So it’s the combination of reason and observation that is powerful. Reason alone is blind, and observation alone is meaningless. — Olivier5
A model that only accepts concurrence between reason and observation should work well enough to save the day. — TheMadFool
You can’t make sense of anything without a little priming of the conceptual pump. We are born with an innate natural logic that allows us to think about our observations and draw lessons from them, as well as with a capacity to model a Euclidian space (which is why non-Euclidian geometries are counter-intuitive). We are also born with hard-wired instincts and tropisms, just like any other animal species: we like certain things (eg the taste of honey) and dislike others (the sight of blood) innately. — Olivier5
He thought that asceticism was the highest form of repose against Will's ceaseless impetus. — schopenhauer1
It isn't possible to 'live in the moment' as if 'a moment' were an object we could enter, — Pam Seeback
Schopenhauer had a saying about not being able to just be, and if so, very temporary. That is part of his idea of necessary suffering. — schopenhauer1
I don't think living in the moment applies when doing many things in life. Quite the opposite. — schopenhauer1
"Living in the moment" doesn't have to automatically exclude any and all notion of planning, preparation, and long term goals. Does it? For many I suppose. Why do you have long term goals and aspirations anyway? So either you or another can more freely live in the moment. Is this not correct? — Outlander
Seems to be a problem here, involving taking into account what we do not know... — Banno
Yeah, we do. It consists of chairs, dogs, rocks, mad presidents... stuff like that. — Banno
Only nothing can exist on its own. Everything else exists relative to something - including ideas.
So your assertion for ideas :"They don’t need any substrate at all; they just exist." is incorrect, as they cannot exist on their own - only nothing can exist on its own!
— Pop
You have still not given any justification of this assumption. Moreover, while I also think that everything, including ideas and the other abstract objects, needs something to explain its existence, that something isn’t any individual mind, but likely the all-encompassing godly Hyge (Nous, Mind) and ultimately Oneness, the or-principle (first principle) which gives each abstract entity its wist (essence). — Tristan L
— PopA consciousness has to create the ideas, otherwise what is the substrate that they exist on?
— Pop
They don’t need any substrate at all; they just exist.
— Tristan L
Really? What substrate do your ideas exist on? — Pop
The overarching question I start with in the OP is whether creativity requires nondeterminism. My answer is that it does not, but instead requires a certain kind of pattern of exploration or mapping of the abstract space of possibilities in relation to already known possibilities; a process that could be deterministically carried out, but by a different algorithm than just iterating through every possibility in order. (Or randomly picking them out in no order). — Pfhorrest
Quite the contrary: In order for someone to come up with an idea, it must actually always have been possible that someone could someday come up with the idea. The actually existing possibility of finding the idea must necessarily fore-exist any and every actual coming-up with the idea, for if it wasn’t possible to come up with the idea, how could anyone find it? — Tristan L
A consciousness has to create the ideas, otherwise what is the substrate that they exist on?
— Pop
They don’t need any substrate at all; they just exist. — Tristan L
Ideas can only exist relative to a consciousness.
— Pop
That is an unwarranted assumption. In fact, it’s even false, as I have already shown in this thread at length. Can you back your claim up? — Tristan L
Logic (i.e. sound inferential reasoning) to start. We also can - must - trust experience, but within limits. — 180 Proof
I have a direct experience, that's an ultimate proof.
— Eugen
Floats your lil rowboat but not mine. I'm interested in the grounds for doubt or belief, not "proof" (ultimate or otherwise). :roll: — 180 Proof
The hard problem is understood by some precisely so that progress can't be made (so that nothing could count as progress.) — Yellow Horse
'I demand an objective explanation for stuff that only I have access to or am.' — Yellow Horse
I'd argue toward a philosophical explanation of consciousness. The word 'materialistic' tends to mislead people into equally useless assumptions (of ineffable stuff we can't be objective about). — Yellow Horse
Except that rocks are not conscious. — Banno
Conflating consciousness with experience — Banno
Seems to me you are conflating different things, including consciousness, experience, conscience, awareness, self-awareness... — Banno
One's reflexes remain functional even when one is asleep. It's how we tell the unconscious from the dead. You would count reflex as a form of conciseness? — Banno
What is it that would allow you to conclude that a Jellyfish is conscious? What observation? — Banno
Our belief in a continuing identical self over a lifetime is an illusion. In praise of nihilism.
No identity overtime means no consciousness over time. — Wheatley