Assuming I understand your point correctly, I would argue that the way people should distribute property is through voluntary means. — Tzeentch
Simply put, the state maintains a monopoly on violence, which means any act of resistance will be further cause for violence. Resistance is forbidden.
The thief holds no monopoly on cunning, and I can (fairly easily, I would argue) use my own wits to protect myself against it. Without a monopoly on violence the thief can't stop me from resisting their efforts.
The company holds no monopoly on manipulation, and I can use my mental capacity however I wish to resist the company's influence. — Tzeentch
I distinguish between actions against one's body and action's against one's belongings. The body is the one belonging that irrevocably belongs to the individual, while there can be a debate about the rest. — Tzeentch
Depriving people of their basic life needs, for instance, is in my view on par with actual physical violence, and I would judge it just as harshly. — Tzeentch
I'm not a particularly materialistic person. — Tzeentch
I consider all of that to be unethical as well. But I view physical violence a degree worse than the coercive power of powerful corporations (if only by a little), which is why the physical violence of states is, in my view, not an actual alternative. — Tzeentch
big pharma is problematic, but it becomes inescapable when states start mandating their product. — Tzeentch
If physical violence was off the table completely, protecting one's belongings would be easy enough. I could chain myself to my belongings so that any attempt to seperate me from them would result in an act of physical violence and voilá. — Tzeentch
I can protect myself from a hacker or a thief easily enough. — Tzeentch
While I agree that ever more powerful corporations are a problem on the same line as states, I view states as being equally responsible for that problem, and not as a viable alternative. They're two sides of the same rotten coin. — Tzeentch
Then there's the added dimension that states are actively trying to make me complicit in their misdeeds by forcing me to contribute to their purse. — Tzeentch
I would not judge a person who takes things from others by putting them in situations where they are completely unable to resist any more favorably than a person who takes things by force. — Tzeentch
What you are describing is the state using its extraordinary power to put the individual in a position where they are unable to resist. — Tzeentch
That in itself could be seen as an act of violence (or at the very least belonging in the same category), however it's probably useful to understand that the state's violence is a direct reaction to this act of resistance. — Tzeentch
That the state has means to put the individual in a position where resistance is impossible, is not a redeeming factor to the way states operate. — Tzeentch
I would not judge a person who takes things from others by putting them in situations where they are completely unable to resist any more favorably than a person who takes things by force. — Tzeentch
There are ways other than physical violence against persons with which one could resist, and they would be met swiftly with actual violence against your person by the state. — Tzeentch
If what you said were true we could find the whole of science or mathematics to be flawed. — Janus
Traditions tend to have their own premises, so to reject the entire tradition would be to reject the premises. But if you reject the premises of a tradition then there would no point entering into discussion with those who hold to the premises; you would just wind up talking past one another. — Janus
To reject a tradition is to reject its founding principles. Such a rejection is inevitably dogmatic, since premises are not supported by reason — Janus
No, I'm saying that if people are trying to have what to them would be a productive discussion in, for example, theology you barge in with what amounts to "theology is bullshit" that you will not be contributing to a productive discussion and you will be off-topic. — Janus
in any case even if the uselessness of a whole tradition could be established, that is not going to advance that discipline but rather will demolish it — Janus
Questioning some ideas within a tradition involves accepting the tradition overall and questioning it from within. — Janus
if you think a tradition is wrongheaded then there is no point attempting to discuss its ideas with those who think it is a good tradition because you will be off topic from the start. — Janus
So you think that, for example, you could advance QM by arguing that the whole discipline is useless? — Janus
Well, I don't see how you would get a better insight into the relation between two traditions by rejecting one of them. — Janus
Rejecting a whole tradition as being wrong-headed seems itself to be wrong-headed, in any case. A balanced view sees all traditions as forms of life. I understand that AP is a form of life, that must yield some insight within a certain field of enquiry. — Janus
You won't get far in any field if you call into question the "usefulness" of the entire discipline. — Janus
Yes. Semantic norms. Appropriate and inappropriate use of a flag or siren. — plaque flag
In a discussion of phenomenology's relationship with post-structuralism, for example, would there be any value contributed by a participant who only wanted to argue that neither phenomenology nor post-structuralism can contribute anything of philosophical value? — Janus
Apparently the development of children is outside your field of knowledge. — BC
How many children do you know who have self-taught themselves from pre-literacy and innumeracy, on up to being able to read a newspaper and balance a checkbook? — BC
People who have time to learn and think along their own lines, may very well conclude that there is something defective and oppressive about the ruling class. The ruling class has found that it's nicer to keep us proles busy than having to suppress riots all the time. — BC
most children need help in acquiring the most basic information, like the sounds associated with the alphabet, the manual ability to generate writing, counting, basic arithmetic, and the like. — BC
If you think that self-directed learning won't occur in a typical school, you are probably right. — BC
One could think of them as reciprocal rather than as opposed. — BC
I've given you explanations, newspaper articles, quotes, references and further clarifications. — Vera Mont
It doesn't matter what you or anyone cited — Vera Mont
so the quote was bullshit. — jorndoe
