And it's more promising than the religiously influenced fantasies that you're peddling. — S
So bringing up that we haven't excluded some possibility is irrelevant. — Terrapin Station
Empirical claims are not provable. Precluding possibilities is irrelevant to them. So that we haven't precluded a possibility in the context of an empirical claim is a red herring. It has nothing to do with support for an empirical claim, nothing to do with reasons to believe one claim over another, etc. — Terrapin Station
Sure. So, are empirical claims provable? — Terrapin Station
If we were to preclude all possibilities but one, that would be a proof, correct? — Terrapin Station
Even if it's possible, absent any evidence, it's a possibility that only fools would take seriously. So you're fighting a losing battle here. — S
If we've precluded all possibilities but one, then that one thing can't be wrong, no? — Terrapin Station
By the complete absence of evidence of it occurring elsewhere. That's the same way that we know that Led Zeppelin music only occurs on Earth. — Terrapin Station
That's not at all the case. Consciousness is very clearly a subset of brain function. — Terrapin Station
I definitely do not choose any stance because I like it. In fact, I'd often prefer that other things were true. I choose stances based on what's the case. — Terrapin Station
I know, at least, that one has a better chance of obtaining it through a means other than those known to be faulty, such as wishful thinking and confirmation bias. You want there to be a God, and, lo and behold, you interpret the science so as to lead to God. That's not the approach of a seeker of truth, that's the approach of someone who is out to indulge in pleasing deception, whether consciously or unconsciously. — S
S thinks that analytical philosophy is superior to continental philosophy, and that the 17th and 18th century philosophers did nothing of note. I don’t know why I engage with him. He isn’t about discovery, about the world or about himself. He seems to think that the consensus in the scientific community at any given time is the end all and be all. He has no imagination, and he just parrots back what he has learned from Richard Dawkins and Christopher Hitchens. — Noah Te Stroete
Would you rather hear kind words or harsh truths? — S
I sympathize with your position, but you can't really discuss it with materialists because they disagree with your premises, but then you disagree with theirs so it doesn't lead anywhere. Still I think that people who believe in the primacy of consciousness over matter are usually less narrow-minded. But it's hard to show someone narrow-minded that they are narrow-minded, they have to be willing to let go of their convictions, or at least to tentatively entertain different points of view without reacting strongly right from the beginning against what they don't believe in. — leo
It is a good exercise to try to find the most basic building blocks of the Universe. Science has traced it back to Energy, but you are Speculating that Spirit or what I would call Consciousness is a more fundamental building block. I don't see how you make Energy from Consciousness, but it is a good Speculation. There's nothing wrong with Speculation. You don't need to have all the answers to have a Speculative Insight. Maybe just the thought that Energy and thus Matter are actually made out of Consciousness will inspire some other Mind to discover the answer. By the way, when it comes to Consciousness all we have is Speculation because nobody — SteveKlinko
S, has nothing to teach. I suggest, learning from someone else if dialectics is your thing. — Wallows
A wonderfully tasty ego boost called "personal attack" gets the rhetorical palate juiced up and ready to go. — creativesoul
Unironically I would give that as the most effective answer to all these questions (especially 9-10), or some other psychedelic like psilocybin. Or rather, attempting to answer these questions oneself while under the influence. I think that would work better than attempting to follow guidelines that were summarized into words. Something to try at least. — leo
I would disagree with the claim that only words have meaning. — creativesoul
At least you can learn, which is more than we can say for 90+ percent of the folks around here. ;-) — Terrapin Station
What you pointed out would be like saying, "Yes, perhaps the sun is warming things, but without a camera, there could be no photographs." — Terrapin Station
In that trying, beware the bane of speculative philosophy.....the dreaded, but nonetheless ever-present, categorical error. — Mww
Does sunlight not interact with all the places on earth where nobody is looking and that's why the globe is warming? — Razorback kitten
Was my comment about epistemology, or somehow saying anything pro or con what you responded with? — Terrapin Station
So then you understand why it was silly to point out that man-made machines are made through human intentionality, and that they require a conscious mind in design, execution, and interpretation? — S
Because, for example, energy makes no sense without there being something that's in motion or capable of motion. — Terrapin Station
Do you believe that there are properties of things without conscious observers? — Terrapin Station
