I know you're not creativesoul but was that an example? (:razz:)Surely this will be resolved before 100 pages. — Marchesk
Not if it's good advice. Then it would be good advice.That's quite a condescending remark. — Wayfarer
One can point just as well in an internet forum.I have endeavoured to present, and to stay true to, Buddhist sources throughout this discussion. Insofar as it's 'a discussion', then no, it's not meditation, nor is it living in a Zen monastery, but then, this is an Internet philosophy forum. — Wayfarer
Yes, memory, though it need not be a specific face, it could be memory supported imagined people or things. A landscape that is not a rendering of any particular landscape, viewpoint over a landscape, the artist has seen.By this I take it you mean someone may draw a face or figure from memory, not a model. — Brett
I would say this supports the position I am arguming, in fact I nearly mentioned the cubists, because yes, part of what they are doing is showing that what the realist painters are doing is not copying, but is itself also a style and perhaps not one as real as theirs.To represent the jug in a painting, in what we might call a realistic style, we’re relying on the same laws that manage the way we see things with our own eyes: perspective, depth of field, form, etc. Applied to a painting these are what you might call “tricks” to imitate how we see. Picasso and Braque tore that idea apart. In their cubist paintings they created a way of perceiving that might be considered more truthful because when we look at a jug we know there is a reverse side to it and we have thoughts about jugs and so on. More importantly they did away with the tricks of perspective and depth of field. — Brett
I'm not saying it is a door to understanding creativity, I am saying there is no neutral copying that is not creative. Even what someone might call copying - rendering what I think would naively be called a realist rendition of a thing or person's image - is actually creative. You are making stuff up that that is not 'out there'.So a style can make use of the “tricks” or it can discard them totally. So I don’t think style is a door into understanding creativity or originality. — Brett
I don’t think that quite works as a sentence. If it’s representative then it relies on the “tricks”. No matter what you do, if it’s structured on those “tricks”, it remains a copy of the object. Otherwise you would not recognise it. — Brett
Representative might be better, though this usually includes works of art that look like things we encounter (or can't encounter like unicorns) but which the artist did not work with a model to create. But I think his point was that if one is merely copying, it isn't creative. The creation was all in the thing itself. But the thing itself is generally very different from representative art based on it or representing it. It is creative to manage to represent and how one represents is generally a style, which is creative. I am sure there are some works of art that are direct copies, but they are rare.Call if representative if you want. — Brett
Representative art based on studying the real thing is not copying. If its a study of a bowl of fruit, copying would be putting the bowl of fruit in some futuristic 3d printer and making a direct atomic level copy. The originality of representative art is in how the original thing is conveyed/used/represented. What facets are focused, what ignored, the style. Even 'trying to be realistic' means using tricks of perspective and shading and also choosing amongst possible facets. And it will include a philosophical/aesthetic take on what the thing 'really' looks like. Pointillists and Impressionists could argue they are more realistic than people who use so called realistic ways of conveying what is represented.Wouldn't that just be copying things then and not being original or creative?
To me the word concept refers to abstractions in language. I can imagine thinking in images (taken in a broad sense, not just visual images, iow some kind of sensory collections), but the moment the word 'concept' comes in, to me that includes words at the very least.I think in concepts. — god must be atheist
It's claiming something about everything that is real, rather than a particular thing. If it if real, then it will be like X. But it need no not be like x. The physical (which I would prefer to call the real) is an expanding set in science, as I said earlier, not just in terms of new members, but in terms of what qualities the thing need have or doesn't have.)What does "physical" mean in that sentence? What is the metaphysical claim that (I presume you mean) empiricism isn't caring about there? — Pfhorrest
exactly my point, but it sure sounds like it is saying more. Because it did mean more, openly for a long time, whether used by dualists or monists disagreeing with them. It included claims about substance. And since there is no reason not to just use real or empirically real (though the latter sounds like it is leaving the door open for other types of real) I think it should be dropped.I can't think of what "physical" might even mean besides "empirically real", — Pfhorrest
As far as air, as far as I know that was always included in the physical.other than absurd guesses that don't even track natural usage of the word like "solid". (E.g. is air non-physical unless it turns out to be made of tiny solid billiard ball atoms bouncing around? If all atoms turn out to be fuzzy local excitations of omnipresent fields does that mean even rocks aren't physical?)