he says it is it. — bert1
Yes he is, actually. He says consciousness is integrated information. — bert1
might want to save the rhetoric/rambling for ehh "less critical audiences"? — jorndoe
That sort of attitude is just not going to get your thread past eight pages. — Banno
I could say that meaning is pointing if that would help? — Jamal
Language builds on itself, so that saying it is so makes it so, or counts as its being so. — Banno
you tried to back him up with more handwaving. One can't fairly accuse others of "vacuous handwaving" while indulging on his own vacuous handwaving. That was the whole point of the two previous posts and I clearly stated so. — neomac
Suggesting a vague relation between what I’m asking now and what you reported in the past, doesn’t prove that you already offered evidences to answer my question. — neomac
I claimed “I abundantly argued” and that’s a fact. I didn’t claim you agreed or you found my arguments persuasive or that the magical expected effect was changing your mind. — neomac
A part from the fact that you were talking about calculations not me and that your defence of Baden’s accusations of “handwaving” against me is handwaving in all sorts of directions, but the point is that there is no way to get rid of the speculative and approximative dimension of geopolitical and moral considerations. That’s why a pretentious accusation of “vacuous handwaving” (or “give me the metrics“ or “no shred of evidence”) which you tried so clumsily to defend, is doomed to be self-defeating. — neomac
In this thread, we have abundantly seen how problematic is to talk about “demonstrable effect” depending on the nature of the facts (e.g. an accounting of the victims of an ongoing war), the reliability of the source of information (e.g. if it’s mainstream or not mainstream, if it comes from Russia or Western sources of information etc.), the time range in which one wants to see the effects (the chain of effects is in principle endless which can cumulate and clash in unpredictable ways), the relevance of such effects (there might be all sorts of effects not all equally relevant for all interested parties, e.g. not all Ukrainians and Russians think that nationalities are just flags), the explanatory power presupposed by “effects” and “policies” (depending on the estimated counterfactuals, and implied responsibilities), and so on. — neomac
“Diplomacy” requires leverage namely exploiting or exploitable dependencies over often unfairly distributed scarce resources (related to market opportunities, commodities at a cheaper price, or economic retaliation, military deterrence/escalation, territorial concessions, etc.) — neomac
“Sustainable development” and “fair trade“ presuppose public infrastructures, compliance to contracts, a financing flow efficiently allocated to say the least which all require a massive concentration of economic and coercive power. — neomac
“International law” and “human rights courts” presuppose the monopoly of a coercive power (the opposite of disarmement) to be enforced or powerful economic leverage (whose effectiveness depends on how unfairly economic resources are distributed) — neomac
“Democratic reforms” can happen only if there is democracy (and assumed we share the notion of “democracy”), so how can democratic reforms happen when one has to deal with non-democratic regimes in building institutions like “International law” and “human rights courts” that should support and protect democratic institutions? — neomac
“Dis-coupling of politics from industrial influence (share holdings and lobbying)” like in China, Russia, North Korea, Iran you mean? Like in the Roman, Mongol, Islamic, Carolingian Empire you mean? Like in some Taliban village or in some aboriginal tribe in the Amazon forest? — neomac
to ensure policies over time one advocates one needs to rely on massive, stable and unequal concentration of power in the hands of few with all related risks in terms of lack of transparency, lack of accountability, exploitation or abuses — neomac
Have you read it? Is it worth it? — T Clark
Albert Einstein couldn't conceive of the leading theories of quantum physics. As you said, that doesn't mean they are wrong. — T Clark
then he just declares that they are the same thing. Which they're not. Integrated information is integrated information. — bert1
Yes. — Vera Mont
Education improves job prospects. — Isaac
Not necessarily. — Vera Mont
No, that's not why. — Vera Mont
Many studies have shown conclusively, definitively, that lacking basic skills... — BC
But the notion of language is wider than English. It's sense-making. Perceptions of the world without words is thought to be a part of our overall meaningful experience -- so meaning, Big-L Language, is still a part of our cognitive apparatus just by the fact that we're able to discriminate at all. There are, after all, parts of the world we had to develop instruments to be able to discriminate. And those instruments get folded into Big-L Language and sense-making. — Moliere
I'm saying it's about conceptual possibility, not someone's actual ability to conceive it. — bert1
I haven't seen any evidence of people conceiving it anyway. — bert1
Something might be conceivable even without anyone to conceive it. It's about possibility. It's more obvious to think of in terms of logical possibility. - (a & -a) was as true 13bn years ago as it is now, no? Same with conceivability. — bert1
The conceivability of the p-zombie just shifts the burden to functionalists to explain why we talk about having experiences when we don't actually have them. — frank
Conceivablility isn't a subjective feat, it's a reasonably public property of propositions. — bert1
I'm saying I've never heard of any cogent explanation for how matter can give rise to consciousness. — Janus
Beethoven symphony, however conceived (Is it the score? Or the playing? Or the sound waves?) are structure and function. — bert1
If you're happy with your definition and explanation, good for you. — bert1
Promissory notes or wrigglin' and squirmin' won't cut it. Present an account or admit you cannot. — Janus
We have a pretty clear physicalist understanding of how, for example, a material object can become hot; by agitation of the molecules. — Janus
Quantum coherence associated with the superpositions of basis vectors in the two representations has been demonstrated to be essential in thermodynamics. The power is completely generated by the coherence work in the spin precession process, while the heat is mainly determined by the coherence heat in the spontaneous emission process.
