Why would China step in? Isn't the example of the a) British Empire, b) Soviet Empire and c) US Empire that Afghanistan is not the place to go, if you don't want to kill your empire? — ssu
...a language community is a group of people that uses symbols in a way supportive of their cooperative/coordinated behavior. [...] It is more about the general use of symbols in a way that tends towards the groups continued use of those symbols. — Ennui Elucidator
In part, the reason I am interested in religion is in response to the notion of alienation and the continued isolation of the individual. It is as if we had to go through things like existentialism where we rejected dictated meaning to find the freedom to give meaning to that which was previously imposed. Man is a social beast, after all, and so it may have been a fool’s errand to expect man to define himself against the world rather than to carve himself out from within it. — Ennui Elucidator
Religion, as understood, is totalizing both of necessity and thesis. This isn't to say that everything is religious, but it isn't so dissimilar from the statement that all acts/speech is political speech. — Ennui Elucidator
...don’t you think it a bit odd to divorce “spirit” from “spirituality” in a conversation where I am investigating what use some philosophy people might have for religion without god? [...] So we’ve got people who are happy to do “spirituality” without animation/breath/soul but not religion without god. — Ennui Elucidator
The idea of “spiritual” is really a major problem. It is the biggest bunch of non-sense one can imagine wrapped in a bit of anti-establishmentarianism. Besides the nonsense on its face (transcendence thrown in with some bad metaphysics), it is clearly culturally received conditioning that is not an independent invention (or experience) of the person espousing spirituality. — Ennui Elucidator
...and the meaningful ritual associated with religion is of great assistance in lendi g increased meaning to that celebrating and mourning...Someone is born, you want to celebrate. Someone dies, you want to mourn. Not because either event necessitates such a reaction, but because that is what we have been acculturated to do. — Ennui Elucidator
Indeed, for all we Indo-Europeans! Old "Dyeus Phter" has had more incarnations over the years than you can shake a stick at. In a roundabout way, this kind of makes sense. Without our weak little yellow dwarf of a star, there would be no life at all around here.But if we are looking for exaltation in issues of ultimate concern, for Australians I think the sun is our spiritual centre. — Banno
How so...how is that thought to work? I am unfamiliar with such a theory.Instead, memory is a reconstructive process. — Joshs
The computing analogy is useful here. Bits and bytes of information are stored on a computer hard drive or other storage device as bipolar charges which can encoded information which can be translated by the software into human languages. The silicon and other media composing the memory chip, and the electrons forming the polarized charges themselves are real things, but the "information" which results from the translation of those strings of charges into human language has no reality outside of the human mind. Facts and ideas only have reality within the mind, and those "mental realities" (for lack of a better term) more-or-less reflect actual, objective reality out in "the universe".I think this pretty much says it all. From what I've seen, computer scientists tend to view information as physical. What they do is called information technology. — baker
The key is, that the creation of information involves abstracting data from phenomena
— Michael Zwingli
Which data? — Prishon
But, Harry, the information and the cause are distinct entities; the reality of the latter need not impart reality to the former. I would define "information" as "any mental abstraction of data from the perception of a phenomenological object or occurrence which contributes to the evaluation of an entity". What if the entity being evaluated is itself not real? If I were to research, in a dictionary of the supernatural, about the supposed ghost of Dylan Thomas haunting the old Chelsea Hotel in New York City, I would gather much information about this haunting. Even so, I think that we can all agree that there is no ghost of Dylan Thomas haunting the Chelsea...if the object of the information is not real to begin with, then how can the information itself based upon said unreality be real?It is physical because the cause is physical. Is there an actual three-masted Greek ship on the horizon? Yes, or no?
[...]
What has happened is that the cause has triggered a chain of events that results in some physical structure representing the cause in some way. We can say that the information was processed, or changed, in some way, but we can still point to the initial cause as what this new structure refers to. — Harry Hindu
Hahaha...fair enough, but please don't be afraid to actually criticize my statements. After all, somebody needs to check my thinking, lest (my head having a bothersome tendency to swell, unchecked) this "funny monkey" begin to think himself more and more...I have not made any critique or criticized your post. — Alkis Piskas
The vast bulk of memory is stored within the brain. Differing aspects of memory are stored in different parts of the brain. Certain "procedural memories" are stored in the basal ganglia. The major areas involved in the storage of memories are the prefrontal cortex, and the hippocampus. Even so, neuroscientists have been able to make experimental subjects experience memories by stimulation of certain tissues of the body. See here:some memory seems to be stored in cells/tissues outside of the brain, in other parts of the body
— Michael Zwingli
What part of the memorty this is? Where is the remaining memory? You don't mention anything else about memory. Well, these are rhetorical questions, so you don't have to reply because they belong to some other topic. — Alkis Piskas
I think not. Many of the thoughts produced by the brain are engendered by sensory input from the body. Without that sensory input, many human thoughts would not come into being, and the inner "world" that is the sum total of an individual human's thoughts would be very different. While the generation of thoughts occurs within the brain, the impetus for said generation generally comes from the body, thus it is the person as a biological whole who is the thinker...it can only be said that the person, rather than the brain, is thinking, because our thoughts are highly dependent upon the state of our bodies and are continuously effected by neurally transmitted information from our bodies.
— Michael Zwingli
most thought, including all rational thought, interpretative thought and emotive thought, occurs as a result of brain activity
— Michael Zwingli
Aren't these two statements-positions in conflict? — Alkis Piskas
You forgot to include the complementary clause to the second of my statements, which changes the nature of the assertion:This is not the same as saying that thought occurs "within the brain", though.
— Michael Zwingli
It is, therefore, not wrong to say that thought "occurs in the brain"
— Michael Zwingli
Again, aren't these two statements-positions in conflict? — Alkis Piskas
Thoughts are compulsed by the body, and generated within the brain, but are experienced by the person as a whole, as he has emotional and physiological reactions to said thoughts. Don't you think?, but that statement seems to deny the full picture of the human experience of thought. — Michael Zwingli
Yes, of course, but that is an old, tried and true device used by philosophers to illustrate certain points of truth.The brains in a jar are impossible in principle. — Prishon
I notice that I should have said "...does not always reflect the truth of..." Indeed, much of the time our inner world does accurately reflect most aspects of objective reality, but not always. What I mean by this is that human perceptions of reality are always interpretations of the aspects of reality, but are not necessarily true reflections of the realities themselves.The "inner world" does not reflect the truth of the "outer world
— Michael Zwingli
I dont agree. Why not? — Prishon
This is a profound question. The "inner world" does not reflect the truth of the "outer world", which is truth itself...the truth of physical reality. That is why I generally like to refer to said "inner world" as "the/a world" ("the world" when the subjective experience is held in common, and "a/his/her/it's world" otherwise), and to said "outer world" as "the universe" or simply "reality". Even so, for human beings, and from the human perspective, the "world" is every bit as important as the "universe". This having been said, I would estimate that when dealing with matters concerning the individual or group human perspective, the "world" should be placed on an equal footing with the "universe". However, when dealing with questions of ultimate reality, especially with questions of "pure science", the "universe" should be given primacy of place. For instance, we humans cannot, in making our day-to-day decisions, base them upon the absolutely true fact that our bodies, being composed of atoms which themselves are upwards of 90% empty space, are themselves upwards of 90% empty space...Cant we see the inner world as being on equal level with the outer physical world? — Prishon