You could do this (both sound odd to me, to be honest), but this seems like a stipulative definition, in which case it's not clear what the impetus for doing this is. — StreetlightX
Um, no. Providing you understand the terms, you can always demonstrate that 2+3=5. Facts you can never demonstrate. You can exhibit supporting documentation, or make probabilistic arguments, but never more than that. — tim wood
(Imo) you're exactly right. I'll add a refinement that likely you had in mind but that I'll just make more explicit. Truth and fact are different animals. Julius Caesar crossed the Rubicon is a fact. 2+3=5 is true. — tim wood
A fact is a true proposition. Nothing more or less. — Douglas Alan
mystical stuff rarely translates into a road-map towards much useful science. — Sir Philo Sophia
I don't think that is correct. they always came from experimental observations which needed new theory to explain. mystical stuff rarely translates into a road-map towards much useful science. — Sir Philo Sophia
I'm not sure how such ideas further science, but they do support a good spiritual feeling philosophy, which seems in synch with many ancient eastern philosophies. — Sir Philo Sophia
OK, so, in your way of thinking, all humans have about the same level of intelligence (difference only in how much it is expressed) and consciousness which comparable in many ways to the intelligence and consciousness of a rock. — Sir Philo Sophia
so, according to your views, a mentally retarded human (e.g., exhibiting less intelligent activity) has less consciousness than an average human (e.g., exhibiting much more intelligent activity than a retarded one) ? — Sir Philo Sophia
so you are coming from the camp of "God's intelligent design" as explaining our universe and human condition? — Sir Philo Sophia
also, you apparently are saying that you don't think that consciousness requires any level of agency. Have I got you right on that?? — Sir Philo Sophia
what working-in-progress definition of 'intelligence' are you using to make these kinds of statements, in re consciousness? — Sir Philo Sophia
if everything is conscious then how does that help us define it — Sir Philo Sophia
and why are our computers or electronics not conscious, not even the way a mouse is? — Sir Philo Sophia
why would biologically self-propagating be related to consciousness. Maybe you did not mean to say it that way. — Sir Philo Sophia
why would degree of intelligent activity be determined and limited by the degree of 'consciousness'? — Sir Philo Sophia
Clearly, "degree of intelligent activity" is not sufficient. e.g., a rock has zero "intelligent activity" which would mean by you it has zero 'consciousness', but then you say ' consciousness as the awareness-response (interactive) mechanism existent in everything', an apparent contradiction. — Sir Philo Sophia
How about my a virus counter example, which exhibits a high degree of expressed intelligence yet in no way would we say it has consciousness? Virus are not even considered to be alive. — Sir Philo Sophia
1. What is God?
"God is the Supreme Intelligence - First Cause of all things."
The Pantheistic theory makes of God a material being, who, though endowed with a supreme intelligence, would only be on a larger scale what we are on a smaller one. But, as matter is incessantly undergoing transformation, God, if this theory were true, would have no stability. He would be subject to all the vicissitudes, and even to all the needs, of humanity. He would lack one of the essential attributes of the Divinity -viz., unchangeableness. The properties of matter cannot be attributed to God without degrading our idea of the Divinity and all the subtleties of sophistry fail to solve the problem of His essential nature.
We do not know what God is but we know that it is impossible that He should not be and the theory just stated is in contradiction with His most essential attributes. It confounds the Creator with the creation, precisely as though we should consider an ingenious 'machine' to be an integral portion of the mechanican who invented it.
The intelligence of God is revealed in His works, as is that of a painter in his picture but the works of God are no more God Himself than the picture is the artist who conceived and painted it. — ALLAN KARDEC (THE SPIRITS' BOOK - 1857)
Every person, as a self, body, or both, knows they exist. But that knowledge is certainly variable with concern to each one, as a lot of philosophies about proving one's existence have emerged, and are known for their common contradictions.
What's yours? I would like to hear from you. — Unlimiter
But is it certain that the exact thought I am consciously aware right now is happening? — Kranky
Irenaeus, Bishop of Lyon, and others contributed to the idea by the 2nd century, and so did St. Augustine in 412 CE, all drawing on St. Paul. — Bitter Crank
If I say "banks are indivisible" and you reply "cornflakes are indivisible" then you are not addressing me. Sinking in yet? — Bartricks
If you mean by 'consciousness' what I mean by 'mind', then you should use 'mind' not 'consciousness' as I'm the one who's made the argument. This is especially so given that I use 'consciousness' to refer to 'the state of consciousness' (like, you know, everyone else does). — Bartricks
You mean 'imply' not 'infer'. — Bartricks
I argued that indivisibility entails immateriality. — Bartricks
No, I am using the word 'mind' conventionally. It is conventionally used to denote the object that bears our conscious experiences. — Bartricks
If I say "banks are financial institutions and they're corrupt" you are not even addressing me if you say "banks are the sides of rivers and they are wet". — Bartricks
treasuries are financial institutions and they're corrupt.
I mean by 'mind' - the 'object that is bearing our conscious experiences'. — Bartricks
The philosophical debate is over what kind of an object it is - material, or immaterial. — Bartricks
Er, yes, obviously I have a problem because it is false. Baby steps. Consciousness is a mental state. Mental 'state'. That means 'state of mind'. A 'state of mind' is a - ooo wait for it - a. state. of. a. mind. State of a mind, not a mind. State of a mind, not a mind. State of a mind. not a mind. State of a mind. Not a mind.
The mind is the thing. Consciousness is a state of it. Write that out a thousand times. Then tattoo 'mind' on your left hand and 'state of mind' on your right so that you remember that they're distinct. — Bartricks
First, no - if the steering mechanism fails 'I' lose the ability to steer the car. Second - congratulations on completely missing the point. — Bartricks
Er no. I never said "consciousness is indivisible". I said my 'mind' is indivisible. Mind. Not 'consciousness'. Consciousness is a 'state' of a thing, not a thing itself. I am conscious. I am not consciousness.
Oh, sorry, I forgot, you need to go check if 'science' confirms that. — Bartricks
This sort of concept can be a tongue twister and philosophically mere speculation.
If one approaches the question from a spiritual perspective you can go a lot further and consider the absolute. — Punshhh
By refresh-rate, you are referring to the duration of a moment for a human, what we would describe as a few seconds. Or about a second with a fade in and out of a second each side, the past and future?
Also you are saying there are other reset periods, like day length determined by physical circumstances? — Punshhh
How does that follow? If the steering mechanism in my car fails, then I lose the ability to steer the car. — Bartricks