But we know how muscles contract and extend. We can explain the movement of bodies. We don't know why we experience things. Saying that it comes from brains, but isn't associated with anything else implies we know what leads to consciousness and so we can rule out that, for example, plants experience. But we can't, because we don't know what leads to consciousness. We know one place where it is, but until we know why it is there, we can't rule out other places.They don’t have the slightest idea of what they are talking about. From a scientific point of view, there is nothing to explain, everything is already explained the moment you say that consciousness is a product of the brain. All the rest is scientific details that have nothing to do with philosophy. It is like explaining how it is possible that our body moves — Angelo Cannata
faith
— Bylaw
Which is to say Jesus couldn't/no one can prove God's existence. — Agent Smith
And people feel the presence of God and so on. Not all empirical things can necessarily be tested (now). IOW people don't just believe in a transcendant deity, even the Abrahamists. Most of them talk about experiencing thingsprayer
— Bylaw
True, Wikipedia has a page on research i.e. experiments done on (the effectiveness of) prayer. So some religious claims can be tested. — Agent Smith
Wellllll. I think the idea of that test was more about faith in the relationship with God, not in God's existence. They had seen miracles but were now grumbling at Massah. The issue was more, can you trust God, given what God has already done for you. Or do you think he will abandon you?God falls under metaphysics, even a novice is aware of this simple fact.
Do not put the LORD your God to the test as you did at Massah.
— Deuteronomy 6:16 — Agent Smith
Some theists would say that. Others wouldn't. Many if observed over time would make empirical claims about God, prayer, angels, the presence of Jesus and more and that's just within Christianity. At other times they might well agree with you and then go back on implicit positions already taken.Test, another name for experiment. To put it simply God is not amenable to scientific inquiry, experimentation's not allowed/prohibited. God isn't an empirical claim. — Agent Smith
I took this as reasoning, as in reaching conclusions via logic and probably verbal thought. The second seemed to be 'the why we do things.'Our faculty of reason.
Reasons to do things — Bartricks
We are not motivated enough to do it perhaps. But if we have reasoned that we should do X, but don't do X other motivations are stronger. I mean, if we believe we should do X (either version of should, the moral or the practical) then we have some motivation to do it.But a reason-to-do something is not a motivation, for we can have reason to do that which we are not motivated to do and we can have a motivation to do that which we have no reason to do. — Bartricks
Can you give me a couple of other examples. If someone is motivated to torture John, it seems to me he has a reason. It may not be what most people call a good reason (when looked at in total) but there would be a reason. He is mad at John and wants John to feel bad. OK, perhaps you grant that but point to the psychopath. He just does it for the hell of it. But then the psychopath gets pleasure from torturing John. John is a human and the psychopath gets pleasure out of torturing humans. That is a reason. We just don't like that reason.Our motivations are often the basis upon which we have a reason to do something, but the reason to do something and the motivation are distinct. For example, if I am motivated to torture John, that is not equivalent to me having reason to torture John. What we are motivated to do we can sometimes have no reason to do, and thus the two are not the same. — Bartricks
In essence, how do we/should we deal with doubt and uncertainty, and possibility? — Agent Smith
If a purely evolutionary story of our development is true, then there are no actual reasons to do anything.
That means that any faculty of reason we have developed is not capable of detecting any actual reasons - for there are none - and will instead be a faculty that generates the hallucination of reasons. — Bartricks
OK, right. I don't think I conflate them.Our faculty of reason.
Reasons to do things — Bartricks
Hence, the statement "p is an unknown truth" cannot be both known and true at the same time. Therefore, if all truths are knowable, the set of "all truths" must not include any of the form "something is an unknown truth"; thus there must be no unknown truths, and thus all truths must be known. — Fitch's paradox of knowability
Or it just seems consistant. There's a built in, this is correctly connected to the past quale. That shouldn't require something more powerful than our unconscious, just something different. Also the OR is about how many entities are posited.Solipsism implies a vastly more powerful brain than what you believe you have, as 99.9999999999.... % of it is unconscious: the part that remembers everything, so that everything is consistent, every time you check it, the part that simulates every physical phenomenon to perfect exactitude, the part that knows the entirety of every science and art, etc. etc. etc. — hypericin
I do think that's possible, though it might not be evolution but cultural development. IOW once the culture catches on that they have a serious problem they develop social pressures and other measures (even religious prohibilitions and limits) to deal with the problem. Folk psychological solutions also.I've read other studies that have found a correlation between when a group was first exposed to alcohol and the rate of alcoholism in the group. Apparently evolution eventually reduces alcoholism.
