokrisis
Boringly, we mods are not in the business of reforming anyone. Just enforcing the rules. — Baden
But this "darkened room problem" is a tedious misrepresentation of the maths. And as I say, if this is the best you have got, you ain't got nothing. — apokrisis
this is huge because it allows neuroscience to finally kick computationalism and Cartesian representationalism out the door. — apokrisis
Not sure this is the right word. It seems to me that the very sophistication of the approach leads some to over-applying it. — Banno
So yes, there is one general story to be had - a semiotic theory of everything. That is implied in Friston’s approach, but not mathematically expressed in direct fashion — apokrisis
So the question becomes one of how successful it is at doing so. It might be - indeed it seems likely - that this approach will lead to a better understanding of the function of various neural bits and pieces. — Banno
If the only line of attack on an idea relies on a fundamental misrepresentation of the idea, then it’s critics are doing a mighty poor job. — apokrisis
The explanatory power of surprise avoidance will take years, and much subtle empirical evidence, to evaluate. — Banno
I don't believe you have examined that large number of highly intelligent people, Dimosthenis9. Therefore your answer is arbitrary, and unreliable. — god must be atheist
but it uses logic and reason to figure out the answer; — god must be atheist
minimising surprise involves seeking out surprise, aka novelty, in order to familiarise oneself with it. I think this is known as "learning|". — unenlightened
If biological systems, including ourselves, act so as to minimise surprise, — Banno
But why is minimising surprise the very same as living longest? — Banno
My problem is that I see almost everything as completely pointless and this has profoundly affected my happiness. — Nicholas Mihaila
If you can never freely will your next thought, then you can’t freely will any of them, since all thoughts are your next thought at some point in time. Your thoughts initiate your deliberate actions, whether the thoughts be fully conscious or subconscious. If you can’t freely will any of your thoughts, how can you freely will any of your actions which are based on and initiated by your thoughts? — Paul Michael
To argue that the West is behind everything that happens simply isn't the case. You can do something, assist, have fair trade policies, but inevitably the countries and people have to solve the issues themselves. And when you look at the list, some countries have solved their problems. — ssu
Intrinsically actions are habits' way of reinforcing old habits or creating new habits. — 180 Proof
dimo, rather logic comes before/after living in the moment and not during, that is, logical judgment ought to be like muscle memory, habitualized — 180 Proof
Same with morality. My understanding is that we are our habits (Aristotle) and not the mere "sum of our actions" (Sartre) — 180 Proof
Those ephemerae are the most sublime of all. "Ecstasies" I call them. I stopped chasing them (via drugs, etc) decades ago when I'd finally realized that all I have to do is, like Beckett's hobos, wait lucidly (i.e. philosophically, aesthetically, erotically ...) and keep on waiting and let the waiting itself become ecstatic. Anyway, for me at least, waiting is still thirsty work. :smirk: — 180 Proof
The tough part of this argument actually takes place before you get to assembling proof of a god's moral failings. — Tom Storm
Hey, it wasn't I who advocated "living as much time (seconds from your whole life) with pleasant feelings" - that was your good self. — Banno
Nothing wrong with a bit of hedonism, of course — Banno
So a truly fulfilling life would be to spend all one's time wanking. — Banno