If you listen closely you will hear — WISDOMfromPO-MO
Is "to be a predicate" a predicate? I suppose so, but haven't figured out whether that's problematic. — jorndoe
But "is a fiction" is a predicate, yet fictional things don't exist. — Michael
If someone were to tell me that they saw me in London yesterday then I would be quite right in saying that they didn't see (and couldn't have seen) me in London yesterday because I wasn't there. — Michael
That is a significant difference. "I see the cup on the table" does not imply that "The cup is on the table". Nor is "I see the cup on the table" implied by "The cup is on the table". — Banno
OK. This is a path of philosophical thought worth pursuing. Science and neurologists will not pursue this line of thinking. For them something is wrong and has to be fixed. However, a philosopher, outside of academia, can begin to inquire into new ways of looking at memory and identity that might open up completely new ways of viewing mind, body and spirituality with enormous amount of practical benefits, e.g. how do drugs affect the body's constructive and reconstructive memory mechanisms and are they creating permanent damage? — Rich
OK, so being a bit more obvious: there is a difference between "I see the cup on the table" and "The cup is on the table".
How do you characterise that difference? — Banno
I don't think it is arbitrary; it is the basis of being able to talk about "you" and 'me" in the first place. — John
There is no right or wrong, just differences in what is remembered.
— Rich
I don't agree. When he thinks he is Johan Ek he is wrong.
That is to say, it is Michael Thomas Boatwright who thinks he is Johan Ek. It is not John Ek that others think is Michael Thomas Boatwright. — Banno
Here's the contention again:
An individual is not identified by a substance or a bundle of properties, but in most cases by our treating the individual in a certain way.
If you like, an individual is an individual only because we place it in that role in our language games.
"We" is used here, not "I", so as to show that this does not take place in a private language. — Banno
To each his sufferings: all are men,
Condemned alike to groan;
The tender for another's pain,
The unfeeling for his own.
Yet ah! why should they know their fate?
Since sorrow never comes too late,
And happiness too swiftly flies.
Thought would destroy their paradise.
No more; where ignorance is bliss,
'Tis folly to be wise. — Thomas Gray
Then It seems to have no connection to me, because I was born, Mummy told me.
— unenlightened
Yes, in a common sense of speaking, since that's what people mis-identify the self to be. — Agustino
And we've already established that when we're looking for the self, we're looking for something permanent. — Agustino
the self cannot be reborn, because the self is never born, for whatsoever is born must die. — Agustino
I think it gets confusing when consciousness is thought of as some object that can be made mobile. — Rich
There appears to be a wave-like, cyclical nature moving of processes that move from rest-from-learning-and-creating (sleep/death) and creating/learning (awake/alive) of this process. — Rich
What if the contents and the container are one consciousness together? — Agustino
But, though I don't believe that we're all the same "I", I still don't want to harm other living things, and so the only change, if I were convinced of what you're saying would be that I'd have a stronger argument for vegetarianism...an argument easier to justify to everyone.
...assuming that I could convince others to it as well. It wouldn't help if I couldn't.
And of course that would apply to human-affairs too, all the depredations that are in the news.
But, in those human-affairs matters, and in every matter other than our household's lack of all-the-time vegetarianism, it wouldn't change me one bit, because I already don' t want anyone or anything harmed. — Michael Ossipoff
I beg to offer a counterexample:
A person who never made a mistake never tried anything new.
— Albert Einstein
I believe this is written in the third person. Am I wrong? — Banno
Basically, you're re-defining the word "Me". — Michael Ossipoff
That finger-cut is in your tissue. That's part of you.
That's qualitatively very different from matters involving other bodies. — Michael Ossipoff
The person is necessarily both the body and the structure and process. — La Cuentista
It seems to me that science is just like baking a cake: the whole time that you are following the steps of a recipe you could believe that nothing is going to turn out, but in spite of that you get a cake by following the steps exactly. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
I recall Dawkins or someone describing a paleontologist who was actually a young Earth creationist, but whose PhD dissertation was on the distribution of Mesozoic aquatic reptiles (which, of course, would have to be predicated on an old Earth model). The dissertation was apparently pretty good, despite the guy's not believing what he was propounding. — Arkady
From what I remember of what Eliminative Physicalists say, it's canonical that the valid point of view is the objective, 3rd-person point of view, and animals' experience is fictitious "folk-psychology". — Michael Ossipoff
But the fact that you don't perceive from my point of view, or that of anyone or anything else, is, itself, evidence that you're one individual, one person, one body. — Michael Ossipoff
I don't see how we can separate consciousness from the physical. — La Cuentista
Yes, from his/her point of view, there is no rat's point of view. Of course. — Michael Ossipoff
No evidence for what? There is evidence that I don't feel your pain, and that my senses are limited.What there is no evidence of is that there is some other separation.There's no evidence for that. — Michael Ossipoff
My post indicated no agreement. It just showed you had no place complaining about my using the phrase "our conscious." — Thanatos Sand
Fine, you can do that as much as you like, just like people can ask what makes someone think God isn't in all of us. But those are both metaphysical notions with no foundation in the physical world. Thinking they do is a short-sighted notion. — Thanatos Sand
Sure but you were attributing to it a metaphysical quality it doesn't inherently or conspicuously have, and our conscious cannot physically be separated from our body/brain. — Thanatos Sand
Do we act in bad faith when we get drunk? Is it inauthentic to escape our anxiety and live for a time as if nothing else matters and that we will never die? If so, is there anything wrong with that?
A couple of points in favour of drinking. Drinking can reveal what I'm capable of, at least in social interaction. My quick and surprising response to a question, my ability to avert boring conversations and situations, my responsiveness to people and the environment (clearly I'm thinking here of peak tipsiness rather than the common sequel of oblivion). That feeling of being what you feel you are supposed to be--the feeling, in fact, of being authentically you: — jamalrob
In other words, was/is there a black man/woman who sympathized with white folks? — TheMadFool
What makes you think that this is specifically is the result of a materialist worldview? — Reformed Nihilist
You frame the conception to fit the job. I just don't see what job is best suited to the framing you're proposing. — Reformed Nihilist
I feel like you're trying to go for a "the eye cannot see itself" idea here, but if the thing (or one of the things) that the psyche does is makes conceptual models, then why can't it make one of itself? I'm still missing a step or two here.
And also still fuzzy on how the psyche relates to the previously described spirituality. Does the other thread give insight into that? I haven't had time to dig into that yet. — Reformed Nihilist
