What can one do then? Not flagging it is letting the other party get away with dishonest argumentation. — TonesInDeepFreeze
Nice example. My observation is that in a debate, if the strong claim—the claim that (A) wants to prevail—fails, then retreating to a more defensible position is a tactic still to make the strong claim prevail. I think it’s fair to call this a fallacy. — Jamal
They're separate. There's the fallacy and there is the motivation for deploying the fallacy. — TonesInDeepFreeze
But when it comes to things like pregnancy, must we all go along with the insanity in order to not be deemed transphobic? Again, I really resent having to sound similar to a right-wing bigot. — Mikie
Reflexively judging the adoption of new and more inclusive use of words can only ever be bigoted. Why don't you want trans bodies to be included in medical terms when they apply to everyone? Do trans people not count as part of "everyone" because they're a minority group?
The instinctive disgust felt above based on two equivocations. The first equivocation is assuming that changing that language is required to be inclusive - in fact it could very well be a cynical attempt to appear inclusive while keeping legitimately prejudicial institutional processes in place. The second is that a negative feeling toward the above suffices to demonstrate that the person is prejudiced, more context would be needed to infer that. Do you have the context to infer the person you're talking to is prejudiced? Or a justification that it can be assumed by default in the present discursive context?
Now, not so much. So the the way this gone has had the opposite effect intended for me. And that is a real social consequence, I'm sure I'm not the only one who has been alienated. — Pantagruel
Yes, in the context of comparative religion or comparative cultural instruction. Those are fairly advanced subjects. I agree with instruction at this level. — Pantagruel
There's recognition and there's education. Undoubtedly children could be educated on the virtues of Hasidic Judaism, or veganism, or any number of other things also. But is it necessary? — Pantagruel
Does trans really have to be an identity? Can't it just be an aspect of identity, of which there are many? — Pantagruel
Totally. You might say it was irresponsible of me to so casually take it out of context and use it as an example, since without knowing about the context—the common situations that ContraPoints describes at length—one could look at the example and think that (A) is being reasonable or at least innocent of bigotry, which would make B look unreasonable. — Jamal
But as Mikie pointed out, (A) might not in fact be aware of all that. The reason I chose the example is precisely because under a certain light it's not crystal clear who is in the wrong and why. — Jamal
This is complex. I get that students unknowingly ceded ground to bureaucratization while believing they were against it, but what I’m not quite clear on is how that is related to the actual embrace of bureaucratic politics that Stern describes towards the end of this passage. — Jamal
I'm sure they must have untapped potentials and the capacity to express surprisingly deep insights. Our own insights, just like theirs, often just are contextually appropriate recombinations of bits of implicit knowledge or wisdom that we have inherited from other people we have heard or read. — Pierre-Normand
Have you been using ChatGPT (GPT-3.5) or GPT-4? — Pierre-Normand
X, Y and Z to offer the most cogent criticism of your position. — Pierre-Normand
The whole p-zombie thing has always driven me crazy. Of course other people have internal lives that are like mine, i.e. phenomenal consciousness, experience, what it's like to be them. Doubting that is the same as Descartes doubting everything but his own existence. What possible value is there in doubting it. By the way the argument is phrased, it is impossible to tell by any objective means. It's like the multiverse - metaphysics at best, meaningless otherwise. — T Clark
depends on how serious one is about understanding what he’s getting at. One could work ones way up to his language via secondary sources, but there are risks, like taking Dreyfus as a solid authority on Heidegger. It was because of secondary sources that I delayed reading Being and Time, having convinced myself I already understood him. But those sources didn’t prepare me for the real thing, which was a life-changing experience for me. — Joshs
Are you saying ‘that kind of talk’ represents a failure on Heidegger’s part to express himself clearly? — Joshs
The being of Dasein or human existence is care. Heidegger's definition of care: "to be already ahead oneself in (the world) as Being-alongside (the entities encountered within the world)" p. 191. This has a very "temporal feel" in it. That's why Heidegger argues that the sense (Sinn) of the being (of human existence) is time or temporality. In a more formal level the temporality can then be expressed as the unitary structure of the three ecstasies, future-present-having been. In B&T, right after the last chapter ("Care as the being of Dasein") of the first division ("Preparatory fundamental analysis of Dasein") begins the second and last division entitled "Dasein and temporality". — waarala
The past remains present insofar as our language and conceptual frameworks were here before us and we think within and strive to think beyond them. — Fooloso4
Like you, I have always though that empirical possibility entails conceptual possibility. But maybe that's not right. Maybe some would say there might be a whole load of things that are empirically possible that, even if we knew what they were, wouldn't make sense conceptually. That's a weird position. That should be distinguished from mysterianism, which (I guess) is the position that we may never know how consciousness arises from the physical (because of our own limitations), nevertheless it would make conceptual sense if we could grasp it. — bert1
Oh, OK. I would say this was definitely logically possible. But not conceptually possible. (Maybe our concepts of possibility are different, not sure) — bert1
That is a worrying thought. — bert1
Screamingly sentient, dumbly delirious, only the gods that were can tell. A sickened, sensitive shadow writhing in hands that are not hands, and whirled blindly past ghastly midnights of rotting creation, corpses of dead worlds with sores that were cities, charnel winds that brush the pallid stars and make them flicker low. Beyond the worlds vague ghosts of monstrous things; half-seen columns of unsanctified temples that rest on nameless rocks beneath space and reach up to dizzy vacua above the spheres of light and darkness. And through this revolting graveyard of the universe the muffled, maddening beating of drums, and thin, monotonous whine of blasphemous flutes from inconceivable, unlighted chambers beyond Time; the detestable pounding and piping whereunto dance slowly, awkwardly, and absurdly the gigantic, tenebrous ultimate gods—the blind, voiceless, mindless gargoyles whose soul is Nyarlathotep. — H P Lovecraft, Nyaralathotep
