So instead, he suggests that qualia are an illusion. By this, he does not mean the experience of the green leaf itself (or red apple, etc). He just doesn't think the experience has any properties of qualia. It just seems to be that way. — Marchesk
So what accounts for the illusion that conscious experience has properties of qualia? Keith suggests that one the one hand there is the perceptual account. But then there is a separate internal monitoring of the perceptual processes that gives rise to the sense of a rich, internal world. — Marchesk
And the reason for this illusion is to make ourselves and other humans feel special. The seeming hardness is a feature of the illusion, with the implication being one of survival and ethical considerations. — Marchesk
It seems about right to me. In view of evolution (including by-products of gene survival traits) being an explanation for pretty much everything about us, I think it reasonable to suspect the same of our experience. — Down The Rabbit Hole
I am seeking input from anyone that can recall the beginning of the rise of Nazi Germany. I have read the history books, and it seems to bear horrifying similarities to Canada now. — Book273
We are not after Jewish people, but anyone who dares speak out against the lockdown or masking, because clearly, they must be bad people. — Book273
The worst part of it all is that, historically, lockdowns do not work and neither does general masking — Book273
What are the options available to a people when its government is hell bent on grinding them into the ground under the guise of striving for an unattainable goal? — Book273
The Senate and the electoral college are set up in such a way that disadvantages the left. So, when you move left in areas that can result in local gains in liberal areas, you risk the Senate and you risk the electoral college. And I think you know this, so I'm not going to go into detail on it unless you insist on pressing the fantasy that somehow a big heave-ho left would be uniformly politically advantageous. And no, it doesn't matter that left-wing policies are actually popular with the general public because the general public does not decide who runs the country, a small group of voters in states with outsize representation in the Senate and the electoral college do. — Baden
The only way to resolve this conflicts is to appeal to one absolute authority to grant us all absolute morality. — magritte
I would argue that this is antagonistic to the populate conception of morality which is generally isn't seen as a just a concept and generally is seen as relay quite absolute.
For me the burning question is, dose morality as popularly conserved of exist? — Restitutor
I think that the letters M O O that make a word like moo are not identical with the sound but fit the conventional pronunciation assigned to those letters. — Andrew4Handel
In the case of pictures they are similar to what the writer wants someone to understand. — Andrew4Handel
However I don't know how hieroglyphics create sentences or information. — Andrew4Handel
This seems to be basic strategy in philosophy of language to make meaning start with something simple like basic colours, sounds or pictures or pointing and build out from there. But I think this strategy is limited to a small segment of language.
For example how would you represent "Yesterday" in a picture or "The Unconscious".
I am not opposed to this strategy but what puzzles me is how meaning does not seem to reside in letters, words and sounds. — Andrew4Handel
I don't believe there is such a thing as right or wrong. — Unlucky Devil
As I see it there are only actions and every individual will either agree with the action making it good/right to them or disagree with the action making it evil/wrong — Unlucky Devil
My overall point is that morality is flexible dependent on our understanding of a persons acts and the context in which they are carried out. — Unlucky Devil
That is the "program" that I am referring to, which controls their free will. — TheQuestioner
However, I don't think you can disprove my theory. I think that the reasons I have expressed in this post present the possibility that my theory is true, so I will give myself 1/2 point. — TheQuestioner
The laws of probability allows us to see that the "causation chain" must be controlled by an external source that is able to rig the outcome. — TheQuestioner
What are the odds that:
1. The human race could survive all the pandemics and wars that have occurred in the past 6 million years? — TheQuestioner
2. Fallible humans would always make the right decisions to sustain the human race? We sure got lucky in WW2, and with N. Korea. — TheQuestioner
3. Most importantly: Each person reading this overcame the zillion-to-one odds that not only their individual sperm won the 300-million-to-one lottery (in one ejaculation), but all their ancestors won the 300-million-to-one lottery. You, as an individually unique soul, would not be reading this unless the "causation chain" had allowed you to overcome those ridiculous odds. — TheQuestioner
Yet they all believe that reality is what it is.That is the one, and the only constant that does not change in the world view of poeple, no matter what philosophy they subscribe to. — god must be atheist
Without a master plan, humans wouldn't have lasted 100 years. Too many "coincidences" had to happen for the race to last 6 million years. — TheQuestioner
I don't think we just happened to win the evolutionary lottery. I think there is a well-written "program" whose complexity is well beyond our comprehension, which has compelled us to follow an efficient algorithm.