Real has no implicit substance claim. Of course for a physicalist they will be synonyms (not assuming you are) but i think at this point 'physical' looks like a metaphysical claim when used in physicalism, but it's not. Or if it is, it has problems since the epistemology that generates it is not making that metaphysical claim. It just offers a route to deciding if things are real without a care whether they are physical or not. And hence things are now considered real without mass or extension, for example.To my mind real and physical are as natural synonyms as moral and ethical. — Pfhorrest
Physical has been an expanding category for a long time. The things that are considered physical are really just the members of what is considered real, regardless of properties. The best case, it seems to me, is the one you are making where if it affects something physical than it is physical. Which ends up, it seems to me replacing properties with relations. That's fine, but then we are using a word with metaphysical property baggage when we are really referring to relations. And it's not just the exotic things like quarks that are exotic since everything is made up of exotic stuff that is not physical in the way we used the word about things like rocks and chairs and as opposed to spiritual or ideal. The problem I have with the word physical it is looks like it is taking a metaphysical stand when it isn't. Further we must assume that all that matters is the impingement on things that we already consider physical (despite whatever we my have found out about their make-up). Which ends up for me circular. Stuff impinges on other stuff. Fine. But real seems more appropriate. If we decide something is real it impinges or affects something else real. Calling this physical sounds like we are taking a stand against other substances. We're not. We are really taking a stand against Rationalism or some other epistemology. Or the idea of knowing purely transcendent stuff.Sure, and applies to everything. Everything behaves in this way: it couples to physical properties and is directly or indirectly observable. And since this meets the criteria of the physical, everything is physical, and nothing is non-physical. That is why the postulate of a non-physical thing or property is absurd. — Kenosha Kid
Where is and what is the image that the brain interprets? Does it make another image of the original image? is that the interpretation?The same can be said about eyeballs. Connect eyeballs to a brain, or a camera to a computer, and then you have interpretations of images. — Harry Hindu
The mechanism is not competitive. This is fussy, but I think there are some slidings or context in the OP. One could argue that the different individual life forms and potentially species or groups may compete for resources or may die and be resources for others. But the mechanism is not competitive. It's not competing against anything.Natural selection is, fundamentally, a competitive mechanism based on only two outcomes; success and failure.
Though most organisms must have other organisms to survive. So the competition is not binary, there is inherent intra and extra species and individual collaboration, even between prey and predator..Natural selection is, fundamentally, a competitive mechanism based on only two outcomes; success and failure. — Benj96
However natural selection is not usurped by these observations. In fact the same selective forces can demonstrate how seemingly cooperative behaviour can develop from selfish individualistic desire to survive. — Benj96
is not correct. It may benfit similar genes in kin, or it may not even one saves a member of another species or a complete stranger at the loss of your own life. IOW you cannot reduce our motives to selfish ones, nor can you say that they benfit theIt still benefits the doer. — Benj96
And if later they are not in those positions or if in some cultures those with power tend not to be psychopaths.....? And in fact tribal leaders have no been, in general, psychopaths.Why is it that psychopaths disproportionately hold high level CEO positions. — Benj96
Are we? That's certainly how some people define success.We are born into a world where we are expected to strive for success : which to most is to have the best of everything; the best wealth, the best recognition, the best popularity and influence. — Benj96
The word itself seems to presume consciousness. I can imagine specific conclusions about consciousness being incorrect or about 'human nature' or ontology coming out of our everyday experience and sense of what consciousness is. But that it is an illusion makes no sense to me just on a semantic level. An illusion is one type of experience. I'd also wonder how they are getting their information such that their words have meaning if not via having been conscious of things, arguments....etc. iow it seems problematic for an empiricist to make that blanket statement, not that a rationalist has it easy eitherillusion
/ɪˈluːʒ(ə)n/
noun
an instance of a wrong or misinterpreted perception of a sensory experience.
