Again, it’s not a matter of agreeing or disagreeing, but seeing the point of the argument you’re taking issue with - which you're not. If the contention is that a camera is the equivalent of, or the same as, the human subject I don't see anything to debate, because it's a simple falsehood. — Wayfarer
Okay then, you should be able to understand that such a strategy is perfectly rational. — Olivier5
In other words, you are making a lot of wild guesses about other people's motives. — Olivier5
Do you respond to each and every post, or do you make choices, like Wayfarer? — Olivier5
Assuming there is such an overlap. — Olivier5
"Things worth responding to" is a slightly different concept from "Things I agree with". — Olivier5
If I see a response worth responding to, I’ll respond to it. — Wayfarer
So now you suddenly dismiss an authoritative source? — Noble Dust
No, the mind of the camera-user is what puts the photo together. They do this first and then take the photo. It's a poor metaphor until you acknowledge this. — Noble Dust
No, the camera is a metaphor in this discussion. Read back if you need to. — Noble Dust
the very thing which weaves all that together into a world is mind, which is not amongst those objects. — Wayfarer
A camera does not film itself; you can't see the camera on film. — Pfhorrest
It has to be fabricated by someone and then set up by someone. Cameras don't crop up in the landscape haphazardly. — Olivier5
The metaphor gets you from A to B, but you have to cast it off once you reach B. This is the classical mistake of analytic thought. — Noble Dust
No, the mind of the camera-user is what puts the photo together. They do this first and then take the photo. It's a poor metaphor until you acknowledge this. — Noble Dust
the very thing which weaves all that together into a world is mind, which is not amongst those objects. — Wayfarer
please be careful or the mods may decide to revert me back to zero. — Jack Cummins
We’ve been exposed to simple arithmetic since Day One, practically, so we don’t notice the fundamentals anymore. That 2+2=4 is a given, but it is merely the empirical proof, a euphemism for experience, that the logical inference “these things conjoined with those things makes a greater thing than either”. — Mww
Guy calls this thing a table. Some other guy comes along, miniaturizes him, takes him way down deep into the table, guy finds nothing but mostly empty space. Does he think his table isn’t what it seems? No, he does not, for he is no longer cognizing the table, but only that which occupies the space relative to himself, which quite obviously does not include his pre-conceived table. — Mww
the judgement arising from them does not conform to them, the judgement is contradictory. — Mww
“...I can think what I please, provided only I do not contradict myself....”
— Mww
So... is the thought that some thought is a contradictory thought subject to the same restrictions? — Isaac — Mww
Interoception. Interesting concept. I never heard of it. Care to elaborate? — Mww
Money equal to a living wage is therefore an essential, not a perk, and all because of nothing less than a historic great theft of lands from the people who lived on them to a minority of (let's be honest) slave owners. — Kenosha Kid
Prisons don't work. Most of the people in them have mental health problems. Throw it away and replace it with a system designed around therapy, with the inmate's access to society dictated by their ability to cope with it, not by their crime or a sentence. — Kenosha Kid
In most cases, voters are better people than politicians, and now we're technologically in a good place, I think more democracy is a good idea. — Kenosha Kid
Integrated recruitment — Kenosha Kid
Probably communists or some sect of paedophile cannibals. — Kenosha Kid
If I understand you right, that's basically what explainable AI is supposed to do: use Bayesian inference to give a likely cause of your output. Which is fine, because at no point is the system actually giving a description of its own state. Funnily enough I was chatting to my new boss about doing exactly this. — Kenosha Kid
“...I can think what I please, provided only I do not contradict myself; that is, provided my conception is a possible thought, though I may be unable to answer for the existence of a corresponding object in the sum of possibilities....” — Mww
How would I trust my knowledge, if there were external influences on it not included in the constituency of the system? — Mww
It is the case that sometimes third-party investigations reveal a physical discrepancy in the mechanics of the system, and sometimes even a rational article the system hadn’t presented to itself, re: “I never thought of it that way”. Even so, when presented with this missing piece, the system must still incorporate it into the compendium of its extant conditions, re: its relevance must still be understood by the system. If it isn’t, it has no power and thus cannot amend the system. — Mww
There is absolutely no empiricism in cognitive metaphysics, it being entirely a rational study under the auspices of logic alone. — Mww
Hence.....for the duration of such temporality, their being missing has no affect. But I see your point. — Mww
I don’t care that there is something (chaotic signals); I want to know if that something is this or that (red, or, bacon, or, gunfire). — Mww
What is "Honey-Do time"? — Isaac
Honey, do take out the trash, please?; Honey, do mow the lawn, please?; Honey, do the dog-poop pickup, please? Etc, etc, etc......... — Mww
if all of them gave some thought to what they are doing instead of running around like headless materialist chicken, they would make faster progress. — Olivier5
even in this ideal situation, all you really get at the end is something equivalent to the state of the first subsystem. You'd still need to report on that somehow which is supposed to be subsystem 2's job. — Kenosha Kid