The unitary structure of the three ecstasies, future-present-having been, determines the ‘is’, the essence, the Being of being as this structure of transit. — Joshs
fdrake That's interesting. Those premises form the basis of the argument by analogy, or the abductive argument. No science necessary. An armchair philosopher who had never touched a Bunsen burner could make that argument. You could also make the same argument, but weaker, for rocks. — bert1
Can we have a reason why it cannot be (not 'isn't', or 'would prefer not to' - 'cannot' is big word here)? — Isaac
I don't really understand this. Are you saying he's making a point about what it is to be a necessary explicator for consciousness? Does he have an answer to that question, or a reason to doubt? — Isaac
Good question. Indeed the same question applies to other humans too. How do we scientifically determine if another human is conscious, without begging any questions? — bert1
I'd invite you to look again at the title of the OP. Who is asking whom to defend their position? — Isaac
And already the whole debate has been skewed into painting Chalmers et al as the victims of an uncharitable, superficial attack on their position which they are being asked, quite unfairly, to defend. — Isaac
Essentially, as with all philosophy, if we can't say anything about why one frame is preferable to the other then it's redundant (as a social exercise) we have to have criteria - even if it's aesthetics, parsimony, clarity, coherence... something has to be the matter we can discuss when comparing models/frameworks, otherwise what are we discussing? — Isaac
"suppose the gap between neurological goings on and first-person consciousness is unbridgeable..." it seems the oddest thing to suppose as a foundational, but more than that it imports assumptions which then need examining - like what does 'unbridgeable' actually mean in this context? — Isaac
That's fine, I don't deny that, but then from within the definition of consciousness used by the protagonists here, there should still be a set of sufficiency criteria for the reasons given in answer to a question 'why?'. It's not that I'm demanding those criteria should match my definition, just any definition. — Isaac
What I'm saying is that you (we all) pick — Isaac
That's all very well, but still lacks (if not more so) any details about sufficiency from that perspective. If it's not a law of physics that's being sought to explain the mechanism, then a law of what? If no law at all, then in what way is just any mechanism not an answer? — Isaac
what we're going to see as 'mysterious' and what we're going to accept as normal, not on the basis of some objective state of affairs, but on an arbitrary and personal decision about when we're going to stop asking 'why?' There's nothing special about consciousness beyond the fact that you choose to see it as special, you choose to not stop asking 'why?'
That's all very well, but still lacks (if not more so) any details about sufficiency from that perspective. If it's not a law of physics that's being sought to explain the mechanism, then a law of what? If no law at all, then in what way is just any mechanism not an answer? — Isaac
“Mathematical definitions never err,” he’s wrong? — Jamal
But although there cannot occur in the concept anything incorrect in content, sometimes–although only rarely–there may still be a defect in the form (the guise) of the concept, viz., as regards its precision — Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, B759
one must not imitate mathematics by starting from a definition — Kant, Critique of Pure Reason, B758
So what do you think? Is “define your terms!” always or often or ever a legitimate imperative? — Jamal
Yet if one asks "why do we have consciousness?" I think the answer needs to consist of a set of satisfactory reasons, simply by the structure of the question, no?
And so if a set of reasons are given, they can only be rejected on two grounds; they're not reasons, or they're not satisfactory. — Isaac
If I could at least get as far as understanding the type of measure of satisfaction missing, that would be progress. The kind of reason that would suffice. But I'm so far missing even that. — Isaac
A good traveler has no fixed plans
and is not intent upon arriving.
A good artist lets his intuition
lead him wherever it wants.
A good scientist has freed himself of concepts
and keeps his mind open to what is.
You're missing my point, it's not that we must look at this from a functional point of view, that was just an example, it's that we must look at this from some point of view. It's not sufficient to be dissatisfied with answers given from one perspective (functional ones serving as the example here) without saying why or how those accounts are unsatisfactory, what are they missing? — Isaac
If neuroscience doesn't explain consciousness by reference to functions, why not? What is it that such an account is missing? — Isaac
If one the many 'consciousness mysterians' were to say that the question of "how/why the brain produces consciousness" is unanswered and then go on to give what would count as an answer from their own definition of function - say "I'm expecting to see how consciousness carries out some function and by 'function' I mean..." - then we'd at least have something to discuss. But as it stands, the discussion still seems little more than "Ohhh, isn't it weird, man". — Isaac
What I would like is an argument, or observation, or evidence, that shows the emergence of consciousness from human bodies is conceptually possible. — bert1
apokrisis suggested a switcheroo, which was quite interesting, basically saying that the burden of proof not on the neuroscientist to say why some or their function of the brain is consciousness, but on the neuro-skeptic to say why it isn't. — bert1
And those rational relations among judgments are determined by the rules, that is the concepts, one binds oneself by in making the judgments
It is a systematic, rational unity, dynamically created and sustained by drawing inferential consequences from and finding reasons for one’s judgments, and rejecting commitments incompatible with those one has undertaken.
But does a self help book really change your perspective, or does it just give you one to try on for a while? That’s pedantic though. — Jamal