As an aside, an "experience" as a concept is a type. — RussellA
Sounds philosophical to me.
Hegel wrote a book with that as a title.
Are you interested in some kind of summary of arguments?
Toward what end? — Valentinus
"consciousness can arise from something with 0% consciousness"; again just a strawman on your part. — 180 Proof
- I don't need scientific proof, I just need an explanation for why it is logical. Now I get it, there is none. There's no common ground and there could be none in the absence of counter-arguments.Spinoza is a philosopher, not a scientist. — 180 Proof
Just because materialism doesn't convince me doesn't mean I'm dogmatic or unscientific. Also, it doesn't mean I'm not open to change my opinions if logical/scientific proof is made.If you can put your own anti-physicalist/anti-materialist/pseudo-scientific biases, or dogma, aside while doing so, then you might come away with the recognition that you have been asking the wrong questions of the wrong source(s) all along, as you still are. — 180 Proof
If you can put your own anti-physicalist/anti-materialist/pseudo-scientific biases, or dogma, aside while doing so, then you might come away with the recognition that you have been asking the wrong questions of the wrong source(s) all along, as you still are. — 180 Proof
Good luck with all your 'panpsychist' titling at windmills. — 180 Proof
I think my journey here has reached its end.Eugen, so with this post I leave you to the tender mercies of those willing to be more patient and indulgent than I'm no longer willing to be. — 180 Proof
Take 'my interpretation of Spinoza, my metaphors & analogies, my paraphrases and recommended books' (on this thread) with a pinch of salt and make of them what you can. — 180 Proof
1. It would explain exactly why I am wrong, that is, why the law by which things without consciousness form consciousness is logical. It seems illogical to me, but an explanation in this sense might convince me. Is there an explanation in Spinoza's work?
2. It would explain exactly how he knows that there is a law of nature in which complexity is consciousness. It seems logical to me as well that simplicity is consciousness. Why consciousness = complexity, but consciousness differs from simplicity. Is there an explanation for the form of this law?
3. He would explain how he came to the conclusion that these are the laws of conscience and not others. Is there such a thing in his work? — Eugen
Don't thank me yet. I suspect your questions, Eugen, aren't done with either of us ... — 180 Proof
logic is reality — 180 Proof
Spinoza is describing how it happens: if qualia is produced by non-qualia, then it is a mode of substance. We get the causality in the presence of that mode.
That's what makes the difference between it happening or not. If the mode is not present, we do not have qualia caused by non-qualia. — TheWillowOfDarkness
not reporting why you cannot leave your bunker — Valentinus
Whether it is caused by a conscious entity or a non-conscious entity, qualia is explained for Spinoza. — Valentinus
He is working a plurimum interrogationum while riding the merry-go-round of a circulus in probando. He may not be a bot but he is hermetically sealed. — Valentinus
Let's use the exmaple of qualia coming out from no qualia. For Spinoza, the absence of qualia is body and mind. The occurrence of qualia is body and mind. So when qualia is generated out of its absence, it an event of body and mind (no qualia) going to another event of body and mind (qualia). — TheWillowOfDarkness
That'd be great, but it's basically impossible. I've got a life...Just a suggestion - Why not reach out to a philosophy department at a university and talk to a Spinoza scholar - if you can find one? A conversation in real time might cut to the chase. — Tom Storm
It seems to me some of your questions are constructed using modern understandings that don't quite fit and may be incompatible with Spinoza. — Tom Storm
- yes, but also happy. Frustrated because I can't find a way to make myself clear enough and because sometimes I don't exactly understand answers. Happy because I'm making progress, I really do, I think I'm much closer to my goal than I was at the beginning. I'm also happy because people actually put a lot of effort in order to help me, even if I am sometimes a pain in the ....Are you feeling frustrated? — Tom Storm
but maybe it will help to reflect on why you are frustrated. — Tom Storm
Ar — Tom Storm
ct on why you are frustrated. Would it help to slow do? What do you think is going on in this discussion between you and the others? Are people refusing to answer you? — Tom Storm
Or are you making it hard for them to answer? — Tom Storm
I don't really want to go down the rabbit hole for "qualia", which similarly to before is a concept anathema to Spinoza. This would be another debate where you're coming at Spinoza very obliquely and thus glance off his ideas rather than sticking in them. — fdrake
Yes, but here's where I'm still failing to see the logic. In Spinozism, I see a human being as a ripple of an ocean with two characteristics (minimum): Extension (body) and thought. Even if we go with the parallelism and for the sake of the argument we leave the physical interaction of atoms apart in order to escape materialism emergence and the hard problem, the problem still remains. In Spinozism, it's all about cause and effect. Are consciousness, qualia, or will caused by something with no qualia and will? If yes, how does Spinoza explain this is possible? Or he just assumes it does?I already showed you that mind as composition thing earlier, and mind as idea of the body. — fdrake
He is working a plurimum interrogationum while riding the merry-go-round of a circulus in probando. He may not be a bot but he is hermetically sealed. — Valentinus
Spinoza doesn't think about it like that. — Wayfarer