How so? Wouldnt it be dependent on how one defined, "successful" or what entails "success"?Clearly, being a "successful biological organism" is rather devoid of meaning. — praxis
Which is what I said earlier:Well first you try voting for the ones that agree with you — unenlightened
If you don't like how they handled the budget, vote for someone else next election. — Harry Hindu
Good luck. One man's revolutionary is another man's terrorist.and if that doesn't work, you start a revolution. — unenlightened
And how do you subject politicians to legal restrictions when it is the politicians that define the legal restrictions?Well all I am suggesting is that politicians be subject to the same kind of legal restrictions as every other citizen in every other kind of job. — unenlightened
Are you saying all behaviors are instinctual, and that free will is an illusion and really just another instinctual response to our perceptions?Everything wills, but not everything is willed.
It may sound confusing, but it is as simple as going with the flow.
In part, some things are strongly willed and steered.
But on the whole, things go with the flow - willingly, but not willed. — Shamshir
What is the relevant difference between the behaviour of humans and the behaviour of rocks, such that you attribute consciousness to the former but not the latter? — bert1
The behavior of a rock differs not so slightly from the behavior of a person. I understand that every object is subject to physical laws, but surely you see a difference between a ball bouncing off a wall and a person throwing a ball. — Hanover
Around and around we go.In the kinds of animistic worldviews found in hunter/ gatherer cultures humans are not the focus of creation. That idea came later, most notably with the Abrahamic religions, and most especially Christianity. — Janus
Animism is the religious belief that objects, places and creatures all possess a distinct spiritual essence. — Wikipedia
?You are projecting to the general what applies only to the particular: what applies to you — Janus
Your view is too simplistic. What is lost in worldviews dominated by reductionist thinking is the sense of the sacred. Of course, religions themselves often reinforce this loss, and one way they may do this is by claiming certain places, objects, events or people as sacred in contrast to the rest as being ordinary, mechanical, fallen and so on. The sense that life itself, the universe and everything in it is sacred, divine, is both the result and expression of the meaning that is always and everywhere immanent . — Janus
Exactly. Youre comparing your view with humans' preliminary explanation of the world and their place in it - when humans believed that they were the focus of creation. Religion has a tendency to inflate one's self importance which is just another form of delusion - delusions of grandeur.A view like this is probably closest to the kinds of animism that suffused the lives of hunter/ gatherers. — Janus
One man's "failed" politician is another man's "successful" politician. That is politics. So maybe we should eliminate politicians and representation and just let all citizens use the internet to vote for any bill or budget that is proposed. What a hoot that would be!To expect that failed politicians resign or be sacked is no odder than to expect surgeons that fail to resign or be sacked. — unenlightened
That's how a representational democracy govt. works. You choose someone to handle the budget. If you don't like how they handled the budget, vote for someone else next election.There are particular threads to discuss particular cases, so I don't want to get lost in trying to decide them here. Rather, I wonder if there is any agreement that honesty in public life should be enforceable in principle in somewhat the same way that it is in business? If my new gizmo doesn't do what it says on the tin, I am entitled to my money back; perhaps I could sue if my taxes are misspent? — unenlightened
Strange how you singled me out for "projecting to the general what applies only to the particular", when everyone in this thread would be doing the same thing, like using ill-defined terms like "spirituality", as if it applied to all atheists or whole cultures, as something they lost. :roll:You are projecting to the general what applies only to the particular: what applies to you. Some people need organized religion and others don't. It's up to the individual to find out what they need; to discover, that is, what works for them. — Janus
I was a Christian the first half of my life and then I became an atheist. The only thing that I lost was my belief in a god.But Western culture has lost its spiritual foundation. I see threads like this, and there are many, as being an (often uncomprehending) lament over that.
So you might ask, am I suggesting a return to traditional religion? I don’t think that’s possible either - but we need to understand what has happened by loosing it. — Wayfarer
Wrong. Your freedom is realized when you understand that you don't need to look to a higher power, or to others, to give you meaning and purpose. You have the power to give yourself meaning and purpose with your own actions.Scientific naturalism, a la modern atheism, pretends to depict the world as it really is, devoid of the superstitious trappings of the past. But it too is a deeply historically-conditioned worldview, embodying a set of values - namely, ‘the value of no value’, the assertion of the Universe as devoid of meaning and therefore purpose, and that humans are the result of a fundamentally meaningless physical process. That’s scientific atheism in a nutshell, and that is what I see behind many of these threads. — Wayfarer
Meaning is the relationship between cause and effect. Meaning is everywhere, possibly the fabric of reality itself.I basically believe that nothing has any meaning. — yupamiralda
That is all any of us can do. Humans are very versatile (thanks to their large brains an opposable thumbs) and the variety of ways in which we choose to be successful organisms can make it seem like we have transcended our biology, but that is an illusion.When asking myself what I should do under this condition, I decided I didn't believe in anything more strongly than that I was a biological organism, and my thinking should revolve around the idea of being a successful biological organism — yupamiralda
Sounds like you find meaning in being a good parent. Why would you think this is absurd or deserving of criticism or insults?and doing what I can to ensure my offspring's success). — yupamiralda
So the only way to make a circle is by putting two semi-circles together?If you still aren’t convinced that a semicircle is part of a circle, just go out and find two semicircular objects, put them together, and you will find that they make a circle. — Troodon Roar
Then the "parts" aren't part of the whole, but something else entirely.I argue that parts can have properties that the wholes which they form with other parts lack. — Troodon Roar
A semi-circle is not part of a circle. It is a different shape entirely.For example, a semicircle is half of a circle, but the semicircle has two corners/edges/vertices and has a straight side as well as a curved side, whereas the circle has no corners/edges/vertices and has just one curved “side” enclosing it.
