...consider the implications of the term 'idiosyncratic'. Idiosyncratic means 'pertaining to a particular individual' — Wayfarer
In fact, it would also be interesting to elaborate why exactly your example sentence is not philosophical. — Tarskian
That's not a real problem. People who know me don't have any trouble making the distinction. — wonderer1
So now, the changes to humanity are not merely evolutionary (biological), they are personal. The personal is of a different category than the biological (subject to evolutionary forces), just as the biological is of a different category than the chemical. — Fire Ologist
We won’t evolve to be a better society. We have to invent it whole cloth and then constrain any biological instincts or physical forces that frustrate our invention. — Fire Ologist
I don't have much use for the notion of a moral authority. — wonderer1
The way I see it, humanity evolved to remove itself from nature, so now the weak sometimes proliferate, and the strong are kept down, the mutation is ostracized, and evolutionary forces are frustrated. That’s humanity. — Fire Ologist
God as goal has been refuted by science, but replaced with humanity’s self-assessment of “human progress” as goal. — Fire Ologist
An understanding that we have an evolved social primate nature rather than a mythological fallen nature. — wonderer1
"Now ladies and gentlemen, I want you to look straight up. Do you see that? You think what you see is blue, don't you? No, no. It's not blue, it's green." — ucarr
One of our problems is, that could be a quote from any candidate on every side. — Fire Ologist
There is a threat to democracy, but it is division itself. WE are the threat, and how we treat each other. — Fire Ologist
There needs to be more goodwill. Just as a baseline for conversation.
Simple maturity, that gives respect regardless of whether it is earned. — Fire Ologist
...the president cannot create an office. Offices are "established by law", or "Congress may by Law vest the Appointment of such inferior Officers — NOS4A2
To a detached observer, Trump seems a very astute proponent and beneficiary of this identity politics. — Tom Storm
“The most consequential election of our lifetime, with democracy itself hanging in the balance!” (Crowd cheers.) Just like the last election and the three before that. — Fire Ologist
It’s us, dividing against our neighbors and friends, unwilling to think skeptically about our own opinions, or treat opposing views with any good will. — Fire Ologist
Identity politics isn’t progress; it’s a reversion to a time when identity mattered more than thoughts, actions, and behavior. — NOS4A2
Contrary to the narrative, it was Biden’s DOJ who acted like King, creating out of thin air an office with which to investigate his political opponents, like the kings of old. — NOS4A2
The U.S. Office of Special Counsel (OSC) is an independent federal investigative and prosecutorial agency. OSC’s basic authorities come from four federal statutes: the Civil Service Reform Act, the Whistleblower Protection Act, the Hatch Act, and the Uniformed Services Employment & Reemployment Rights Act (USERRA). — The White House
In order to escape from the lower class, you first need to rise through the "kulak" class. — Tarskian
By popular demand, however, the ruling mafia will "liquidate" the kulaks. — Tarskian
...when Trump mounts his post-election coup, you might be waiting for some next hero to show up and save the day. — apokrisis
Does being in possession of Biden's campaign war chest when the music stopped count as a sufficiently Shakespearean-level script? — apokrisis
But why were so many folk dismissing her for being shallow and brittle before the fickle finger of fate had to make its hasty choice? — apokrisis
Just as much as the Democrats, the Republicans have listened to the mob, and they have happily enacted the mob's delusions into law. — Tarskian
I would probably say that the ultimate sacred object is money. — Tom Storm
Who says this? Is this your framing or that of some source. — apokrisis
That is not a powerful argument in my book. — apokrisis
But what the US needs more is something sustainable done about its wealth inequalities and environmental unsustainabilities. The deeply technical issues. — apokrisis
If you just vote for those who look like you – white bread or suitably diverse – then that is how you continue to get what you already got. A country divided by populism rather than agenda. — apokrisis
There is only one party in the United States, the Property Party … and it has two right wings: Republican and Democrat.
Are “convention” and “utility” the antecedents for “things.”? — ucarr
ucarr, what do you mean by “antecedents” here? I think convention and utility are attachments to physical objects. — javi2541997
When we look at the premise: What constitutes an 'object' is entirely a matter of language/convention. There's no physical basis for it., we see that the interface connecting language with physical parts of the natural world is denied. — ucarr
...we see that the interface connecting cognitive language with physical parts of the natural world is denied. — ucarr
This denial raises the question: How does language internally bridge the gap separating it from the referents of the natural world that give it meaning? — ucarr
I don't see a denial of the indicated connection, so it's a question you must answer. — noAxioms
How is my understanding of your quote a mis-reading of it? — ucarr
Well for one, the suggestion is that convention is very much the interface between the physical world and 'object'. Convention comes from language and/or utility. So the interface is not denied, but instead enabled by these things. — noAxioms
Are “convention” and “utility” the antecedents for “things.”? — ucarr
Are you saying ‘object’ is a non-physical construction of the mind? — ucarr
An ideal, which yes, is a construct of the mind. As for it being non-physical, not so keen on that since mind seems to be as physical as anything else. Opinions on this vary of course. — noAxioms
When we look at the premise: What constitutes an 'object' is entirely a matter of language/convention. There's no physical basis for it., we see that the interface connecting language with physical parts of the natural world is denied. — ucarr
Well for one, the suggestion is that convention is very much the interface between the physical world and 'object'. Convention comes from language and/or utility. So the interface is not denied, but instead enabled by these things. — noAxioms
When we look at the premise: What constitutes an 'object' is entirely a matter of language/convention. There's no physical basis for it., we see that the interface connecting language with physical parts of the natural world is denied. — ucarr
"what constitutes an 'object' is entirely a matter of language/convention. There's no physical basis for it." — noAxioms
Is this the premise you're examining? — ucarr
Yes. — noAxioms
Can a sentient being cognize a thing-in-itself without the mediation of language? — ucarr
Any cognition is at some level a language, but I suppose it depends on how 'language' is defined. — noAxioms
Are we outside the language game within the realm of Kant’s noumena?