Jews have been drinking wine for thousands of years, native Americans much shorter, for example, with the latter group devastated by alcoholism. — Hanover
I think the insights can often be expressed rationally. On weed you can realize that someone makes you uncomfortable because they seem judgmental. As an example. You realize that you have felt this way for a while, but it is harder to ignore, so it becomes conscious. Not breathtaking. Perhaps therapy might do this, or an open talk with a different friend. But sure insights from the small to the large can come via drugs. And of course other ways. Dosage and drub type and one's own sensitivity and period in one's life all having effects.It's a very interesting question. I agree that they can (but it doesn't mean they will) produce insight, but it's not the type of insight that can be expressed rationally. — Manuel
).instead, they are methodological criteria (not merely "worldviews") for excluding "immaterial" data and "nonphysical" concepts, respectively, fromthe construction of explanatory models of nature (i.e. phenomena
I couldn't follow this, my limitations probably. Neither proposal: is this enformationism and materialism or materialism and physicalism. (I probably should have just mentioned one of the two latter ones since they tend to be used interchangeably but not by everyone, just covering bases. We can go with just physicalism from now on, if that's ok).(A) Neither proposal is an attempt to solve scientific problems; (B) instead, they are methodological criteria (not merely "worldviews") for excluding "immaterial" data and "nonphysical" concepts, respectively, from the construction of explanatory models of nature (i.e. phenomena). As such, IMO, materialism and physicalism have been prodigiously effective criteria for centuries despite their respective limitations. — 180 Proof
They are obviously different, they are different senses. So, they experience this thing called shape differently. And one sense has never been used. Sensing are learned skills, just because feeling the shapes doesn't translate into what another completely difference sense experience doesn't mean either one is just a quale.That people who were born blind and recognise an object's shape by touch are not, after becoming able to see, immediately able to recognise an object's shape by sight. This shows that the feel of a sphere isn't like the look of a sphere. — Michael
A. In science, what specifiable problem does "Enformationism" solve falsifiably?
B. In philosophy, what non-trivial, coherent question does "Enformationism" raise without begging any (or translate into a more probative question or questions)? — 180 Proof
And if a red colour is a quality of mental phenomena, not a property of external world objects, and if the apples we see have a red colour, then the apples we see are mental phenomena, not external world objects. — Michael
Of course one can suggest a specific usage for a term that people can then agree to use. That's fine, but your posts read as if the people who disagreed with you are wrong. They didn't understand what the word meant. Those two discussions have quite different tones. Here the common usage tends much more against your sense of how the word should be used, and people were likely responding from that knowledge. I would guess they would react differently if you presented it as a proposal for a unified definition and the one you want. I certainly would have.They may not be distinguished in sloppy common usage, but isn't that the point of sharpening usage: to clarify the underlying logic? — Janus
To me the following does not fit with my description of what certain means...I haven't said otherwise. — Janus
You can't be certain that God exists, because being certain is knowing and the things we can be said to know are things that are inter-subjectively corroborable.
I am taking these questions as expecting the answer should be 'no'.Do you think we can be said to know anything we cannot be certain of? Do you think we can be said to believe anything we do not feel certain of? — Janus
I disagree, though this is semantics and use does vary.You can't be certain that God exists, because being certain is knowing and the things we can be said to know are things that are inter-subjectively corroborable. — Janus
Some people can, others can't. How does one learn how to weed out pathological boy/girlfriends? Some people can't so no one should bother? You can reflect over what attracted you to the person? You can listen to other people's nightmares, you could ask certain questions earlier in the relationship. Here I am using an analogy where intuition and wisdom are involved. Can one rule out one will not end up getting close to another crazy person? Well, probably not completely. But can one improve? Sure. There are all sorts of things we learn to do better that some people cannot or will not try to learn to do better.Yeah sure but how do you prevent yourself from using it terribly? — Skalidris
Right, this is a fairly useless use of the concept. Hurling or implying superiority is unlikly to improve the conversation. On the other hand, I do think many people do develop ways to check their cognitive biases, to varying degrees of success. A lot of psychological concepts, I think, do describe real phenomena. Projection, passive-aggressiveness, narcissism, or even something like the fancy ass sounding Herzberg’s Motivation-Hygiene Theory can easily be abused.How can we ever be sure that the decision we’re making isn’t biased? Biases are unconscious…
I see a lot of people using cognitive bias as some kind of superiority: “I know about cognitive bias and I try to avoid it, and you don’t, so I’m closer to the truth than you are”… And this is exactly the kind of behaviour that kills critical thinking… Or people who use it to take down someone’s defense: “you’re saying that because you’re biased, therefore it doesn’t have any value”… — Skalidris
