Yeah, but even if all that Sheldrake claims, eventually turns out to be true, how much would that increase the personal credence level YOU assign to such as panpsychism?
For me, my answer would be, not much! I still have a credence level of around 1%. — universeness
I am not convinced that such evidence, proves that information can be passed between 'conscious' creatures via morphic resonance and morphic fields. But even if it does, that does not mean consciousness is not 'what the brain does,' it would mean that perhaps information can be passed/correlated via some quantum phenomena such as entanglement (as Sheldrake himself has suggested). — universeness
I am toying with the idea of doing a CPR reading group here on TPF. I’ve read it once but feel I didn’t really crack it. — Jamal
Consciousness is a phenomenon of the brain, which needs interaction with the environment to awaken its dispositional knowledge, which, if absent, doesn't lead anywhere. — Manuel
Rereading Kant’s Critique of Pure Reason by Theodor Adorno, his introductory lecture course given in 1959.
Clear and deep and great fun to read, highly recommended for anyone interested in Kant — Jamal
I'm not clear what you mean by substantive-performative knowledge. — Ludwig V
↪unenlightened I think the free-and-easy depiction of Zen Buddhism propagated by popular books in the West is nothing like the lived reality. — Wayfarer
Actually, I can, in principle, agree with that. Still... I personally don't see how this affects emergence. — Eugen
For the last time, no, it is not! I am not embracing or dismissing emergence. — Eugen
it seems to me you don't understand that reduction entails emergence. You cannot reduce something that wasn't priorly emergent. — Eugen
There is a clear description for both of them: "Weak emergent properties are said to be properties of a large system that can be predicted or derived by computing the interactions of the system's constituent parts. Strong emergent properties of a system are said to be impossible to predict by computing the interactions of its constituents." — Eugen
I don't care what your personal belief is — Eugen
No, it isn't. There's a clear distinction between them. — Eugen
My question is that if one could create a model of consciousness starting from non-conscious substance AVOIDING the use of emergence (weak or strong). — Eugen
I misunderstood this paragraph, mainly due to the last sentence, as saying the assimilation-individuation framework was flawed due to the existence of modern power-structures. But instead, you are saying that you lean more towards the view that we, across time, do not tend more towards assimilation or individuation, but if something is going to break the tie, it would be the modern power-structures. — Ø implies everything
It all comes down to the ideology in-question; some ideologies are beneficial to those in power, and others are not. Whenever you have a group of people assimilating under a problematic ideology, the powerful agents act as a force for individuation by fragmenting the group. However, those same powerful agents act as a force for assimilation when the ideology is beneficial to them. — Ø implies everything
Your starting point seems to be the autonomous individual
subject, who decides from their own vantage of free will what to agree or disagree with. But aren’t most of our agreements and disagreements features of shared conventions and norms of thinking that bind us together within the communities that we are immersed in? — Joshs
the interesting thing about relativistic spacetime is that as it expands, its energy content increases — SophistiCat
Now suppose that the walls of the vessel expand outward. — SophistiCat
This is a fallacy called reductio ad Hitlerum. — frank
What’s your solution, best guess, or daydream? — Experience of Clarity
But i say again, it is the way of how philosophy should achieve this combination that makes all the difference.That's the "juice" and the real question I think. — dimosthenis9