That "program" includes the illusion that we have free will, and the motivation to succeed and receive recognition, and the pursuit of sex. — TheQuestioner
By "free will", I mean the assertion that humans can actually make their own choices, instead of following a master plan that is beyond their control — TheQuestioner
Here is why I think "a specific sequence of events can only happen without it":
I think it is impossible that our current reality is the result of 6 million years of free will. I don't believe that free will would have resulted in such a favorable outcome. — TheQuestioner
In response to your assertion that another timeline might be similar to the present timeline, consider a person that causes other people to become violent. Some people (not all) may not have become violent if that person never existed.
If you removed one important person from the timeline (e.g. Hitler), the "other timeline" would have been much different from the present timeline. — TheQuestioner
We do not know if the world would have been a "better place" if Hitler was never born. It is possible that one of the people he exterminated might have procreated to create someone far worse, someone that could have caused the end of all humanity. We will never know, but we do know that humanity still exists. — TheQuestioner
We also know that we are using a wonderful technology right now, which allows us to exchange ideas in a manner that was never imagined 50 years ago. In my opinion, this technology was created by a combination of procreations that was not determined by "free will". — TheQuestioner
Instead of "That could not possibly be a coincidence.", I should have said "That could not possibly have occurred as a result of free will." — TheQuestioner
I disagree with your assertion that "any number of combination would have lead to a similar result". Einstein would not have been born from any other two parents, and no other human would have made his discoveries at exactly the same time that he made them, which was required for subsequent discoveries to have been made at exactly the time that they were made.
IIf the parents of the following great composers had not procreated, music would not be as it is today: Bach, Mozart, Beethoven, and Stravinsky. — TheQuestioner
During the past 6 million years, every male and female had to procreate in the exact combination that actually occurred, for the creations described above to take place. That could not possibly be a coincidence. — TheQuestioner
Then you cannot call the police when you see a rape occurring outside your house. The police might hit a pedestrian when responding to the call. — Paul Edwards
Note that if I was having my tongue cut out, and I had a button to destroy Earth, I would do so to end the injustice. Certainly International SWAT can do a much better job than destroying Earth, ie they will accidentally kill a lot fewer people. — Paul Edwards
So long as they don't deliberately target them, it's not immoral. — Paul Edwards
If it was you having your tongue cut out by Saddam's goons, would you want International SWAT to rescue you? Doesn't your moral code require you to look at the world from the perspective of others? — Paul Edwards
There is nothing immoral about calling up International SWAT to go and spread human rights. There is something immoral about trying to stand in the way of SWAT. — Paul Edwards
I didn't sign any such thing, so my moral code is not dependent on the UN Charter. Is yours? — Paul Edwards
Not all parties consented to being raped by Saddam's goons either, or having their tongues cut out. It's already mob justice in my eyes. But not yours? — Paul Edwards
What moral/philosophical code introduces the concept of a "country" where a previous strategy becomes invalidated? — Paul Edwards
I don't see how you can equate anything Obama believed with Trump's world-view. — Tim3003
I think populists don't call for change. Just the reverse. They surf the wave of the conservative's fear of change. Brexit was not a change but a reaction to the changing nature of the EU, a wish to hold on to a notion of Britain from the past, before immigration and those Brussels burocrats started trying to control our green and pleasant land. That's why the retirement age voters went for it and the young did not. — Tim3003
In the same way Trump didn't call for change either, just a reversion to an America-first view that would have been the only show in town a few decades ago. It's the fear of change, and especially that threatened by globalism and climate change, that populists thrive on. Their supporters are usually those with so little imagination they can easily bury their heads in the sand instead of considering the effects of their wall-building. The word 'conservative' isn't used for no reason.. — Tim3003
UKIP support collapsed as soon as Farrage left it, which was well before the Brexit deal was signed. There was however a Brexit supporting govt by then so he thought his fight was won. When Teresa May failed to get her deal through parliament he realised it might not be, so at the election the in-coming Boris was forced to call he formed the Brexit party to keep Boris honest. Voters flocked to Farrage and not to UKIP, which still existed. — Tim3003
I see this a bit in Fox (though they still provide a platform for the fraud narrative, just hedge their bets both ways).
