I am not sure how you got that out of what I said. I think that we can hear the joy in the song of birds, they are not reflectively aware, they simply are. Shelley kinda nailed it. — Cavacava
As I suggested to ND I think it might be in their tweet. — Cavacava
I think they can share these senses, these feelings at times but knowledge in my opinion requires conceptualization, determinate concepts, without which there is no understanding, no knowledge. — Cavacava
No. I think all life shares the same world, but each species confronts that world in their own way, utilizing what nature has provided to it according to its own pragmatics. — Cavacava
Don't you think you ought to try for at least a definition of knowledge before you ask people about the varieties of it? Keep in mind I did not say they were different; I did say I distinguished between them. If you locate knowledge in qualia, and qualia is an internal state of some kind, then I imagine that all knowledge is different. We both may be able to identify raspberries in a series of blind tests, but by no means does that lead to the conclusion that our mental states - our qualia - are the same. — tim wood
Granted birds cannot create people knowledge. Can you create bird knowledge? — tim wood
I certainly do distinguish between "knowledge" and "bird knowledge," as well as human knowledge, dog, cat, whale, otter, and every other kind of knowledge. Don't you? — tim wood
Sniffability — Cavacava
As to knowledge, I certainly do distinguish between "knowledge" and "bird knowledge," as well as human knowledge, dog, cat, whale, otter, and every other kind of knowledge. Don't you? — tim wood
How about as genus and species. And I'll tackle the how when you've accounted for human knowledge. Three questions: an sit, quid sit, quale sit, Is it? What is it? What kind is it? Are you denying the third because you haven't dealt with the first two? — tim wood
I dunno. Crows are supposed to be pretty intelligent. Granted birds cannot create people knowledge. Can you create bird knowledge? Perhaps you claim that birds are incapable of knowing. If so, make your case. — tim wood
The point that's getting skipped, here, is How Do You Know? — tim wood
I don't see knowledge in there at all. And even if so, your "knowledge" is just of "what it is like to experience red." That's not the same thing as the experience of red. And what does the experience of red have to do with red itself? — tim wood
Science isn't a method, it's a name for a tradition with a history of changing methods and evolving views of what an object is, how it relates to the scientist attempting to apprehend it , and thus how to achieve objectivity. — Joshs
Clear enough, but this is just definition, and not quite accurate. And it says that red is the name of a judgment made about a feeloing. People may agree that the book is red, but what does that tell us about red in-itself? — tim wood
And again, what makes something "good" or "bad" re evaluative claims is subjective. — numberjohnny5
First off, it's a fact that "explanations" are subjective. There are no objective criteria for what counts as a correct/incorrect or right/wrong "explanation". — numberjohnny5
Superposition states are states too (they are also called "mixed" states, as opposed to "pure" states). — SophistiCat
They do not say that they are speaking precisely and formally in their books. It is only you that says that. The evidence points to the opposite being the case. The absence of equations is a big clue.
In any case, the books are not holy scripture and we are not in the helpless position of those trying to interpret holy scripture and work out what the Author intended. Either mathematical analysis supports a conclusion that there does not exist a single level 1 spacetime lacking a duplicate Earth, rather than the set of such spacetimes merely having measure zero, or it doesn't. If it does, you should be able to point to a rigorous proof of the former. So far you have not done so. — andrewk
I think the cosmological principle allows such exceptions, but just says that the probability of us being that exception is sufficiently infinitesimal to preclude explanations that require us to be that exception. — noAxioms
Really? Empricism is the working principle of science. Why is it that scientists perform experiments if empiricism is a fallacy? — TheMadFool
I'm not saying g = m/s^2. The unit of g is m/s^2. — TheMadFool
Before we discover relationships (laws). — TheMadFool
The general point that I wanted to make is that if there are separate systems with a finite number of possible states between them, then for them to be found in the same state at some moment, they do not have to have identical histories up to that moment — SophistiCat
Well, I cannot answer for Vilenkin or Tegmark, but I think they were speaking informally. — SophistiCat
How we interpret these results depends on how we think about probability. If we interpret probability as a quantitative measure of credence, or degree of belief, then there isn't really a difference between "almost surely" and "surely": in either case, the credence is exactly zero. This failure to make a distinction between possibility and impossibility may be a deficiency of the epistemic interpretation of probability (not to mention the problems of formal probabilistic modeling that have been raised here). — SophistiCat
But if we further think about our concepts of probability and possibility, this might be argued to be a distinction without a difference. We can hardly tell the difference in credence between an event that has a probability of 10-10 in a single trial and one with a probability 10-100. We stop making a difference long before "almost surely". — SophistiCat
There is still a possible/impossible distinction though. But is there, really? If "an event A is impossible" means for you that you should live your life as though A will never happen, then events with an extremely low probability are as good as impossible. You live your life assuming that the air will not suddenly evacuate the room through the window, leaving you choking on the floor, even though science says that such an event is possible (and even has a well-defined, finite probability!) — SophistiCat
If consciousness is a spectrum, then animals would have some sort of limited consciousness. I'm not sure what's sentimental about that. — Noble Dust
Consciousness gives birth to reason, imagination, etc; the things you're using to discuss in this thread. It's the backdrop of you're entire human experience. The bird clearly doesn't have a consciousness as developed as you because it can't reason through arguments the way you can, just as one example. — Noble Dust
I thought you pushed the view that you're married to both of them, a deterministic view.
