And that article full of jargon is proof that scientists turned matter into life? — Protagoras
The mind is desire and desire is non material but physical. — Protagoras
Science happens in the mind. This may be why science finds it difficult to look at the mind, or even to conceive of it. The eye cannot see itself. — Olivier5
Do you have reason to believe that or no reason to believe it? — Bartricks
Only someone who had control over the laws of Reason would be able to do anything at all. — Bartricks
And that mind would be......omnipotent and omniscient. — Bartricks
So, someone could read my argument and think it is shit. That person would be stupid. There are a lot of them around. — Bartricks
And it is required for omnipotence because the person whose willings constitutively determine what there is reason to do and believe has control over everything. There is nothing they cannot do. — Bartricks
It follows from being omnipotent. To be omnipotent requires being the source of all normative reasons. — Bartricks
If one is a fool, one will reject all of that in some flippant way. — Bartricks
What is a justification made of? Well, a justification is made of God's attitudes. That is, to be 'justified' in believing something is for God to favour you believing it. — Bartricks
they don't know anything about the existence or the non-existence of god. — skyblack
the agnostic view that there is no good reason to think that god doesn't exist. — Banno
I'm talking about a song playing in my head. It has nothing to do with air vibrations — RogueAI
I think the idea that mental states = physical states is contradicted by the simple fact that I can have a song playing in my head while there's no music in my skull — RogueAI
If you are incapable of acknowledging the trivial fact that people have songs in their heads, what more can I say? — RogueAI
What are minds themselves in an idealist system? Are they also projections of a mind? — khaled
No, it's not implausible to actually have a song playing in your head. I have a song playing in my head right now. Do you think it's implausible? Do you think I'm lying or mistaken? — RogueAI
but they're not indicative of a category error, which is what you were claiming before. — RogueAI
In dualism, there are two categories: mental stuff and physical stuff, and the dualist claims that one comes from the other. — RogueAI
That would be fine if there was an explanation for it all, but in the absence of any explanation (and the problem has been around a long time), I think there's a prima facie case for a category error. — RogueAI
What are minds themselves in an idealist system? Are they also projections of a mind? — khaled
The cause of my thought can only be a thought — Mww
never to arrive at the unconditioned cause of any thought. — Mww
That I must use thinking, in order to think to that which causes my thinking, is the epitome of infinite regress. — Mww
Infinite regress. — Mww
Positing the existence of some mind-independent non-conscious stuff doesn't solve any problems. — RogueAI
No, because the idealist says that the cause of your experiences is a mind(s). Everything you experience is a projection of either a coordinated set of minds or a god-head mind — RogueAI
it's not implausible to have a song in your head. It happens all the time. — RogueAI
That I think is a condition of my biology, and to seek its causes, is to necessarily use the very thing already caused. — Mww
I can never ever think to a cause of thinking. — Mww
Better to examine what a thought is, what a thought contains, where it fits in some overall system, rather than its causality. — Mww
I think the idea that mental states = physical states is contradicted by the simple fact that I can have a song playing in my head while there's no music in my skull
— RogueAI
It seems highly implausible that you actually have a song playing in your head. There doesn't seem to be be any source of vibration in there sufficient to make the necessary sounds. Far more likely is that you sometimes have an experience similar to that you have when listening to a song. Since both experiences are mental processes it doesn't seem at all a contradiction. — Isaac
You can measure the intensity of a magnetic field, though. — Olivier5
You can weight matter alright, but you cannot weight the idea that matter is all there is — Olivier5
To re-iterate, a recurring theme in this thread is how to conceive of a non-physical entity such as a mind. I’m saying, the question is misguided, because the mind is not an entity or object of any such analysis. — Wayfarer
Say you decide to disagree with what another poster is saying - that assessment, that weighing up, is the aspect of your activites that is not physical, even if there's some neural activity that is triggered by it. — Wayfarer
So looking at for a mental substance or thing or cause, in that sense, is misplaced. — Wayfarer
What about the insights of mathematicians who solve conjectures and so on? What has physically transpired in those cases? — Wayfarer
1. If x is nonphysical then x violates physical laws — TheMadFool
What dark energy and its implication on the conservation physical laws does is it makes statement 2 above false i.e. it's true that that x violates physical laws & x is physical. — TheMadFool
Considering thoughts aren't physical, how are you ever going to detect that this event has occurred? What do you expect to see when a thought does something? — khaled
10. If x is nonphysical then either x doesn't violate physical laws or x violates physical laws [7 - 9 conditional proof] — TheMadFool
That's one of the vexing problems in ontology. — TheMadFool
You can't do any work with thoughts, at least I haven't heard of such an event having occurred. — TheMadFool
I assume that the "Qualia law" (matter->Qualia) is a law of nature similar to the other laws of nature, thus steady and time-independent. — SolarWind
would mean that the qualia would still have to depend on something else. — SolarWind
What should be that? — SolarWind
There is an infinitesimally narrow gap of realization if someone has EXACTLY the inner configuration of oneself. — SolarWind
Now it would be extremely implausible that a small deviation would lead to a completely different qualia (or no qualia). That would be very discontinuous. — SolarWind
Anything is possible, but that doesn't get us anywhere. — SolarWind
We are faced with the amazing situation of not being able to prove something intuitively true. — SolarWind
Exactly. I cannot know it. But I can accept it as plausible that I am not the exception in the universe. — SolarWind
Which is more probable?
1) I am the only human being who has qualia.
2) There is a principle which material configuration has qualia. — SolarWind
R: Oh, so...when you figure it all out, does that mean I won’t be able to claim I think? — Mww
R: I think.
S: No you don’t. That’s the brain at work. — Mww
It is the other way to eliminate qualia. However, this would mean that ethically speaking, any genocide would be the same as breaking stones. — SolarWind
The body's molecular complexes may be adapted by the evolutionary process for extreme sensitivity to energy fields that haven't even been discovered yet, but which we must honestly admit probably exist. — Enrique
Epiphenomenalism is true and we can prove it:
If there would be a mind effect, this effect could be captured by the physicists, they will eat everything what has an effect and define a force to it.
What remains can only be an epi. Q.e.d. ! — SolarWind
Do you think that some physical effects are not caused sufficiently by physical causes? — khaled
So what is ‘physical’? — Wayfarer
Do you think that some physical effects are not caused sufficiently by physical causes? — khaled
Do you think that some physical effects are not caused sufficiently by physical causes? — khaled