On the other hand, it seems like in all of these cases, there was something to gain from performing such actions — Alec
Any time someone wants something that isn't to their own benefit. Compare I simply want to save someone from a burning house vs. I want to save someone from a burning house in order to protect myself from the guilt of not doing so. — Alec
think this was the premise behind the Selfish Gene book by Richard Dawkins. I believe his contention was that altruistic actions serve to promote the survival of the species and are therefore ultimately selfish, with self defined at that population. — MikeL
The emergent behavior can model itself. — Jake Tarragon
I don't really want to derail your thread further from your main topic, I just wanted to voice my objection to you dismissing idealism out of hand. — Victoribus Spolia
So that seems to beg the question. Science assumes a mind-independent reality, how can you therefore use such to prove the existence of such? — Victoribus Spolia
Well, the Wittgensteinian answer would be to say that the environmental and cultural context that is normally present when asserting that "China Brain" is conscious, is lacking, in the same way that the normal context required for the same assertion is also lacking when considering the abstract operations of a human brain divorced from it's environmental and inter-personal context. — sime
On what grounds do you believe that there exists more than consciousness and conscious content? — Victoribus Spolia
Why can't you accept #5? That seems like an unsettling declaration that lacks objectivity (no pun intended), or is perhaps based on a misunderstanding of Idealism..... — Victoribus Spolia
Or maybe silicon chips aren't, but that in the future we are able to build organic computers (which would amount to artificial brains, I suppose). — Michael
Or you could reject a physicalist account of consciousness and argue that simulated consciousness is impossible. — Michael
His argument (from physics) isn't just that spontaneous brains are more likely, but that spontaneous brains with memories of a life like ours are more likely. — Michael
The latter position, to be coherent, must posit God or some kind of universal or collective mind. That is just the point I have been making. — Janus
Ideas, as in thoughts? — javra
And the materialist has to show how mind A can know about body B via ideas in mind A. — Michael
I fail to see how that's more parsimonious than saying that ideas in mind A are caused by interacting with mind B. — Michael
because if you're arguing for materialism then the mind is a physical thing, and so there shouldn't be a problem with saying that minds can interact with each other without any intermediary. — Michael
What does it matter!? This running about for absolute certainty is a running after the horizon in belief that one can eventually hold it in one's hands. — javra
To then affirm that in the movie Inception the other agencies were not “real” is then, I argue, a fallacy of reasoning (given the very metaphysical premises of the movie). Either you envision a body that is asleep/unconscious/etc. from which is produced multiple interacting agencies, or, else no such body and there being nothing but a communally shared dream between a multitude of agencies (as to the movie’s depiction of recurring personas, this in a way is no different than Shakespeare’s comments that all we are are actors/agencies/roles on a stage … playing out our roles on the sage of life (or at least something to the like)). — javra
Those questions can be asked of the materialist as well. — Michael
I don't understand why you think bodies being of substance A can avoid solipsism but bodies being of substance B can't. — Michael
And the idealist can say the same. — Michael
Materialism suffers from the same epistemological problem. — Michael
But this is what (some) idealists claim is the case. So you're saying that idealism can't avoid solipsism because non-solipsistic idealism is false? — Michael
If we go for Hume's bundle theory, for example, our bodies are bundles of sense-data, and when these bundles of sense-data interact, you can directly perceive my immaterial body (as per a naive realist understanding of perception). — Michael
You're a mental thing and I'm a mental thing. When we "touch" this elicits in you certain experiences. — Michael
It's the same sort of thing that happens for the materialist. When my physical body "touches" your physical body, this elicits in you certain experiences. — Michael
The idealist claim that all things are fundamentally mental or immaterial in nature is not to say that only my experiences exist. — Michael
And the idealist's claim that independent minds can interact with and perceive each other is no more problematic than the physicalist's claim that independent bodies can interact with and perceive each other. — Michael
It's not some obscure tribe by the way. It's the official language of Indonesia, spoken by more than 200 million people. — andrewk
And the idealist says the same. Only that the human beings that we interact with are mental/immaterial things, not physical/immaterial things. — Michael
Yes. Isn't that also what the materialist says? — Michael
How does the materialist know that there are other minds? — Michael
There are minds other than mine. It's idealism, but not solipsism. — Michael
Now just take away the physical bodies. There are minds other than mine. It's idealism, but not solipsism. — Michael
I suppose if I wanted to ask an Indonesian, in Indonesian, whether Harry Potter is real, I might ask something like 'Do you think anybody ever did all those things that the book says Harry Potter did?'. — andrewk
The relevance of that to the thread is that, without that verb, I don't think one can even describe a difference between an Idealist and a materialist. The difference dissolves to just one of language use. — andrewk
'The map is not the territory', which uses 'to be' in the 'identity' use. So according to Korzybski himself, his most famous utterance may be meaningless. — andrewk
(although as a philosopher that statement makes me blush, as I know that counterfactuals like that are meaningless). — andrewk