I wouldn't put it that way, because the inaccuracy predicted by the HUP is much smaller than our ability to perceive. So HUP does not impinge on our reality. — andrewk
And I am simply suggesting that if it is conditionalized solely on someone's knowledge (or lack thereof), background or otherwise, then we should not call it "probability." Again, I recognize that this is a futile quest. — aletheist
Which is to admit this is all an epistemological question and not an ontological one. That is, you're asking how accurate our knowledge is of an event. — Hanover
We can guess what it might be, and you may have a 50% chance of being right but that chance pertains to your guess — Jeremiah
Suppose I've never heard of physics and probability theory, and I (incorrectly) expect the outcome of a large number of coin tosses to be influenced by the force of wishful thinking in the vicinity of the coin.
It seems an ordinary probabilistic or statistical model is a model of something in addition to one's ignorance. — Cabbage Farmer
Physicalism is an updated version of materialism, not the science of physics. It just says that everything is made up of whatever physics posits. Cars being made up of physical parts isn't an issue for materialists. But experience is problematic. — Marchesk
How experience is made up of physical stuff. Saying that meat experiences color, while cars don't because meat, isn't an answer. — Marchesk
An answer that would make the puzzlement go away — Marchesk
Physicalism can't explain why some physical systems have experience and others don't. — Marchesk
You might ask so what, but physicalism is supposed to present a comprehensive ontology. It can't leave anything out and be true. — Marchesk
And so some physical systems have experiences, like my brain/body, and others don't, like my car (which could be smart and drive itself these days) or the rock I kicked.
That's why it remains problematic for physicalism. — Marchesk
I agree that such is the convention. But what do those who use and defend the convention mean when they say that something exists? — Perdidi Corpus
A tempting answer is to say that the visual cortex of the brain generates color. But when the brain is examined, there is no color to be found there, of course. So where is that color experience taking place? — Marchesk
"Where does truth exist?" looks like a question about truth. But is it? Try treating it as a question about how we use the words "truth" and "exist"; so that it morphs into something like "Does the word exist apply to truth?" — Banno
It is except the focus is own conscious experience and not understanding. Arguably, a fair amount of progress has been made in computer understanding with machine translation, image recognition, search algorithms, etc. But no progress whatsoever, far as anyone can tell, has been made on experience. — Marchesk
Yes imagining something would be the best example for this situation I feel. — Rawrren
Do you know of any reasoning as to why some reject intentionality? And if so, how do they then explain what we call 'intentional states & concepts'. — Rawrren
if the phenomenon of politically-driven fact-indifference is a perennial one
&
if a new term has been coined, to refer to this same perennial phenomenon as though it's unprecedented
&
if one is interested in what is new about this situation
then: the phenomenon in question is not 'post-truth' but 'a collection of groups claiming that there is an unprecedented event/era/atmosphere called post-truth' — csalisbury
It's misleading because, as you say, it seems like a truth-apt sentence, being that it looks like most other truth-apt sentences, but it isn't. — Michael
I more or less agree with @jamalrob & @The Great Whatever
"Post-truth" had been seized upon by 'experts' (in the sense jamalrob used the word) at the exact moment their theories and narratives have been shown to be false (the 'surprise' of Brexit & the 2016 US presidential election etc.)
In many cases, then, "post-truth" is literally used to mean 'an atmosphere in which people no longer believe in our narratives and theories after those narratives and theories have been demonstrated to be false" — csalisbury
There is no truth, or if there is, no one can know it, which is just the same. There are always two sides to every story, everything can be doubted, every narrator is most likely corrupt and self-serving. Therefore, the choice of what to believe is not so much rational and empirical as moral. To wit, if you are a patriot, you should assume the attitude of "my country, right or wrong" and believe the self-serving narrative offered by the official news media and patriotic (i.e. loyal) pundits.
No, if something is computable (doesn't encounter the Halting problem), then it is real in some sense. — Question
If something can't be computed then that is indicative of a gap in understanding or that there are some things that are unintelligible. — Question
Now look I am not an a close-minded arsehole — intrapersona
Or am I running in circles in trying to state that all physical laws can be proven to be true — Question
Yeah, I wasn't as clear I ought to have been (and I lost sight myself of my initial strategy.) It's not that the fear of impending torture is a 'problem' itself - the idea is to elicit an explanation of why we should be afraid of such a thing that wouldn't apply equally to a fear of life after death. — csalisbury
And it looks like you have an answer (your intent to naturalize has indeed been obvious, I note neutrally) - self-identity is supervenient on bodily identity (& extrapolating: since the body loses its identity after death, there's nothing left to supervene on.) It will be my body that is tortured; there will be no body after I die.
Is that fair? — csalisbury
Would you be willing to sum up the problem presented as you see it? I'd like to measure my intent against the actual effect, in order to revise and tweak. — csalisbury
If memory is to serve as a condition for selfhood, then it must circumscribe some region - it must draw a line and say: that which happens within this boundary will be preserved in the memory of entity x. If memory is to be the eminence grise behind selfhood, it must also be a drawer of boundaries. And that makes things difficult. Because that which draws the boundary is also that which is to be bounded. — csalisbury
I'm sure personal identity is a psycho-social construct, but such a construct requires a lower-level continuity in order to even get off the ground - The construction of a self-narrative requires some kind of spatio/temporal/experiential boundary (boundary-process?) which excludes certain experiences/elements as candidates for integration in a self-construct and includes others. — csalisbury
And in any case, I don't think the thought experiment I've posed is all that extraordinary. Throughout history, many people have awaited torture. This is a far cry from teleportation. — csalisbury
Instrumental interpretations don't care about ontological commitments. It's a matter of simply approaching the explanation or account as something that works for what it is, where it doesn't matter if it's a fiction or not.
Ontological commmitment interpretations are the opposite, obviously. One takes the explanation or account to be literally picking out things in the world, just as they are. — Terrapin Station
I'm an instrumentalist on some things, and not on other things. I particularly tend to be an instrumentalist with respect to explanations/theories that are mathematical-only (or primarily), or that are more abstract in received view interpretations. — Terrapin Station
If we were to survey physicists, what percetage do you think would say that they buy MWI instrumentally versus buying it as making a realist ontological commitment? — Terrapin Station
The old argument from consensus. — tom
I'd like to cut this rational justification/ emotional response knot and simply say : Nearly all of us would be scared if condemned to torture & we'd be scared because it's going to be us who is tortured. — csalisbury
So, well & good. but personal continuity is an explanandum, not an explanans. We might posit some sort of soul (which, having been posited, drastically lowers any assurance one might have about the impossibility of one's existing after death.) But if, on the other hand, one rejects the idea of a soul, then another explanation must be put forth.
That second explanation is what I was hoping to draw out. — csalisbury
But you weren't experiencing pain or death (beyond the pain of anxious apprehension) waiting. in the hallway, to be caned. So why be frightened? What did the suffering of a boy, not in the hallway, have to do with you? — csalisbury