If I see someone writhing in pain with evident cause I do not think: all the same, his feelings are hidden from me. — Antony Nickles
I appreciate the effort.I'll do my best. — Isaac
Would this mean then that animals have beliefs?1. Beliefs are not propositions. Beliefs are states of mind equivalent to a tendency to act as if... — Isaac
Does this mean that one cannot come to believe things that are counterintuitive: relativity, for example, or that the earth actually revolves around the sun. If we take the latter case that we can find empirical evidence that this is the case, very few people actually do that. Or that color exist outside us.a) not possible to have a belief which is contrary to the evidence of your senses (beliefs are formed by a neurological process of response to stimuli), and — Isaac
I agree with this. I do think that people can be mistaken about their beliefs. though I think that their other beliefs are propositional, just dissonent with what they want to belief or they have contradictory beliefs (just as one can have contradictory tendencies to act as if.people's stated propositions are not necessarily reflective of their beliefs and it is a category error to develop an understanding of one based on experience of the other (just because people say their 'belief' is based on foundations, doesn't mean it is; just because people say they doubt everything, doesn't mean they do) — Isaac
What was his normative claim?-- this leads to the more general criticism that there is no target of the normative claim, it's like telling people that they ought to breathe. — Isaac
If you belief in the Christian model of faith, you might well do that. At least one is encouraged to by some versions of that faith. Though one might be better off putting on that end of the spectrum 'beliefs that are not supported at and do not seem to fit current models in science, say, or perhaps in general' It could be without the latter part of that. IOW one could try to believe only those things that you can demonstrate or have been demonstrated by experts to be justified OR you could accept things without justification (at least conscious justification one has access to) and ignore counterarguments. i would say most people do this about something.Given my definition in (1), above, I contend that no-one would hold their beliefs were impossible to change even in the light of overwhelming evidence to the contrary, — Isaac
*Exactly. Often I find that it can seem like a person arrives at their beliefs only via science and deduction (from scientific models), when in fact they have a wide range of beliefs arrived at via intuition, authority, unconscious processes. They then expect others to live up to to standards they do not. Now sometimes the belief they are criticizing is some larger concept like God, but in fact they themselves act in the world based on intuition, unconscious process and authority in ways that do directly affect other people.I find that people generally tend to follow that as well, but only until it becomes inconvenient for them, and they often switch to the alternatives when it comes to what standards they hold other people to. — Pfhorrest
Seriously, is that the most charitable interpretation you can come up with. If you actually read my posts with humanitarian care you would see that 1) I never expressed the slightest bit of racism. 2) My concerns were humanitarian and I was critical of the motives of the people involved is making those decisions. So, stop asking me that question. See if you can imagine good motives for having the position I had and have on the war, and you can continue to disagree about what policies and actions would be best.YOU should have supported a war to free them, as I did. What stopped YOU from trying to help the Iraqis? Is it because they are brown? — Paul Edwards
I really don't see how you could know that billions of people supported the war. And now much did those who supported the war, support the war based on false intelligence and lies by the Bush administration.Billions of people the world over should have supported the liberation of Iraq to free them from state-slavery. — Paul Edwards
You want to focus on me and judge me and not focus on what I wrote, for the most part. The people around Bush, as I said before, were perfectly content with Saddam H.'s behavior toward the Kurds and his own people when it was in their interests to do that. These people lied to the American public and the world and whatever support they had was in large part due to those lies.And let's start with you, as a member of the public, who likely expects his own human rights to be protected to the nth degree. — Paul Edwards
