But of course, you claim that certain objects in the physical universe, create the conscious universe, but have no clue how or why.
Physics, however, has good arguments how and why. — tom
So, red objects reflect or emit photons of predominately red energy. Humans label photons of this energy (or the black-body spectrum centred on red) as "red". — tom
The ball is red. The redness of the ball begins a causal chain by which certain neurones fire in a human or certain circuits fire in a robot. — tom
I think it was the last sentence that got me off on the track I went on. It seemed like you were saying that the snooker ball actually had the Redness property itself. — SteveKlinko
"Normal" is a word that I have grown to reject using on the basis of ambiguity and inexactness. — Posty McPostface
It's a strange word because it derives its meaning from what is 'abnormal'. — Posty McPostface
1) I see the redness of the snooker ball.
2) I consciously see the redness of the snooker ball.
In what kind of circumstances could the truth of these two statements come apart?
If they are always true or false in the same circumstances, then what is added by talk of consciously seeing anything.
In both cases, it looks like what is being seen is an instances of a visible property and that instance, wherever it is, is no more inside my skull than the snooker ball itself is. — jkg20
Robots and animals can do 1).
Only humans can do 2). — tom
You appear to assert that meaning is the relationship between cause and effect.
Have I understood your position correctly?
Is this offered as a definition of meaning, or an illustrative example of what meaning is? — Pattern-chaser
It is the definition of meaning. — Harry Hindu
Consciousness does not drive the mind, it follows along with a notebook and writes things down. — T Clark
This is a strange conception for me. Do you believe in free will or do you think we’re determined? — Mr Phil O'Sophy
Scientists have no idea how Neural Activity causes or results in the Red experience. Scientists don't actually even know what the Experience of Red is. They also don't even know what the Experiencer is, that is having the Experience. Scientist do not know what they themselves are. Scientists do not yet have a method for studying the Experience or the Experiencer. Scientists understandably then mostly ignore the Experience and the Experiencer. This is the Hard Problem of Consciousness. — SteveKlinko
What you do with words is use them to refer to (communicate) the non-verbal contents of your mind. — Harry Hindu
Put into your terms, the cause is (as you say) an idea in someone else's head, and the effect is an idea in yours. The spoken words are merely transport. — Pattern-chaser
Yes. Cause and effect. I think you might be getting it. — Harry Hindu
↪Pattern-chaser
What? — Banno
Meaning is always assigned by people. — Banno
Tree-rings have no intrinsic meaning. Meaning is assigned arbitrarily to them by humans. Even using tree rings to determine the age of a tree is a human thing: we kill the tree to see how old it was. The rings simply reflect the way the tree grew. They have no intrinsic meaning, and they were not put there for the use of humans. Better, surely, not to assign meaning or use, but simply to observe and enjoy? — Pattern-chaser
The sentiment is right.
Meaning is always assigned by people.
But it's not arbitrary. — Banno
In effect, the sounds you hear are the effect, while the vibrations are part of the cause. The vibrations were caused by a person speaking, which was in turn caused by some idea in their head and their intent to convey that idea. I don't see how this is so difficult to see as a causal process - where the effect (sounds in your head) mean what caused them - the idea in someone else's head. — Harry Hindu
But to treat philosophy as a way of life...is a much larger concern. What does that mean, treat it as a way of life? — Noble Dust
that which actually is — Pattern-chaser
And in what way is that which actually is different from that which is?
And what about that which really is?
I can't believe you walked right in to that one.
Or are you messing with our heads? — Arne
If meaning only existed in our heads and not outside of our heads, then how does the meaning in words get from the writer or speaker's head to the listeners' heads? — Harry Hindu
Calling it a "conscious" experience of red tells me nothing about where the red is. — Arne
↪Pattern-chaser
The universe is everything on my view. All that was. All that is. — creativesoul
"and they were not put there for the use of humans"
I'm just not sure about this last part, I don't know why they were put there, do you? I can't logically exclude the possibility that they were put there for the use of humans just yet. — Tomseltje
No offence intended, but seeing your statement
I prefer philosophy that is useful and meaningful to humans, and I prefer to consider matters relevant to humans, from a human perspective. — Pattern-chaser
I would have expected you would opt for assigned meaning rather than intrinsic meaning, yet you chose differently. I wonder why, got any thoughts on that?