The map idea is the closest, since it reports on the function of the system as a whole, which is how cacheing works anyway. — Kenosha Kid
There's these no-go areas with no obvious reason to not go there, in fact really compelling reasons to go there. — Kenosha Kid
It's not that you disagree with me, it's that what you're saying is not amenable to reason. — Wayfarer
How could it ever be proven that 'an idea of pain' and 'a pain' are different things, to one prepared to deny it? — Wayfarer
No, it wouldn't cause you difficulty, it would cause you pain. But apparently that can also be denied — Wayfarer
Even when you deny the reality of your own thoughts — Olivier5
The role of neuroscience is not and can never be to replace minds with another "realer" reality. — Olivier5
It could be that our two brains work as mirrors to one another, thus creating a mise en abyme called consciousness. — Olivier5
But a scientist must believe in the capacity of the human mind to understand something. — Olivier5
Any actual real life tangible evidence that I don't have to take on trust? — Protagoras
Well, if yet make the distinction between felt pain and the concept of pain, there’s really no point discussing it. — Wayfarer
A scientist who doesn't trust the human mind's capacity to understand the universe would drop science altogether — Olivier5
You can't say 'oh, there it is, what is that, I will go and look at it.' It's not an object of cognition, but the subject of experience. — Wayfarer
When you have a thought, an experience, a sensation, this doesn't occur to you as an object, obviously. If a rock hits you, then the rock is an object, but the pain it causes you is not an object. Isn't that obvious? — Wayfarer
And you can't say 'well, that pain I feel is actually not pain, it's really the firing of c-fibres.' — Wayfarer
Let someone fasten a paperclip to your earlobe and have you say that. — Wayfarer
Pain is irredemiably first-person. You can't see pain, or weigh it or measure it, only feel it, and only you know how bad that pain is. — Wayfarer
You are quite good at avoiding questions. I repeat: Are you denying the reality of your subjective feelings? — Olivier5
Consider that, if you cannot trust the reality of your feelings, you cannot trust the reality of your thinking either since thinking is in part feeling, sensing, etc. — Olivier5
If you cannot trust the reality of your thinking, you cannot trust science. — Olivier5
How come do you trust science so much if you don't trust thinking? — Olivier5
All the things you mention are objects. You have an I-it relationship to them. — Wayfarer
How could the reality of the subjective feeling be anything other than the reality of the subjective feeling? — Wayfarer
I don't think anyone denies this. — Isaac
You'd be surprised. — Olivier5
Are you denying the reality of your subjective feelings? See point A above. — Olivier5
You asked a question: why is the mind so hard to understand, and I answered you. Now you say that you are in agreement with my answer. — Olivier5
A prerequisite, I would think, is for the mind to acknowledge itself... — Olivier5
Not at all. A metaphor is simply an illustration, a comparison. It is not to be taken literally.
Do I really need to explain such ultra basic literary notions? What's wrong with you brains? — Olivier5
Yes, I completely agree with this but it also makes me think we're speaking at cross purposes. — Kenosha Kid
I was talking more about what precedes that: System A*'s lack of knowledge about itself or the causes of System A's outputs. Yes, it's undoubtedly a cause of rationalisations, of narrative-building, but the absence of information (expressed by those you disapprove of as the immediacy of qualia) are examinable. What we don't know about our phenomenology invites either curiosity or rationalisation. — Kenosha Kid
We were supposed to be going to see Derren Brown tonight. My girlfriend bought me the tickets for my birthday last year but it was cancelled due to Covid. — Kenosha Kid
Turned out, it's this date next year. — Kenosha Kid
Not that hard to imagine, that given sufficient methodological reduction from some undeniable reality, we can actually arrive at some example or other, that represents our cognitive system, such that all the above is explained. Explained but not proven. — Mww
It doesn’t, insofar as they are both post hoc. Yours is post hoc from an external perspective, mine is post hoc from my own internal perspective. — Mww
Which is exactly the problem. I don’t want data contributed exactly because it isn’t part of the process. — Mww
Metaphysics is not and never was a science, hence cannot be examined scientifically. — Mww
Then you are only conscious of the the representation of the transfer, and infer the correspondence between them. — Mww
It is indubitable that whatever is in our heads is not the same as whatever is in the world outside our heads. Doesn’t matter what is, only that what is here is distinct from what is there. — Mww
If you look back, you will find I don’t use the term “mind”. As far as I’m concerned, in the context of this discussion, all I need to talk about is the human cognitive system and its constituency, which cannot include mind. Even if we say the system is metaphysical, and “mind” is metaphysical, doesn’t mean they are the same thing. — Mww
I am aware of the external world simply from being affected by it. — Mww
I don’t need mind to tell me there is something in my visual field. — Mww
Honey-Do time, doncha know. — Mww
Another possibility: you could have say a ring of subsystems each examining the system on the left. Every subsystem will be examined, but none has a picture of the whole, nor can you get any information out of it without introducing another subsystem which isn't being examined. — Kenosha Kid
