So is the is this a resolvable problem? — Andrew4Handel
'The many dwell in their own private world, whilst the awakened have but one world in common' ~ Heraclitus (quoted in John Fowles, The Aristos). — Wayfarer
¡ǝʇɐɯ ʎǝʞᴉɹƆUnfortunately we have members who are in the southern hemisphere — Jamal
That's what an idealized Jesus might say: take up your cross ! — green flag
to avoid having to do what he taught — Art48
I think I provided an initial answer, here: — Metaphysician Undercover
Is collective intelligence greater than individual intelligence? — Benj96
Therefore, there is scope to believe a superhuman intelligence may know what's better for us than any of us do individually. — Benj96
If AI has a grasp on ethics and morality (which I believe it does as it has been trained on all the Law and philosophical books/texts we have available to us thus far) then perhaps whatever it deems ethically fit based on those texts will surpass any notion of morality we have previous conceived of as individuals. — Benj96
If a mistake occurs I'm not sure it's "innocent" in the sense that the person caused it.
But the mistake is either caused by "mal-intent" or "despite good intention" . And I think that's the key difference.
If a mistake is caused but the intent was good, then the mistake is in the action/execution. Forgiveable. Perhaps the person requires a bit more careful thinking/reasoning and planning in the future. — Benj96
In fact it's much easier to see the hard problem when you try to derive the physical from the non-physical. — bert1
but intuitively it's hard to conceive of space emerging from non-space: — bert1
adding millions of 0inch lengths doesn't get you a length. — bert1
There seems to be no intermediate step in-between non-spatiality and spatiality. — bert1
t's a good OP, interesting question. I don't have much more to say on the subject unfortunately, so I should probably shut the fuck up as well. — bert1
I presented my objections and I can argue successfully for each one with facts, logic and credible knowledge. Are you willing to break them down one by one? — Nickolasgaspar
Drives me up the fucking wall. It's not complicated is it? — bert1
The OP isn't addressed to you. It is addressed to people who think consciousness is more fundamental than matter and asks how matter can emerge from consciousness. If you want to talk about how we are all engaging in pseudophilosophy, I suggest you start a thread about it. There are plenty of other threads when it might be more on topic to go on about pseudophilosophy. If this thread was arguing for the view that consciousness is fundamental, then fair game. But it isn't. It asks us to assume that (rationally or not) and proceed to enquire how matter could emerge. That's the subject of the thread, and you are not engaging with it. Twiggez-vous? — bert1
"Matter" is an assumption which the conscious mind makes. — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't think it does. It just explains one way of what matter is not how it arises and whats its relation to mind.Doesn't this answer the question of the op then — Metaphysician Undercover
I just point out to you that is pseudo philosophy. — Nickolasgaspar
Why are you avoiding my challenge? — Nickolasgaspar
Why do you think you can practice meaningful philosophy when ignoring our most credible epistemology on the subject???? — Nickolasgaspar
Isn't all we know, at all levels, "physical properties, observed an measured"? So, what more are you asking for? — Metaphysician Undercover
That is how "matter" arises from consciousness. — Metaphysician Undercover
except that "consciousness" is no more mysteriously "emergent from matter" than walking is emergent from legs — 180 Proof
As for any moral value I'm not sure o know what you mean exactly. Some mistakes are not morally relevant. Others are more so. — Benj96
It may be contradiction of terms but its a reality. Maybe "innocent mistake" would be a better term for what I mean.faultless mistake or error is a contradiction in terms — Ludwig V
Secondly, to deny that the self exists at all. That the ego itself exists. — ClayG
then it follows that there are certain religious faiths that allow for the belief that it is morally neutral for one to commit atrocities. — ClayG
Perhaps you think not wanting the best for humanity is itself irrational — Ø implies everything
You assume humanity is the foot — Ø implies everything
what if the life on Earth in general, and/or some notion of nature, is the foot in which humanity is the thorn? — Ø implies everything
Well, when you make broad statements with no reasoning behind it, kind of makes sense then that I would do that with just a claim without support. — schopenhauer1