What ordinary definition of 'everyone' is it true for? — flannel jesus
You don't believe it. You know it to be false. You're just being dishonest. — flannel jesus
I don't think thats the case. There's no ordinary definition of 'everyone' for which it's true. — flannel jesus
Don't admit you're wrong then, just don't say it again because you know it's untrue. — flannel jesus
I understand it perfectly well, it's just untrue. — flannel jesus
"Everyone knows X" - I disagree with this claim.
X and Everyone knows X are not the same claim. I can agree with one and disagree with the other. — flannel jesus
And you have something better that you're basing the "everyone" claim on? What better information than statistics is that? — flannel jesus
It's not some tiny minority. Only 51-52% of professional philosophers are physicalists about the mind. That means up to 48% of philosophers might not think the mind emerges from the brain.
It's not senseless, 52% isn't "everyone" by any reasonable definition. — flannel jesus
And I suppose you're defining "reasonable" as "people who agree with me", which makes it tautologically true, not meaningfully true. — flannel jesus
You now know that not everyone thinks minds emerge from brains, so you have no reason to make the claim again. — flannel jesus
but if you meant the majority of people, (a) you would have said that when I invited you to say what you meant, and you didn't say that, and (b) that would still be incorrect. The majority of people are religious and believe in souls. — flannel jesus
People use "Everyone" "Anyone" to say the majority of people or really anyone in the figure of speech all the time. It just means that it is widely accepted that, it is predominantly fact that, unless you are talking about First-Order logic topics.And you still can't just say "yes, not everyone knows or believes that". How easy would that be to say? — flannel jesus
If someone says 'everyone knows the mind emerges from the brain', do you think that's true, and what do you think that claim means? Corvus said that, I'm curious what you think is the most natural interpretation of that claim. — flannel jesus
I would even say quite the contrary. The possibility and the limits of metaphysics follow from his exposition concerning time, space and consciousness. Just have a look on the paragraph "What Objective Unity of Self-consciousness is". — Pez
The implication I got from reading Corvu's responses was that only brains are conscious, but he might not be saying that. — RogueAI
I would even say quite the contrary. The possibility and the limits of metaphysics follow from his exposition concerning time, space and consciousness. Just have a look on the paragraph "What Objective Unity of Self-consciousness is". — Pez
That's been the question since all the way back here: — flannel jesus
When you claim "everyone knows the mind emerges from the brain", what does everyone mean to you in that sentence? — flannel jesus
"every" is the opposite of vague. It's one of the most well-defined concepts in existence. — flannel jesus
Well, you've already admitted that "everyone" doesn't mean "everyone", so that's a good start. — flannel jesus
But I'll take your reply as a sly way of admitting you were incorrect. Perhaps you're just one of those people who can't say the words "I was incorrect." — flannel jesus
Finally I look at whether a microtubule fractal suggests that electric current plays a part in conventional neurocomputing processes in plants." — RogueAI
it doesn't matter if you agree with them or think their ideas make sense, the point is *not everyone believes the thing you said everyone believes*.
an hour ago — flannel jesus
I can't quite follow or agree with their ideas then. The prime sign of possessing consciousness and mind for a being is demonstrations of its linguistic, rational reasoning capability, and showing the signs of emotional interactions.no, I think they're talking about all consciousness, including human.
People who believe in souls are of course another great example of people who don't think minds emerge from brains. They think minds are in souls. — flannel jesus
I think his point is that aletheia in ancient Greek meaning is different from modern day meaning of truth.Despite not having read the article, I don't think Jan Szaif's point is that Greek had no word for truth. — Lionino
Do you believe in eternal resurrection? That would be a Nietzschean idea, wouldn't it?500 years from now I will come back from the dead and use the word "Heidegger" to describe break-dancing at a beach. Hopefully the academics will talk about that in 600 years. — Lionino
But isn't the mind the panpsychists talking about totally different type from the human mind?Some people are panpsychists who believe consciousness is fundamental rather than emergent. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Panpsychism — flannel jesus
Truly can mean truthfully and rightly too. Truth is an English word for truth. :DTruly in English means "really" all the time, does that mean English has no word for truth? — Lionino
What is your evidence for the claim?But not everyone knows, or agrees, that consciousness emerges from the brain, and not everyone agrees that it's possible for AI to be conscious. — flannel jesus
No I don't accept it. I still believe that everyone (with common sense) knows / agrees that consciousness emerges from the brain.Do you accept that not everyone knows / agrees that consciousness emerges from the brain? — flannel jesus
no, it's even more unclear than before. I didn't write that they're connected, someone else wrote it, and then you agreed with it. Everythings entirely unclear now.
Why are you agreeing with some guy saying they're connected, and then complaining that connected is vague? — flannel jesus