the template is information processing in a mind. — Hallucinogen
Nice. Is the following still the case?just a nice, clever man who never did any military service. — Vera Mont
Yes, indeed! And I endorse them wholeheartedly - except for that unfortunate bit about soldiery. — Vera Mont
scraptious — Jamal
Such questions! Here I am, one of 8,000,000,000 people on earth. What on earth could be special about me? Would it make any difference if I did not exist? — George Fisher
I appreciate an u willingly to go over the same arguments hundreds of times. I merely meant to illustTte the appearance of him as I’ve described isn’t a wild thing to hear someone say. — AmadeusD
Bottom line, it's not just about what is said but also about how it is presented. Thoughtfulness has value. — Pantagruel
Interestingly, just listened to a podcast which was a debate between Michael Shermer and Sheldrake.
I thought Sheldrake won the debate, despite basically feeling the same as yourself about his work. Think he and Chalmers could probably figure a more respectable version of his assertions if they cracked heads together. — AmadeusD
Yes, scientific experimentation often involves abstracting and limiting variables from natural contexts in order to isolate and control the factors being studied. — Pantagruel
Then continue to expect me and my like to challenge you.I understand why you think I'm, being dogmatic, but this is my view and I;m sticking to it. — universeness
I disagree.I feel that the burden of explanation being placed on me here is unreasonable. — FrancisRay
Why do you leap to conclusions about a topic you don't study and think is not worth studying. By the time theosophy was invented mysticism had been around for thousands of years. — FrancisRay
I feel it would be best if we ended the discussion.here . since for me it's like wading through treacle and I suspect it's a waste of time.
I hope you won't be offended but I'm going to retire from the thread once I've finished this post.. . — FrancisRay
Unfortunately, my work schedule has become increasingly hectic over the past few months (which is why I haven't been as active here as I once was). — Existential Hope
Yeah, I think we are still a toddler species but words from past humans such as Carl Sagan, continue to reinforce me:I remain doubtful that the foreseeable future will herald a change. — Existential Hope
That's a very fair and good question. I am exchanging with you about these things for two main reasons:I'm sorry you see no value in them, and find it astonishing. I wonder why you're talking to me about these things when you already know enough to know there's no value in them. — FrancisRay
My uncompromising view is that a person who cannot work out that materialism is logically absurd does not have the skills to be a serious philosopher. — FrancisRay
'Cogito ergo sum,' works for me. Why does it not work for you? Solipsism is absolute nonsense IMO, but I agree hard solipsism cannot be falsified but so what? neither can god be falsified! But that does not stop all god posits being highly unlikely to most rational scrutineers.If you're uncertain then try to design an experiment to prove the presence of consciousness. It cannot be done. . — FrancisRay
By reducing conscious states to behaviour one can then claim behaviour is not evidence of consciousness. This is Daniel Dennett's strategy in 'Consciousness Explained'. He can adopt this approach because there is no empirical test for consciousness,but just behaviour that may or may not signify its presence. . , — FrancisRay
Neuroscience studies brains. It is unable to prove that consciousness exists. — FrancisRay
universeness is taking a different approach but I suspect he won't get anywhere philosophically interesting with FrancisRay either because there is no there there – just :sparkle: — 180 Proof
I also hope that we will not forget the pluralism that Swami Vivekananda had espoused in his 1893 speech in Chicago. — Existential Hope
Well put, and perhaps we could also notice that the snake has to make effort, to climb the rope, to show that it's possible even for a snake, to reach a higher viewpoint. This is true, despite the biblical curse on its species, that they must forever slide and slither on their bellies on the ground. Keep climbing snakes! Perhaps if we humans keep doing the same, we can (metaphorically) find more common ground in higher places!Hopefully, the snake will not prevent us from seeing the rope. — Existential Hope
In my opinion, when someone makes an appeal to a particular doctrine they should provide an explanation of what it is being said and how they understand it. Looking back I see 180 Proof makes this point. — Fooloso4
