If you want a non-domain specific answer; an answer to the question of what ensures the connection between thought and being or mind and world — fdrake
I dunno, I don't think that's relevant to the topic at hand. — fdrake
knowledge works as an intersubjective/shared generation of concepts/theories/ideas about stuff which can be more or less adequate. — fdrake
intersubjective procedures (like inquiry, experiment, argument) can reveal the objective aspects of entities — fdrake
While intersubjective procedures (like inquiry, experiment, argument) can reveal the objective aspects of entities, the mechanism of revealing remains objective rather than intersubjective. — fdrake
No. I am saying they are the same thing, I figured you'd get that. — GLEN willows
No. I'm saying they are the same thing. Next I'll say "H20 is water" and you'll say "aha - you had to make a distinction!" — GLEN willows
Oy! I'm a materialist - you know this — GLEN willows
Anyway I've already agreed that consciousness/love/emotions can't be found in the brain. I can't find them, and you can't. Even fMRI's showing areas that light up when one is in love only show blood and electrical signals in your brain - they aren't love itself. — GLEN willows
How much does love weigh? How much do the chemicals that create the feeling of love weigh. — GLEN willows
Option 2: The concept of love - and all it IS is a concept created by neurons firing — GLEN willows
Maybe we'll use a new technique to find them or more likely we'll realize they are sensations we have that correlate with some sort of activity in the brain. — GLEN willows
My question posed at the beginning was what could consciousness be, if not simply a part of the brain? — GLEN willows
There is no such thing as love — GLEN willows
in terms of something that exists outside of the brain. — GLEN willows
love is "more than just a chemical." I hear it a lot from non-academics. But if it is "more" then it has to be dualism, pure and simple? You can't argue "the brain and consciousness are two different things" and then claim you';re not talking about two different things. Can you — GLEN willows
Am I getting annoying? — GLEN willows
I'd express this as that the private experience is irrelevant; it's that the language has a use that gives the utterances meaning. — Banno
I'm saying: that we might, or that we don't, is irrelevant. Isomorphism is not required. — Banno
I don't know what moral mass means — GLEN willows
My argument is simply that - I agree. — GLEN willows
The feeling of love is a result of neurochemical interaction. Eventually science will prove this and we'll know that the "love" isn;t really a thing — GLEN willows
Good question. I'm dubious that it can be maintained, or that it is helpful. — Banno
But how could we possibly know that we "share common understandings"? If there is a private subjective world, then by definition you cannot see into mine, nor I into yours. and it would not be possible to confirm any commonality. — Banno
How can subjectivity be shared? — Banno
I have absolutely no problem with believing (yes it is a belief, as you have opposing beliefs) that love is an outgrowth of brain chemicals. — GLEN willows
What makes you think that love is something floating outside of the brain — GLEN willows
But there can be no evidence of this isomorphism, and so the only direction the argument can go in is from the fact of communication to the supposition of isomorphism. — Banno
I'd go a step further and say that there is no "thing" to be isomorphic, that all we have is the communication. — Banno
You can (I am sure derisively) liken it to the Platonic philosopher-king seeing the forms. — schopenhauer1
The pessimist see it, and are trying to convey it. Thus the non-pessimist doesn't perhaps see this integration of understanding yet. — schopenhauer1
I think you are caught up in concrete arguments. Sometimes people just present their views — schopenhauer1
Sorry - my phrase just means I'm a full reductive materialist. Full stop! — GLEN willows
but that no causal link need be constructed between some physical state or process and a given mind state. So being in love might never be equated to the excitation of specific nerve clusters; and yet remain entirely a result of activity within the mind. — Banno
He is putting pessimism in the spotlight but not fully committing to the conclusions. He entertains the notions and presents the case but is apathetic about it. — schopenhauer1
About being objective.. the name of the book is The Conspiracy Against the Human Race. I'm not sure he's objective here. — schopenhauer1
One can say life itself is a certain set of things on repeat. — schopenhauer1
God forbid! I am not pushing for any particular agenda. How dare you! Are you implying that being a pessimist is in any way more genuine or “grown up” than an optimist!?!? I would NEEEVER say that!