It wasn't a war to free them. The justification for the war was because they supposedly had WOMD's or Hussein did. But this was made up intelligence and manipulation. When it was obvious that there were no WOMD's, THEN the goal of the war was for the Iraqi people. Not for oil. Not for military presence in the Middle East, not for no bid billion dollar contracts to Cheney's old companies he still had connections with. Not for enormous money transferred to the private sector in the new more privitized military. The same neo cons, I mean, some of them were exactly the same people, who under Reagan had been quite friendly with Saddam Hussein, even when he used gas on the Kurds - who presumably also deserve sympathy - now demonized Saddam Hussein for the reasons above. He wasn't nice to his people back when they were pro-Hussein, but they used him for their ends at that time and even helped his military and intelligence services. When it became convenient for their ends, they demonized him. And he was easy to demonize, of course.No. Far from it. I believe everyone has the right to live in freedom, including Iraqis, and VERY much supported the 2003 war to free them. — Paul Edwards
We didn't let, we encouraged and certain corporations made money off of it. Arming both sides is not justifiable morally. Given Sadaam, as part of that, high tech computers that could be used in nuclear programs also does not fit.Yes, because the strategy at that time was to let the competing psychopaths fight each other instead of fighting us. — Hippyhead
After intelligence agency warnings that it would happen were ignored. Only after they had done a great deal of damage to at least thousands of people (and they are not finished yet). And only after the Russian took a real aggressive stance in relation to them and also Trump. IOW the regular neocons, including people like Hilary, were not that interested in crushing them. (and I am no Trump fan by the way)Yes, IS was a threat, and so the Islamic State was then effectively crushed. — Hippyhead
Most people on both sides did not give a shit about them. One side created a mass of bs that this was (after no womd were found) the reason they were there and cared. Thus giving them the hypocrisy. But further on the left there was a significant minority who had been concerned about the embargo and the first war and had also long before that been critical of neo-con support for Hussein and other policies harming people in the Middle East.Iraq war critics showed no interest in the Iraqi people before the war, and now that American involvement in Iraq has wound down they again show no interest. — Hippyhead
OK, though you do seem to understand their objections. But then you clearly understand your position better than I do, so perhaps that makes the difference.the dynamics I find odd
— Coben
Me too. — Pfhorrest
The picture made it more clear, and I generally understood.I’m not sure I know what you’re asking, but maybe a picture will clarify my answer anyway: — Pfhorrest
In some way they are doing this, sure. I am saying this in response to what I thought was your assertion that people never do this. They do. People prefer not to have to make choices. They vary in the degree of how much they avoid this and how they avoid this. They vary wildly in this. But people give away power all the time in a diverse set of ways. I am not saying this is right or good or bad or wrong. I am saying people do this. How lovely to not have to figure out WHICH expert is right for example. For example. a family member was sick. She went the normal medicine route at first but after a bit, given their treatment options and prognosis, she went alternative. Most people will not do this. Now she chose an alternative treatment with scientific support and she survived - using the regular doctors to moniter the changes which they did not understand. This took extreme bravery on her part. She decided to trust her abililty to determine which expert to believe. Most people will choose whatever the dominant expert is. Most people do not want to put themselves in a position to be actively responsible: this can be anything from clothes, to how one is supposed to view the opposite sex in one's subculture, to parenting, to health, issues where one can choose between experts or follow the experts of one's team and not think about it much exept to justify after the fact why the choice is the right one.That is impossible. The man who chooses to submit to the will of another is doing so freely and weighing the advantages of doing so. — David Mo
Truly doubtful. The US only allows Israel to have a nuclear arsenal.There's an excellent chance that with Saddam's regime still in power we'd now be witnessing a nuclear arms race exploding across the Middle East. — Hippyhead
See? You haven't the slightest idea what you're talking about, which is why I'm not taking you seriously. A million people were killed in the Iran/Iraq war alone. — Hippyhead
Though the invasion led to the creation of Isis and this was certainly a threat to the neighbors. Further this seems to come in some historical void. The US wanted Iraq to be a threat to its neighbors and encouraged it to fight Iran and gave it the means to do it better or worse really.Instead, today's Iraqi government presents no threat to any of it's neighbors. — Hippyhead