But Breitbart as of right now has the following front page headlines: — boethius
You are the one claiming that motherhood starts at birth. — Gregory
I have a much more respectful and wholesome view of pregnancy. A pregnant women is a mother, and females know this too. — Gregory
I know life can be hard, but you just don't care if something that might be a full human is killed. You are willing to publically defend it. — Gregory
I know I'm not a robot because only I make my decisions. If we are going down that sceptical rabbit hole, i ask you to prove Jews and blacks are equal to whites and shouldn't be enslaved. What's your evidence and PROOF that slavery isn't good for them. — Gregory
I respect life and other people. You are willing to use doubt to take life (even up to birth?) — Gregory
The followers of populists follow the person as much as the policy. It's been said many times that Trump was policy-lite. His basic stance was of simplistic anti-immigration anti-leftie anti-foreigners tropes that anyone could understand. — Tim3003
His rise was echoed by Farrage in the UK. When he left UKIP and politics altogether it collapsed. At the last election he returned and formed the Brexit Party, which stood in the election with no policies at all, except to achieve Brexit. Millions voted for him. The idea of Brexit was agreed to by many others, but only Farrage was liked and trusted enough to get the poll ratings. (His party ended up being irrelevant because Boris Johnson removed any point in voting for him by copying his Brexiteer stance.) — Tim3003
Populists appeal to voters who are bamboozled by the complexity of policy, and they keep it in simple primary colours. — Tim3003
They are usually political outsiders - as the voters believe themselves to be. These voters will probably not vote at all but just moan about politicians in general until a charmismatic figure comes along to galvanise and organise them.
Where was Trumpism before Trump? His right-wing views were (probably secretly) held by many, but only when he came along as the new Messiah who spoke their black-and-white language did voters wake up and flock to him. — Tim3003
It's called The Cult of Personality. People voted for him because they trusted him as one of their own. In the UK Nigel Farrage had the same appeal. He too came from outside the political establishment. Once Farrage left UKIP it floundered under several leaders. It is not as easy to replace these populist icons as it may appear. It's them, not their policies that voters trust. — Tim3003
You guys have no evidence that shows the fetus is not a human baby and are willing to take a chance in killing it. — Gregory
You'd rather be sleazy in your thinking and try to get away with killing what could possibly have all the dignity you have — Gregory
They don't care about motherhood, they don't care about pregnancy, and they really don't care about sexuality. They demean the whole subject in the name of "freedom" — Gregory
If they are in terminal pain, yes. But not for lesser reasons like abortions are usually for — Gregory
Since you cant, it's obvious that they might be human. Isn't it obvious that you don't kill something that might be human? Its called basic respect for (here comes that that word) life. forget about the killing animals thing. I brought that up as an example. You're ok with killing something that for all you know is a full human baby. — Gregory
I'm not sure about this. Trump's attempt to go full tilt at this is largely falling on indifferent or deaf ears as his allies - with the exception of the utterly pathetic Giuliani - drop him like the rotten hot potato that he is. Short of some still-possible court shenanigans, the vibe is that people seem to be accepting the results for what they are. But maybe that's 'cause I don't follow Q or Breitbart or whatever close enough. — StreetlightX
He has failed to rouse the rabble, partly because of Biden's statesmanlike patience and inclusiveness, partly too through there being no evidence. — Tim3003
Yes, votes for Trump are fundamentally a rejection of the status quo political class. The evidence for this is Bernie Sanders, who represents the same kind of rejection on the left. Two very different candidates with two very different policies, united by their ability to speak to a loss of faith in the status quo. — Hippyhead
The heart of the problem is that the accelerating development of knowledge is challenging us to look at ever more fundamental issues at an ever faster pace. And we're just not ready. — Hippyhead
For all yes/no questions that are not gibberish (i.e. are reasonable and coherent), there has to be an answer, right? — dimension72
The idea that people should expect of their head of state what they do of their spiritual leaders is a silly one. — NOS4A2
Any paid actor can virtue signal. — NOS4A2
Come January 20th we can close this thread, yeah? — Maw