I don't think this is true, though I would guess it would be hard for either of us to demonstrate our position. I find professional and private interest activities to be fascinating. I don't wake up and find boredom waiting for me and decide to distract myself. I find myself with this great desire to create - I have a few forms of creative activities. At work these are more limited, but they do occur, in my free time I focus on them whenever I can. I also have social desires and so far my interest in people (in general) does not bore me. Some people do, but not people in general. You may argue that I must have so effectively sublimated my fear of boredom that I don't notice the fear is driving my interests and desires. I think I know myself much better than that, though, sure, some people don't. And there are animals who can get bored - the unwalked dog - but once they have something like the kind of life they were made for, they generally do not get bored - oh, the smells, and hey that's a new dog over there - and animals in the wild do have surplus time, heck they even play and explore. Once the old noggin gets big it's curiousity has more potential objects. We like to accomplish things, improve, relate to others. I'd have to live an incredibly long time to get bored as long as I have access to some people I like and find interesting and some media to create for myself and others. There's a life force, I think, and it wants to live and finds things interesting. Curiousity may have killed the cat, but it keeps them from boredom. And we're primates so our curiousity is much more potentially complicated and also social in ways that oxycontin deprived felines will never understand.A pretty face, a noble pursuit, a puzzle, an ounce of pleasure.. we all try to submerge in these entertainments to not face the existential boredom straight on. — schopenhauer1
If you believe it is most likely, you have a belief. If you believe it is or stands a good chance of being most fruitful, you have a belief. You are deciding that these lines are more promisting than those lines of research because you have beliefs. The determination plausibility is a determination bases on belief. Plausible meaning (of an argument or statement) seeming reasonable or probable.What seems most plausible, or likely to be fruitful, could be chosen, without any commitment to believing it is true; and that choice would not be "random", as I see it. — Janus
Actually they do have to believe things. Or they would have little basis to focus their studies. Those not believing would be picking approaches, subjects and hypotheses at random, which would put them at a disadvantage in relation to anyone with a more practical approach. But the truth is they do believe things. That's the reality, if one uses the word in the ways it has been usedScientists don't have to believe anything in order to practice science; they simply have to entertain provisional hypotheses and presuppositions. — Janus
Especially since belief is contrasted with knowledge already, whether one consider's knowledge to be beliefs arrived at rigorously (something along the lines of JTB) or a different category.I believe this may be the objective the OP had in mind. Personally I can't see the sense in defining away a word. If we confine beliefs to those matters about which we are absolutely certain (not even 99.9999999999999%), then no one has any beliefs and we have a spare word. — Isaac
I believe, Isaac, I am on your side of this one. I don't see that believing something to be true entails 100% certainty. Further i don't see how one could even ransack oneself, let alone others, to determine, then, if one met that criterion. It would mean, in my case, that I have no political beliefs at all. I would suddenly lack all sorts of beliefs about my family and friends and certainly people I know less well. Jimmy is kind. Hm, well, I don't know what he is like when he is abroad. Scientists, given their epistemology and methodology, would have to refrain from believing pretty much everything. From saying they believe X. Since they would have to admit that perhaps what seems obvious today may be revised by further research. It's not like a light switch, even one with a third position (half lit). If we say we believe something it means that is our position on something with varying degrees of certainty. But it is the position we take, the conclusion we have drawn, some with greater certainty that others. Sure, some people are damn certain about nearly all their beliefs or at least they think they should feel that way and present themselves that way. I don't see them as the role model for a definition of belief.I just recommend a more nuanced way of speaking about what we are doing when our conviction is not 100%. For example if I say I believe God exists, I would mean that I have no doubt God exists. Or if I believe the butler did it then I would be 100% convinced that the butler did it — Janus
Why 100? If you want to reserve a special word for when one considers the probability 100%, why not another for 99%? One for 51%, one for 32%... What is it about 100% that warrants it's own word? I can't see the advantage of what you're advocating. — Isaac
And fail to read, take seriously, notice counterevidence, anomalies, portions of texts, portions of what is said in the same way. This is cognitive bias. For the purposes of the discussion it doesn't matter much why, it's just that we do it.We withdraw from people who alarm, disturb or confuse us with ideas that don’t make sense to us, and that as a consequence we may feel are harmful or immoral. — Joshs
Which is another way of saying they have biases. Some people can have more than others. But we all have this.In today’s polarized political climate, we spend a lot of time psychoanalyzing our opponents. We say they refuse to accept reality, create fake news, are brainwashed, succumb to shady motives, ignore what they don’t want to hear. What we have a great deal
of difficulty doing is recognizing that a fact only makes the sense it does within a particular account, and people from different backgrounds and histories use different accounts to interpret facts. — Joshs