Do you have no concerns that this could be labeled an almost fundamentalist or evanhellical position to take? My 0.0001% credence level that a god exists, is my very important defense against an accusation that I am a fanatical atheist ( folks like @Jamal have accused me of being a fanatic on certain issues in the past.)If we're speaking about Middle Way Buddhism then I'd say 100% sure. I'd bet my life on it. — FrancisRay
I give a similar 0.0001% credence to the proposal that humans have a soul. There is currently zero evidence to support such a claim.In one of his sermons Meister Eckhart, a Christian Bishop, pledges his soul on it. — FrancisRay
For me, this is another example of the 'jumps' you seem to make. Perhaps 'leaps of faith,' might be a more appropriate and less offensive phrase. I think such 'leaps of faith' are based on pure speculation and certainly not any 'knowledge' that Mr Eckhart could have demonstrated as fact.This indicated that his confidence was grounded in knowledge and not speculation. — FrancisRay
I think all mystics are theosophists, and must accept such characters as Rasputin and Aliester Crowley as members. They believe in 'magic,' but I accept that many mystics see the transcendental or the esoteric as hidden (occultist) knowledge about the physics/workings of the universe that scientists have yet to discover. I don't think that this is true in any way, shape or form, but I accept that is a point of view held by many 'mystics.'I don't believe any phenomenon is supernatural and nor do any mystics. — FrancisRay
So, god, the mere product of a speculative human imagination then. If that's the case, then we have common ground in that viewpoint.As for God, in mysticism He is explained as misinterpreted meditative experience. — FrancisRay
'The next step of a proof! Wow! I can only be excited by such a claim! Do you realise that if you have such a proof that 'middle way Buddhism,' IS the facts about the nature and workings of the universe, then you could be up for a Nobel prize in the future?Okay/. Here goes. First - would you agree that all metaphysical questions are undecidable, and that this is because all their extreme answers are logically indefensible? This can be verified from a survey of philosophers, or by working through a number of such questions. If so, then I'll move on the to the next step of a proof. . . . — FrancisRay
Okay. I was providing a starting point for further discussion but did not make this clear. I cannot answer the second part of 180 Proof's question without some preliminary philosophical chat. — FrancisRay
In his book The Continuum Hermann Weyl points out that nobody experiences time. It is created from memories and anticipations, a story we tell ourselves. He draws a careful distinction between the extended 'arithmetical' continuum, which is a theory, and the 'intuitive' continuum, which is extensionless. — FrancisRay
It would be a terrible mistake to image we experience time rather than create it, and it would lead to a deep misunderstanding of mysticism. — FrancisRay
All that would be truly real is the 'Eternal Now' and the 'Forever Here', which is Weyl's 'intuitive' continuum. This is what is discovered in meditation. Thus Meister Eckhart warns us not to become entangled in time. . — FrancisRay
As I have revealed to you, I am indeed a Hindu (and specifically someone who follows Advaita). — Existential Hope
Quite so. the idea is ridiculous. What is not ridiculous is the idea that the Ultimate lies beyond sensory empiricism and so looks exactly like nothing, which is the view I endorse. — FrancisRay
I steer well clear of these sorts of speculations. I stick to metaphysics, where logic and reason are the only deciding factors. — FrancisRay
For instance, it is today fairly uncontentious in the sciences to claim that God does not exist, that space and time do not exist, that consciousness is fundamental and that the source of existence is empirically invisible. As these ideas and others are developed and integrated we come ever closer to the world as described by the Upanishads. The quantum pioneers were well aware of this, albeit that mainstream physics seems to have regressed since then into an entrenched ideological position. . ,.. — FrancisRay
Thank you for the mention. It's been a while. — Existential Hope
You are claiming to know a fact that you cannot possibly know. The recent work by folks like Stuart Hameroff in conjunction with Roger Penrose. An attempt to find common ground between quantum mechanics and human consciousness, demonstrates to me, that we will always tug against your statement above. I think it's unwise to think that the scientific method will never crack at least the 'how' of human consciousness.There is no empirical method for proving that consciousness exists. — FrancisRay