Anyways, so as I was saying.... life is a sexually transmitted terminal disease and if you don't think so you are deluding yourself. These view are being suppressed by all you naïve fools just so you can all continue to suffer in a never ending hell.
What do you MEAN I'm arguing for pessimism? Of course I'm not! Where have I done that!?!?!?! — khaled
My argument is more that the whole belief in a separate consciousness is based on folk psychology....as the Churchlands would suggest. — GLEN willows
But what of people like Chalmers who still cling to a form of dualism. — GLEN willows
If you just mean the brain causes or creates the mind then everyone can agree there I think. — khaled
an integral aspect of the material brain — GLEN willows
and thinks everyone is too deluded to talk about. — Albero
But you cannot complain to your boss or your friends
biology replaced ethics in the sense of providing an account of human obligations. — Banno
1 is false. People I come across have quite the different moral compass when it comes to a variety of issues. I'm still reminded of abortion debates or welfare or government assistance. Folks don't have a moral compass. — Darkneos
2 isn't entirely true and some "immoral" acts are quite legal and people can and do perform and get away with them. Repeatedly. — Darkneos
3 is on you to say why they should even start to begin with. — Darkneos
I do in fact have a basis that murderers should not be punished, mainly that there isn't a basis to begin with when punishing them. — Darkneos
You keep trying to foot the whole thing on me but the reality is that it's on YOU and anyone espousing morality as to why such things are right or wrong to begin with. — Darkneos
Plus isn’t that a fallacy or appealing to popularity? — Darkneos
I mean...when you get down to it the whole thing IS arbitrary and capricious opinion. That’s not my opinion that’s a fact. — Darkneos
But how many times have people done that and it led to ruin? — Darkneos
the choice of words is misleading to say the least because subjectivity has nothing to do with it. Why cause confusion by choosing words that could, like inter"subjectivity"? — TheMadFool
Sarcasm travels poorly online. — baker
Well, an objective X, as I discern it, is intersubjectivity-invariant — 180 Proof
By objective I denote subjectivity [perspective, consensus (intersubjective), language, gauge]–invariance e.g. arithmetic, gravity, boiling point of water, species functional defects of homo sapien sapiens, etc. — 180 Proof
which is wrong because you, yourself said "...Something can be intersubjective and also objective..." — TheMadFool
Then you're misusing the term "intersubjective". — TheMadFool
Then why are we arguing. We're on the same side. — TheMadFool
I'll give you an empirical example to get my point across. If 1 person sees a boat on the horizon, you would be more doubtful than if 10 people had made the same claim. In essence, the rule of thumb for objectivity seems to be more the merrier. Thus my belief that the overlap in moral codes among various culitures and religion points to some objective moral facts that people seem to have intuited. — TheMadFool
To say moral convergence could be intersubjective would mean we already know that morality is subjective. Begging the question situation, no? — TheMadFool
Is it possible for everyone to simultaneously think that something is wrong and it be right anyways and vice versa? If so, then what is the method you use for determining what is moral? — khaled
that all of us see eye to eye on the value of that moral principle can't be a coincidence. — TheMadFool
It really depends on what you mean by objective. If objective just means everyone agrees on it, then yes your statement above would apply (that there is an objective morality).
However if you want to divorce "objective" from "inter-subjective" (as in everyone agrees on it) then your statement doesn't apply. We would just have a hint that there is an "inter-subjective" morality but no reason to think it matches whatever the "objective" morality is. Now, having divorced them, I have no clue how you would ascertain what the "objective" morality is but that's a problem for moral realists. — khaled
big hint that there are objective moral truths that our gut-feelings zero in on, no? — TheMadFool
You maybe right but then how does one distinguish intuitions from knowledge? — TheMadFool