I just now see Michael's edit where he notes the same view shift. — noAxioms
If they have the same history, and if determinism is the case, then wouldn't they also have the same future? — Michael
I think so:
1. only physical things exist
2. only [things subject to the laws of and principles that physics discovers] exist
3. only [things subject to the laws of and principles that [the science of the fundamental constituents of reality and their interactions] discovers] exist
It's also vacuous. It just amounts to the claim that only the things that exist exist.
Although it seems to me that this doesn't really explain the issue. Surely people make such claims as "the fundamental constituents of reality are immaterial"? And so using the above definition(s), physics is the science of the immaterial, and so physicalism and immaterialism are identical? — Michael
You're being illusive. Wayfarer has a point, and you know the next question.
Countable means you can assign a number to any of these volumes, and to do that they must be distinguished. If they can't be, they're not countable. — noAxioms
If identical state, how can they diverge? You must consider the full set of worlds as the one state, else there is no 'current state' with which another volume can be identical. — noAxioms
Physics being the science of the physical.
Physical is what physics studies. — Πετροκότσυφας
Sorry, my question wasn't worded well. What I meant to ask is; what does it mean for a thing to be a law of physics? Is a law of physics just whatever all things are subject to? That's the second horn of Hempel's dilemma, and makes for physicalism to be circular. Is a law of physics just whatever is part of current physical theories? That's the first horn of Hempel's dilemma, and makes for physicalism to be known to be false as it is known that current physical theories are not a Theory of Everything. — Michael
where I think what he means is "there is almost surely an infinite number of .....". That is, I think he over-simplified his statement, presumably because he wanted to make it more accessible to the non-physicist reader, since it is a non-technical article. — andrewk
You might explain for us hoi polloi how indistinguishable things can be counted, because we would have thought that distinguishing something is a prerequisite for counting it. — Wayfarer
Empiricism!? — TheMadFool
The unit of g is m/s^2...time! has to be measured accurately first. — TheMadFool
Science is empirical. Measurement, time, length, mass, etc. comes first. — TheMadFool
In one post you said there are countably many Hubble volumes, and in another post you said there were uncountably many. Can you clarify this? — fishfry
My understanding of your argument is that at the moment of the creation of the multiverse every possible state gets instantiated.
As I understand it, the argument for that conclusion is probabilistic. — fishfry
I don't understand how you can say this, yet claim you don't understand the idea of countably many coin flips. They're the same mathematical idea. — fishfry
You have countably many regions, or universes, or coin flips. Each region or universe or flip is assigned one out of finitely many possible states. One out of a zillion in the case of physics, or one out of 2 in the case of coin flips, but the math is exactly the same either way. — fishfry
You can't mock the idea of coin flips and then come back with the exact same idea in the guise of countably many universes. There's no mathematical difference between a 2-sided coin or a gazillion-sided coin. If the number of states is finite, then probability theory applies. In the large, it is "almost certain" that all states recur infinitely many times, but it is not absolutely certain. The case of coins or universes are exactly the same. It only depends on there being countably many coins or universes or regions, each taking up one out of at most finitely many states. — fishfry
Yes. If you're going to say a result is established in physics, and is obvious. It should come with either a reference to either the paper or popular science article that establishes it, or a description of the text which suggests it.* — fdrake
Can you provide a reference to the derivation? — fdrake
I have not noticed such an explanation. But it's a long thread and I haven't read it all. Can you please point to one such explanation? — andrewk
Please explain it to me. If there are no measure zero events, then NO distribution of states to universes is possible. Just like if you flip infinitely many coins. Whatever result comes up, that was a measure zero event. — fishfry
If you make a statistical argument on an infinite probability space and you don't take measure zero events into account, you have to say why they're not relevant in the particular case under discussion. If you can't formulate a coherent reply, you don't understand the ideas you're promoting. — fishfry
Neuronal and mental activities have mutual effects, but are incommensurable because physiological activity is a correlate, not a cause, of mental activity. — Galuchat
On the one hand, we may define the physical as whatever is currently explained by our best physical theories, e.g., quantum mechanics, general relativity. Though many would find this definition unsatisfactory, some would accept that we have at least a general understanding of the physical based on these theories, and can use them to assess what is physical and what is not. And therein lies the rub, as a worked-out explanation of mentality currently lies outside the scope of such theories.