According to quantum mechanics, all objects can have wave-like properties (see de Broglie waves). For instance, in Young's double-slit experiment electrons can be used in the place of light waves. Each electron's wave-function goes through both slits, and hence has two separate split-beams that contribute to the intensity pattern on a screen. According to standard wave theory[16] these two contributions give rise to an intensity pattern of bright bands due to constructive interference, interlaced with dark bands due to destructive interference, on a downstream screen. This ability to interfere and diffract is related to coherence (classical or quantum) of the waves produced at both slits. The association of an electron with a wave is unique to quantum theory.
When the incident beam is represented by a quantum pure state, the split beams downstream of the two slits are represented as a superposition of the pure states representing each split beam.[17] The quantum description of imperfectly coherent paths is called a mixed state. A perfectly coherent state has a density matrix (also called the "statistical operator") that is a projection onto the pure coherent state and is equivalent to a wave function, while a mixed state is described by a classical probability distribution for the pure states that make up the mixture.
Macroscopic scale quantum coherence leads to novel phenomena, the so-called macroscopic quantum phenomena. For instance, the laser, superconductivity and superfluidity are examples of highly coherent quantum systems whose effects are evident at the macroscopic scale. The macroscopic quantum coherence (off-diagonal long-range order, ODLRO)[18][19] for superfluidity, and laser light, is related to first-order (1-body) coherence/ODLRO, while superconductivity is related to second-order coherence/ODLRO. (For fermions, such as electrons, only even orders of coherence/ODLRO are possible.) For bosons, a Bose–Einstein condensate is an example of a system exhibiting macroscopic quantum coherence through a multiple occupied single-particle state.
The classical electromagnetic field exhibits macroscopic quantum coherence. The most obvious example is the carrier signal for radio and TV. They satisfy Glauber's quantum description of coherence.
Recently M. B. Plenio and co-workers constructed an operational formulation of quantum coherence as a resource theory. They introduced coherence monotones analogous to the entanglement monotones.[20] Quantum coherence has been shown to be equivalent to quantum entanglement[21] in the sense that coherence can be faithfully described as entanglement, and conversely that each entanglement measure corresponds to a coherence measure. — https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coherence_(physics)
I want to float an idea -- What if both experiences of the dress are Directly real? The direct realist is willing to sacrifice the old pedagogical explanation of the law of non-contradiction "Nothing can be black and white all over". Here we have a reason to believe that the dress is black, blue, white, and gold. — Moliere
I might have made progress by the time the topic comes around next. — Dawnstorm
If the position is "consciousness is necessarily explainable by physical/functional accounts", the negation of that is "consciousness is possibly not explainable by physical/functional accounts". — fdrake
If you buy that framing of the debate, anyway. — fdrake
As far as I understand his view, he equates metaphysical possibility with conceivability - or at least takes conceivability as a sufficient condition for metaphysical possibility. Metaphysical necessity is the same as not possibly not true. If you take conception, or the other arguments like Mary's room/inverted qualia/ and all that, as sufficient for establishing metaphysical possibility, then that is actually a negation of the physicalist position. If you grant that it could be true that phenomenal consciousness isn't explainable by physical/functional processes, then if Chalmers is right, that suffices to show that physicalism is false. — fdrake