To ask a living organism to conceive of death is like ...
— TheMadFool
... stone aged human imagining herself on the Moon looking back at the Earth. Death is ur-counterfactual, the reflection on a mirror darkly from nowhere. An unwanted epiphany of utter oblivion by which every meta-cognitive entity ineluctably calls into question 'being a self'. :death: — 180 Proof
Ludwig Wittgenstein was of the opinion that meaning is use. :chin:
— TheMadFool
More precisely, meaning is use within a language game by players in a community (i.e. form of life). — 180 Proof
Could you explain it? Does the pen suppose to have mind to perceive anything? — Corvus
We have no need to worry about our non-existence, because the personified process of dying and death takes care of everything for us. It's a free service, though various agencies try to collect as much as possible before The End, when we cease forever to produce revenue.
Granted, at times death seems to provide moderately interesting subject matter, but it's always a dead end, so to speak.
As Emily wrote
Because I could not stop for Death –
He kindly stopped for me –
Emily was sure that the horses pulling the carriage in which she and Death rode were headed for eternity. Paradise? Well, she didn't say that, and she could have if she had wanted to. However, Immortality was a third passenger. I don't expect immortality to be in my carriage ride with Death. You can think so if you want -- it won't make any difference, either way, Just my opinion. — Bitter Crank
A striking resemblance, no?
— TheMadFool
Oh, indeed - has the penny dropped? — Banno
If meaning is use, then the meaning of your life is what you do. — Banno
...religion provided one of the most satisfying answers to that existential query.
— TheMadFool
Well, I won't agree with that. Religion perhaps provides a cookie-cutter replacement for meaning. It's for folk who want a prefabricated answer, one that avoids having to be critical or think for oneself. that may be satisfactory for you, but not for me. — Banno
infinitesimals to be precise
— TheMadFool
I suppose physical space might. I'm not saying it does.
But infinitesimals are rarely used as such in math that is not non-standard analysis. However, just recently I employed a step to prove a theorem of sorts in which a second order term was ignored, similar to NSA. — jgill
terminate and exterminate — Prishon
One might say that existential meaning is what we orient to while symbols are what we use to convey meaning. Symbols (or words) do not merely refer (i.e. point) - they can (and often) do something.
So yes, we can mean different things by the symbols we employ, but it isn’t equivocation to treat what meaning we convey with symbols as the same sort of thing that we mean by orienting (or living, if you prefer). — Ennui Elucidator
Was that a lie to quit the subject? — Prishon
A latter day Archimedes, I shout, "eureka!" — Michael Zwingli
"Lord, please situate a table between me and my enemies." — Valentinus
Planck-time (10exp-43(s)) — Prishon
The relationship between the brain and the mind is a significant challenge both philosophically and scientifically. This is because of the difficulty in explaining how mental activities, such as thoughts and emotions, can be implemented by physical structures such as neurons and synapses, or by any other type of physical mechanism. This difficulty was expressed by Gottfried Leibniz in the analogy known as Leibniz's Mill" — Manuel
How does pattern recognition happen? — unenlightened
Ask Nagase — 180 Proof
Either way, definition or claim, it's not an empirical statement. — 180 Proof
Its not that difficult to understand! Everyone says"oöhhh... Quantum field theory..." but actually its very easy.
now — Prishon
inanimate matter -> animate matter -> animate, thinking matter (us) -> the attaining of the Absolute
That's why the ETs are observing us, to see if we can do it. Hence all the wild UFO sensor readings on US military aircraft — Count Timothy von Icarus
Whence logical positivism? 'Verificationism' is not self-consistent enough to verify itself (i.e. "only empirical statements are meaningful" is not an empirical statement and, in its own terms, therefore is not "meaningful" – self-refuting). — 180 Proof
The purpose of wisdom is to improve one's life, and that includes improving one's socio-economic status. Agree? — baker
Yeah, which is why gutters and prisons are full of enlightened people! — baker
Only in the sense that any information we receive is incomplete. Not testing the world - testing our predictive representations of the world. It’s not about whether my predictions ‘come true’ or not, but about whether they are useful in determining future interaction. Incorrect predictions can be just as useful as correct ones. — Possibility
I don’t think that’s what Tim IS saying, but I’ll let him clarify that one. Suffice to say, our minds determine predictions we make in relation to the world, and any relative regularities we perceive construct patterns in our predictions, which inform our actions.
How do you think we perceive relative regularities in a process? How do we even consolidate a process at all? By constructing an abstract representation from a series of periodic observations in the past. So are we really seeing the pattern ‘out there’, or are we perceiving it in our mind and then attributing it to our predictions about the world? — Possibility
(con't) ... AIs engineer grey goo-like nanoviruses released into all of the major urban sprawls on the planet which target only influential people – "movers and shakers" at all strata (as per their online presences / reputations / networks with other influential people) – making them symbiotic hosts the AIs can use as avatars to gradually repurpose global civilization in order to execute AIs' more-than-human (yet unknown / unintelligible to humanity until it's too late to stop it :eyes:) Plan. — 180 Proof
No, seriously - where the hell did that association come from?
If you’re going to make comparisons like that, you’d better be prepared to back it up. — Possibility
least resistance principle, including both space and time — Prishon
We may have them now. How would we know? They'd be too smart to pass a Turing Test and "out" themselves. Watch the movie Ex Machina and take note of the ending. If the Singularity can happen, maybe it's already happened (c1990) and the Dark Web is AIs' "Fortress of Solitude", until ... :victory: :nerd: — 180 Proof
:lol:
I had to look up those words. First I thought you meant a slith or a woman doing it with all.
Both a sloth and glutton are deadly indeed! Considerer them mathematical anomalies... — Prishon