Only the mind can experience duration, unless you have communicated with a rock who told you otherwise. — Rich
So we could decide on whether or not to do it? We have two choices at least? — apokrisis
Then the decision and all the options form a coherent whole, which is one thing, of which the decision-maker is conscious. — BlueBanana
Says who? — T Clark
I would argue that infinity works on the same principles as an infinite regress. Just as something must have caused the last cause, something greater than the greatest conceivable thing can always be conceived.
Rather than God being the greatest conceivable being, it makes more sense to think of God as the only unconceivable being. — The Curiorist
By Variable I meant something which is subject to change.
— bahman
So then your argument is circular. "Things that change require a variable. Why? — fishfry
Because a variable is something subject to change." Circular, right? — fishfry
Besides, aren't constants variables? The function f(x) = 3 is constant, yet x is the independent variable. You are using a technical term with a different meaning than normal but not fully defining your new meaning. — fishfry
Duration is not a feeling.
— bahman
I don't know anyone who cannot close their eyes and feel time passing. — Rich
I deny your premise! — Mitchell
This is just an idea I had inspired by the somewhat limited arguments of Anselm and Aquinas, which seem to contradict each other slightly; if God is the being that than which nothing greater can be conceived, the implication is the God must be infinitely great, so infinity does exist. Therefore, it seems that Aquinas would be wrong in denying the possibility of an infinite regress. — The Curiorist
I think that thinking is an unconscious activity. We just become aware of thoughts when they completely formed.
— bahman
We think in a language. When you are conscious of your thoughts you are aware of the voices inside your head. Let's forget about thinking since you believe it is an unconscious activity.. When we say we are are not doing things consciously, what we really mean is that we aren't focused on what we do. — Purple Pond
I am not sure what is the use of consciousness when all the process for formation of a thought is done unconsciously.
— bahman
So you can vocalize and write precise the thoughts that you are focused on. — Purple Pond
I can derive for miles thinking of other things.
— bahman
I bet you can't do that in your sleep when you are not conscious. — Purple Pond
People say they do things unconsciously when they really mean is they do it without thinking. Were always conscious of our surroundings though we might not be thinking about it. — Purple Pond
If you were totally unconscious when your driving you'd crash the car. — Purple Pond
Time is real and allows change
— bahman
1.Change is necessary for time.
I don't know if this is a misconception but time is associated with change. Look at how the stoppage of time is portrayed in popular culture. In movies time halt is shown as motion/change slowing down and then stopping.
Imagine, as in the movies, everything stops moving/there is no change. If one is to stay true to the change-time paradigm, then time should stop or become nonexistent. — TheMadFool
2. Time is not necessary for change. We can have change without the time. Changes can be viewed as sequences of events without time. — TheMadFool
If "two states must lay on different points", then why is the concept of time needed in the first place. If any body can be expressed as a set of points in space, then any change can be expressed as a change in the arrangement of those points in space...spacetime. — Cavacava
Fine but less than satisfying psychologically because it lacks an ego, which, I think is why we think time flows. — Cavacava
Can you tell us why awareness is needed?
— bahman
Because you can react to being aware of the way the world is rather than stimulus and response (knee jerk reactions). — Purple Pond
Time does not lie on a point.
— Rich
I didn't say so.
— bahman
Actually you did. Read your presentation. You are defining duration as lying between two points. Exactly b what lies between two points? — Rich
It is a psychological feeling imbued in the mind. We feel time pass we do not see it pass and we associate this passage of time with changes in memory.
— Rich
I was not talking about psychological time.
-bahman
Real time is psychological time. Duration is a feeling. There is nothing physical or v spatial about it. — Rich
I think that's confusing the map with the territory. Time, whatever it is, just is. The modeling of time via mathematics requires a variable often labelled 't'. Time existed long before the letter t. Variables are a historically contingent abstract idea of humans. In fact letters of the alphabet used as symbolic variables in mathematical expressions didn't come about till relatively recently, in the 13th or 14th centuries.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_algebra — fishfry
It is interesting to take in views from around the world here in the forum, it takes a degree of vulnerability but the pay off is invaluable. (L) — ArguingWAristotleTiff
Chicago born and raised. Living in the Desert Southwest now. Where are you living now? — ArguingWAristotleTiff
You cannot change the property of a irreducible thing without changing it.
— bahman
What? — BlueBanana
Nope. I am all female 8-) Most folks know me as super nice but I'll let you in on a secret, just between you and me, okay? When I get up in the morning the Devil himself asks: Is that bitch awake already? — ArguingWAristotleTiff
It is a pleasure to meet you~ :D — ArguingWAristotleTiff
I am right and you are wrong!
— bahman
I have a 50/50 chance at getting this right but are you a male? :P — ArguingWAristotleTiff
RE- call. Implies memory. Remember last week?
No memory is internal, but recalls experiences we conceive of as external.
I did not think I could be more obvious in the way I wrote that. — charleton
I agree that not everything we do is through awareness. But there's a lot we can't do unless we are aware. — Purple Pond
This is off topic so please lets put it aside.
— bahman
It's not. It's an example how a thing is created without reducing it to anything or building it from anything but by changing its properties. — BlueBanana
1) we have experiences. — charleton
2) we can recall those experiences. — charleton
3) Recalling experience is not the same as experiencing a second time. — charleton
4) If we define experience as interaction with the outside world, then we avoid the confusion of thinking
we are experiencing experience. — charleton
No we recall experience. — charleton
We experience ourselves continually in a way — charleton
BUT...I think it makes more sense to define experience as as an interaction with the outside world, not with just our memories as such. — charleton
Do you want to parse that again?? — charleton
There is evidence from NDE's of consciousness seeming to persist even when the brain itself has no measurable activity. — Wayfarer
Brain is physical therefore brain state is physical state.
— bahman
What kind of physical state is? It's not solid, nor liquid, nor gas. — Purple Pond
That as I mentioned is related to hard problem of consciousness. It is not clear to philosopher that why we need consciousness in order to communicate for example.
— bahman
I don't agree that the so called "hard problem" is harder than the "easy problem". I believe that they are the same problem.
How is consciousness different than awareness? It's hard to imagine how we can communicate properly if we aren't aware of what's going on. — Purple Pond