Referring to a dictionary may be ok for an ordinary Joe Blow or Jane Row but for anyone claiming to be a philosopher it is merely a populorum fallacy. — hks
Neither God nor Aristotle wrote your dictionary. You need to think for yourself. Not simply regurgitate your dictionary. — hks
What makes any explanation necessary or not necessary? — Terrapin Station
Because consciousness is a physiological thing. Mentality is a physiological thing. Experience, what something feels like, is a physiological thing. That was the point of my comment. — Terrapin Station
It would make no sense to say that they're not talking about consciousness as a mental phenomenon, as that's what consciousness is. — Terrapin Station
As before, you can say it how you want to. But you seem to be saying that you’re re-wording it in a way that doesn’t mean anything to you.
Speaking of re-wording, you could say that a proposed implication is an implication if its consequent can be shown to be a re-wording of its antecedent. — Michael Ossipoff
That paper doesn't actually use the terms "asleep" or "awake" — Terrapin Station
I won’t claim to know what “ETA” means. Estimated time of arrival? — Michael Ossipoff
That doesn't mean that Science is useless. — ssu
P2: All human beingshave inherent rightsaward or assign certain 'rights' to one another, among them... — Rank Amateur
I'd say that a proposition is proved if it has been shown that it amounts to a tautology. — Michael Ossipoff
a proposed implication is an implication if it can be shown that its consequent is just another way of saying its antecedent. — Michael Ossipoff
I have not claimed to understand how I make decisions. If you know tell me please :smile: — I like sushi
War is not the optimal solution to any problem, so it is always wrong. — Devans99
Maybe "Matters about which provable things can be said" would be a better way to say what I've meant by "the describable realm". — Michael Ossipoff
Maybe "Matters of fact" should be replaced by "Matters of provable fact" — Michael Ossipoff
I don't agree that knowledge requires any sort of certainty. — Terrapin Station
If we're doing academic work, yes. If we're doing art--writing poetry, writing lyrics, writing fiction, etc, no. — Terrapin Station
I view “philosophy” as being no more than an exploration of the limitations of linguistic understanding and what language means beyond the colloquial use, what it could be, and politically what it is to soon become. — I like sushi
Philosophy is pure human thought without any fallacies, prejudices, or contradictions. — hks
I also came across the following definition (from an esoteric book whose name I can't remember), "Philosophy is the study of facts in their right relation." — BrianW
Normal, well-adjusted humans are different in small ways but similar on all the important issues. So it's possible to define right and wrong in mathematical terms and apply it to all humans. — Devans99
Doing the right thing — Devans99
Abstinence might be another way to test for willpower. — Devans99
High willpower is key to getting the most from life. — Devans99
IQ tests exist. There are various ways of measuring willpower (walking on hot coal for example). So its possible to separate the two. — Devans99
I'm not saying that you can't distinguish (for example) IQ and willpower, but I am saying it's a fruitless endeavour. They belong together. The sense they convey does so as part of a greater whole. — Pattern-chaser
Distinguishing intelligence, wisdom, understanding, and so on, is somewhat dependent on these things actually being distinct in the first place, and I don't think they are — Pattern-chaser
I think IQ and willpower are distinct enough. Willpower is required to make the 'correct' decisions. IQ is required to understand complex situations. — Devans99
I am sure you would agree with this claim that "murder is wrong" — princessofdarkness
I think Intelligence is made up of following two factors: — Devans99
All of our senses are our own creations, relative to our own bodies, and not the window into an external objective world. — Jonah Tobias
All you're saying there is that there is brain activity? Or are you saying that the brain activity in question is something in the vein of thinking, desiring, etc.--those sorts of things? — Terrapin Station
There are people who posit that there is not only unconscious/subconscious brain activity, but that the unconscious brain activity consists of things such as thoughts, desires, concepts, etc. If you don't posit that then that's fine. — Terrapin Station
Just to clarify, the dispute isn't over whether the brain is involved in some way. It obviously is. The dispute is over whether there are mental phenomena occurring that we're not aware of. What are mental phenomena? — Terrapin Station
What's the support of the claim? — Terrapin Station
With the driving example, one thing that's important to point out is that we're not talking about propositional knowledge there, we're talking about "how to" knowledge at best--in other words, the ability to do something. In that scenario, by saying that it's evidence of subconscious mental content, you're ruling out that it can simply be akin to "muscle memory," and you're saying that it's necessary to think about it in some sense, just where you're not aware that you're thinking about it. So in the face of a challenge about that, we'd need to be able to provide evidence that there's necessarily something mental about it. — Terrapin Station
believing in the subconscious is something powerful but remember the subconscious does not pick up information because it is not fully aware of anything — WhiteNightScales
is there anyone here who does not believe in the subconscious limen? — Ranger