— ucarr
I believe that the principal way which we distinguish objects is with the sense of sight.
— Metaphysician Undercover
If you read the OP, I'm not asking how we distinguish objects. I'm asking how such distinctions are physical, not just ideals.
I give many examples illustrating what I'm after. — noAxioms
how do we know the gun doesn't know ... — ucarr
Because the gun 'knowing' anything violates the OP. — noAxioms
I could only conclude that what constitutes an 'object' is entirely a matter of language/convention. There's no physical basis for it. I can talk about the blue gutter and that, by convention, identifies an object distinct from the red gutter despite them both being parts of a greater (not separated) pipe. — noAxioms
The poster doesn't burst into flames. It ignites only where the gun is pointed, and spreads from there. So the gun hasn't defined any definition of demarcation, the metal frame has. — noAxioms
So this got me thinking, and I could only conclude that what constitutes an 'object' is entirely a matter of language/convention. There's no physical basis for it. — noAxioms
I'm trying to get a classical device like the fictional phaser to apply its function to a classical object without using language to convey intent. — noAxioms
The biggest hurdle to this this task is fundamentally you are trying to find object in the absence of language, but you have to use language as an instrument to do it. — Fire Ologist
How to design the gun to do the right thing? — noAxioms
I think he meant an algorithm following a pattern of efficiency NOT a moral code (so to speak). It will interpret as it sees fit within the directives it has been given, and gives to itself, in order to achieve set tasks. — I like sushi
I am suggesting that IF AGI comes to be AND it is not conscious this is a very serious problem (more so than a conscious being). — I like sushi
How do we set the goal of achieving Consciousness when we do not really know what Consciousness means to a degree where we can explicitly point towards it as a target? — I like sushi
I assume neither the first nor the last, only AGI's metacognitive "independence". — 180 Proof
I don't think we can "program" AGI so much as train it like we do children and adolescents, mostly, learning from stories and by example — 180 Proof
I suspect we will probably have to wait for 'AGI' to decide for itself whether or not to self-impose moral norms and/or legal constraints and what kind of ethics and/or laws it may create for itself — 180 Proof
My point is that the 'AGI', not humans, will decide whether or not to impose on itself and abide by (some theory of) moral norms, or codes of conduct; besides, its 'sense of responsibility' may or may not be consistent with human responsibility. How or why 'AGI' decides whatever it decides will be done so for its own reasons which humans might or might not be intelligent enough to either grasp or accept. — 180 Proof
Art is any Fictional representation presented to human senses, the sole function of which is to trigger a notable feeling without having recourse to any other explanation/trigger. — ENOAH
We can be as snobby as we want in assessing whether or not American Idol triggers strong, or authentic feelings; good or bad ones; whether its art is creative, original, or ingenious. But we cannot exclude it from the art club. — ENOAH
I look forward to further discussions with you in the future, and feel free to jump back in any time. — Philosophim
I think it is best we agree to disagree at this point; as anything else I say will be a reiteration. — Bob Ross
The summation of the series is 1. It approaches 1 but never quite gets there. It's a limit property. — jgill
Your mistake is that you are looking inside the set for a start point. The start point is not inside the set. It is the question of what caused the entire set. — Philosophim
… you are starting with C (an infinite set that contains all causality) and then treating C as if it is one of its members (k) without realizing it.
“Philosophim, you must remember that the stipulation you gave is that C, which can be whatever you want to call it, is a set of infinite elements containing every cause; so, the only way you can get the result you are wanting (which is that C is a cause and is the set of all causes) is with an incoherent circular dependency: C:={…, C, …}. — Bob Ross
Philosophy proposes a truth based on the logic of reasoning for science to dispose of or confirm. — PoeticUniverse
I hope the T.O.E. fails. — ucarr
You believe goal of physicists' "T.O.E." is to explain "everything"? that it's not just physics but some final (super-natural) metaphysics? I thought the aim was to produce a testable unification of the fundamental forces of nature – to demonstrate they are aspects or modalities of one another – that's formulated into a G.U.T. (which would include QG). What does "everything" have to do with it? That's not physics. How is it even possible to test a purported explanation for "everything"? — 180 Proof
...How is it even possible to test a purported explanation for "everything"? — 180 Proof
Do you count philosophy and even science as modes of storytelling? Philosophy seeking the first beginning of everything and its final end, and the particular sciences drawing shorter/narrower starting points and more precise ends? — Fire Ologist
I wonder if you'e thinking philosophy is always an instance of Chinese boxes? — ucarr
In what sense? That the philosopher doesn’t understand the symbols but can use a manual to create responses that work but have no understanding behind them? Or that the philosopher understands that the symbols are meaningless, and so, when philosophizing, is conducting a meta process while processing the meaningless symbols? — Fire Ologist