In what way is behaviorism or its past popularity proof that there is no empirical method that can prove consciousness exists? A human beings 'behaviour,' impacted or influenced by the instructions/education/nurture/daily experiences/culture a person was 'raised' within, has little to do with whether or not consciousness exists. Are you suggesting that a newborn human, maintained physically (perhaps by non-communicative machines,) but not interacted with by any other sentient, would not be conscious?This is proved by the past popularity of Behaviorism. — FrancisRay
A science of consciousness would require a study of the actual phenomenon, and not just a lot of speculation. — FrancisRay
The study of the actual phenomenon is called mysticism. — FrancisRay
I find that very often when I speak about mysticism my statements go unquestioned, even when they are very bold, but my sanity is brought into question. — FrancisRay
but I can tell you that I became convinced of the truth of Buddhist doctrine on purely intellectual grounds well before I read a book about it or tried meditation. It's just a matter of doing the sums. — FrancisRay
nowadays it is not unusual for physicists to speak about creation from nothing, the unreality of time, the notion that space is conceptual and so forth. — FrancisRay
Perhaps it is relevant that physics is coming ever closer to the same conception of reality as the mystics, for this suggests that empiricism does at least support the discoveries and realisations of those who explore consciousness. Newton's universe was hopelessly out of step, but with QM and relativity, entanglement and non-locality physics comes into line, as Schrodinger was keen to point out, and nowadays it is not unusual for physicists to speak about creation from nothing, the unreality of time, the notion that space is conceptual and so forth. — FrancisRay
I provided an initial answer and expected a follow up question or some discussion. Instead my answer was dismissed for being new age nonsense. This is a pity, since I find the relationship between the Perennial philosophy and physics fascinating but tricky. — FrancisRay
I'm always happy to debate issues, but I become agitated when people who don't study these issues and seem to have no interest in them waive their arms around and dismiss mysticism as nonsense. Never do they exhibit an understand of what they are dismissing. . — FrancisRay
The question of what the nondual doctrine explains is easy to answer, but the question was what it claims that is testable in physics and this is trickier, since it requires some chat about exactly what counts as testable. — FrancisRay
I'm very much influenced by my encounter with Advaita and (also Buddhist) non-dualism, although that mostly amounts to reading about it, with some regular meditation over periods of years. But I don't think it is an easy thing to explain. — Wayfarer
I'm not here really, having taken a break, but I'll give an answer.
The nondual doctrine translates into metaphysics as a neutral theory. In principle it explains all metaphysical problems and questions. For instance, it explains why metaphysical questions are undecidable. It explains ontology, epistemology, ethics, religion, consciousness, life. death, the universe and everything.
It predicts that all metaphysical questions are undecidable and gives answers for all such questions. It predicts that no scientific data or philosophical argument will ever falsify or refute it, a prediction that is tested every day, albeit only in a negative way.
As it denies the true existence of space-time and that reality has dimensions it seems to be relevant to non=locality, entanglement and other things, as Ulrich Mohrhoff explains in his book 'The World According to Quantum Mechanics'. It predicts the 'hard' problem of consciousness, which arises because it is impossible to disprove the 'advaita' explanation of consciousness. mind and matter. It predicts that science will never discover any substance or essence at the heart of matter/ It also explains (of course) the phenomenon known as 'mysticism'.
I would say that if one understands a neutral theory one understands philosophy, and we don't then we don't. . . — FrancisRay
i. What 'facts of the matter' do "the nondual doctrine of the Perennial Philosophy" explain?
ii. What 'predictions' can be derived from this "Perennial" explanation which can be experimentally falsified? — 180 Proof
from each according to their ability, to each according to their need.
Wealth is an evil concept. — Vera Mont