(note, I realize this is a rather personal question, so I'm not expecting you to express the thoughts you may have on this, just whether you gave it some thought yet or not) — Tomseltje
So truth is objective. And 'objectively true' is a tautology, like 'truly true'. — unenlightened
Or actually real? Or really true? Or truly real? Or actually true? — Arne
I use philosophy in pursuit of an ever deepening understanding of the nature of being. My philosophy tool box is going to be full of tools that best enable that pursuit. And if most of those tools come from a particular school of philosophy (a particular hardware store? a particular hardware brand? from a particular hardware department?), then those are the tools that are going to be in my tool box. — Arne
Conscious Space(whatever that is supposed to refer to) is in the universe, right? Everything in the universe is in 'physical' space. Everything that exists does so by virtue of being in physical space. — creativesoul
but you assign meaning to them — Pattern-chaser
once meaning has been assigned, it has meaning I'd argue. — Tomseltje
Perhaps someone of finer vintage can back me up here, but their main shtick was smoking the lowest quality weed known to man, talking about spiritualism/poetry, and having sex; enjoying themselves. It was a political and cultural movement AFAIK, not one based around substance use or abuse. — VagabondSpectre
TomseltjeThat's also where Pattern-chaser goes astray, rightly noticing that we impart meaning to tree rings while also concluding that this means tree rings have no meaning at all- apparently without noticing this contradiction.
Don't look to meaning, look to use: tree rings can be used to dermin the age of a tree. — Banno
Although the age of a tree can be measured by tree rings, this isn't what they mean. I submit that they have no meaning at all. Clouds have no meaning either. Nor do black holes. They just are. — Pattern-chaser
Nonsense, if as you stated
I prefer philosophy that is useful and meaningful to humans, and I prefer to consider matters relevant to humans, from a human perspective. — Pattern-chaser
following it's logical conclusion, you'd have to admit that to humans for who the age of a tree is relevant and know about how trees grow, the three rings indicating the age of the tree have that meaning.
Perhaps you meant that it has no meaning to the tree, but why would you with your preference to consider matters relevant to humans? — Tomseltje
You had the opportunity to be true to your word, but you declined. — tom
What tree rings mean are the age of the tree. — Harry Hindu
"to be useful, a word must refer to something in the world." — Harry Hindu
Where "world" refers to the physical spacetime universe plus the ill-defined and sprawling mass of human culture, in all its wonder, and all its guises? For the latter is where 99% of humans live out 99% of their lives. And some words, those that are often applied and used to describe human culture, or some smaller part of it, are equally ill-defined. I think "meaning" --- in the sense of 'the meaning of life', not 'Many words have more than one meaning' --- is one of these. Human concepts like wisdom, value, and quality are similar in this regard. We all know what they mean, but writing it down in words is next-to-impossible. :brow: — Pattern-chaser
Here you are engaging in anthropomorphism. — Harry Hindu
↪Pattern-chaser
I should note that despite the following, I wouldn't say I follow a single school of philosophy, I often find myself in agreement with incompatible views.
Essentially, it's for the sake of consistency. Consistency is a theoretical virtue, that is, most of the time consistency is a property of a theory which makes the good or better relative to a theory which is otherwise identical save a for a contradiction amongst its assumptions or entailments. The more you pick views and assumptions between schools, the more likely you are to introduce contradictions into your set of beliefs. Of course, one can still find themselves in a school of thought who's tenets are inconsistent or results in a belief system with some other unwanted feature (ad hoc-ness, poor explanatory power, lack of fruitfulness, etc.) — MindForged
No you can't. — tom