I wonder if that's what charleton means, then. Data streams are ontologically primary, and all other things (brains, hands, trees, etc.) are emergent phenomena. — Michael
Saying that we were "designed" like a car or an alarm clock sounds strange. Yet, apparently it is a joy for some people to say that about themselves. — WISDOMfromPO-MO
. Neither participant was a victim. If no others had been present it would be hard to find anything to complain about. But others were present, so there were other potential victims. — andrewk
It seems to me that for there to be no change the universe would have to be completely empty - always and everywhere, so no quantum particles popping in and out of existence. If it contains even one photon or particle then there is change, since matter is energy is waves, and waves involve vibration, which is change. — andrewk
. What would Jesus do? — Sapientia
I don't care whether you think it ridiculous. It's called justice. — Sapientia
In the world we live in, nobody will arrest you for making a million bucks when you sell your start up brownie making operation. That doesn't make your brownies as worth while as saved lives — Bitter Crank
It's a problem if it's excessive. That would be a problem because it's unfair and creates an imbalance. And an imbalance impacts people like me. That would be money in excess of what you've earned, which you do not deserve, could go to those who need it more than you do, and therefore ought to be redistributed. — Sapientia
Edit: or even better, read Hume. — Πετροκότσυφας
His argument is more subtle, suggesting that a priori reasoning does not predict the outcomes of causal interactions and that as humans we have since time immemorial simply had to OBSERVE and conclude from observations causality. — charleton
Now, I am curious: how would you distinguish such a "Humean" universe from one that is "enriched" with your favored metaphysics? — SophistiCat
This is baloney, of course, as it has been pointed out before. It pretents that Hume can't recognise that these events are in relations of precedency, contiguity and constant conjunction. — Πετροκότσυφας
I'm not ignoring it, but you are misunderstanding it. — charleton
You are making my case for me, if you would but know it. — charleton
Not really. All science is based on evidence. We are just getting better at it. Newton gives way to Einstein, who in turn may well be shown to be inadequate. Einstein's work is observable. If not then its not valid. — charleton
You are just being ridiculous. Nothing can be conceived unless perceived.
Put a new born baby in a sensory deprivation chamber and see what you get.
You have not really used joined up thinking. — charleton
OR - you could answer my question "Tell me the non perceptual source of knowledge of which you speak!" — charleton
You are talking and saying nothing. — charleton
Now, to reason means to find some data set U that is a superset of this data set K. Our method of reasoning works by choosing the most similar data set. In other words, it goes through every data set within some category of data sets that are supersets of data set K in order to choose the one that is the most similar to K. That's all there is to reasoning. — Magnus Anderson
That's hilarious. How else do you think you can form a theory? By simply making shit up? That's what dogmatists do. They invent a theory and then they focus on the facts that support it and ignore those that contradict it. — Magnus Anderson
The problem you have is that you cannot accept that predictions and theories are fallible. You cannot live with this fact. You think that if something is fallible it is necessarily useless. — Magnus Anderson
Hume's view does not lead to skepticism and it does not make science impossible. — Magnus Anderson
It's precisely that there are only "brute particulars that happen to always behave a certain way". Laws are merely human inventions that are based on a selection of these brute particulars. Any other way of thinking is already a form of dogmatism and absolutism. — Magnus Anderson
If those who accumulate great wealth are motivated mostly just by the desire to create great wealth (and the power that comes with that) for themselves, do you think that such a situation is morally acceptable and should be tolerated, or even encouraged? — Janus
Whatever work you want this point to do, if you accept it you just argue against your own view. — Πετροκότσυφας
— The Emergence and Development of Causal Representations by Xiang Chen in Philosophy and Cognitive Science II — Πετροκότσυφας
Obviously you have to conceptualise, but you can only conceptualise FROM sensory information which is the source of ALL knowledge - quite obviously. — charleton
Locke suggests we start as a Tabula Rasa, I do not exactly agree with that, yet without the sensations we have nothing to work on. — charleton
I have no idea what your objection or solution to this rather obvious reality is. — charleton
Yes and no. They do not ask why, they DO ask how.
If you want to know why ask a priest, as they have all the answers ready made. — charleton
). At any rate, there's no reason to suppose that cognitive science which examines the infants' abilities at causal representation supports Kant's apriorism and not Hume's habit theory. In fact, I think it tends towards the latter. — Πετροκότσυφας
I simply act in a certain fashion and then the sun comes up, without me having a reason for my behaviour. And the scientist after giving all of his verbal justifications acts similarly, without reasons. — sime
t isn't. You are merely confused. And the reason why it is "valid" for us to think that the past will repeat in the future is because we have evolved in relatively stable environments. — Magnus Anderson
It is because of observations + habit. Our method of reasoning is a habit. This habit has evolved in relatively stable environments. — Magnus Anderson
You don't understand what the question "why the sun would rise hundreds of billions of times in a row?" means. That's the problem. When you ask a question such as "why X at point in time t?" you are asking "how can we calculate that the event X, and not some other event Y, will occur at point in time t based on events that occured before the event X?" That's all that is being asked by such a question. — Magnus Anderson
The truth is that ONLY sensory impressions give us all the knowledge we will ever have. If that leads you to skepticism you'll just have to lump it. — charleton