So the semicircle has at least two properties — having corners/edges/vertices and having a straight side — which the circle it forms along with another semicircle lacks.
So this is clearly a case of a part having properties that the whole does not have.
So the whole is not necessarily greater, in every way, than the part. — Troodon Roar
What do you mean consider it in a "positive light"? If you are asking for me to assume the idea for a moment and contemplate the implications of such an idea, then I have done just that, which is why I posed the questions I did. Read the first sentence of what you quoted from me. I said, "If the world isn't real then...". They aren't rhetorical questions. They are questions based on assuming the idea is true. In other words, it doesn't offer anything coherent (and therefore useful) if it can't answer those questions.I'm not sure. All I know is that new perspectives nearly always offer something worthwhile, no matter how small. This particular perspective may prove to be useful ... or not. Consider it in a positive light first, and see if you can glean anything useful? — Pattern-chaser
:roll: Word salad. If "we" are all of the same mind - meaning there is only one mind, then solipsism.Because, speaking colloquially, 'we're all of the same mind'. In other words, members of a culture (and species, come to think of it) will inhabit a domain of shared meanings. It's not as if the 'hallucination' (bad word, again) is particular to you. Or put another way, when it is, then you really are hallucinating. — Wayfarer
Probably because you're using the wrong keyword, "non-validity". Google "invalid reasoning", and that should help.I haven't had much luck using google. — Josh Alfred
If words didn't have some degree of objectivity then we would always be talking past each other. We would never communicate at all. How could we lie to each other if the meaning of my words in my mind didn't mean the same thing in your mind? We would create our own arbitrary categories of our individual perceptions and never be able to communicate them to others. How would you expect me to understand the scribbles you put up on a screen if we didn't have some shared understanding of what those scribbles mean? Who would you be "talking to"? It seems that we would all be only talking ourselves. So, why didn't you just say your post to yourself in your mind? Why did you type it out and submit it on a philosophy forum? Isn't it because you wanted to share your idea with others who have a shared understanding of the meaning of the scribbles that you put on the screen? The scribbles mean your ideas and your intent to communicate them.Whenever we discuss the meaning of words, I do not think we are trying to figure out the objective meaning of those words. After all, words do not seem to have objective meaning. — TheHedoMinimalist
I would use the term, "attention" instead of "significance".Rather, words are tools that we use to draw significance to certain phenomena and associations. — TheHedoMinimalist
A misuse of language is a logical error in the sense that terms do have an agreed on, or shared, meaning. Someone misuses a term when they take an existing term with an agreed-upon meaning and use it in a different way without a coherent definition of how they are using it. The term is either incompatible with the other ways they use language (they are inconsistent) or the way we understand the world (our observations).A misuse of language is more similar to a misuse of a hammer than a logical error or an inaccurate observation. — TheHedoMinimalist
So what you have done here is question the agreed-upon meaning of "living thing". Sure, we could use the boundary of organisms evolving central nervous systems as what defines "living thing", but we've agreed upon the boundary where complex molecules began to replicate.Because of this, it seems that what we should consider a living thing is not a question that could be answered through scientific experiments or logical deductions. It is a question of value. When we call something a living thing, we are putting it into a category above all other types of things.
Biologists define living things as organisms and emphasize their ability to maintain homeostasis and replicate its genetic information. But, are those things actually important? Should we really think of living things as just a collection of cells which replicate themselves? I think of life as the process of being alive and as a state of animation. I do not understand why we consider trees and fungi to be alive. They appear to have no mental activity or display any interesting or complex behavior. On the other hand, I do not understand why we don’t consider certain AI Programs to be living things. Some AI Programs are capable of complex information processing, sensory detection, learning, understanding of spoken language, and list goes on. When I think about the key characteristics of life, I do not think about the stuff about organic matter that I learned in Biology class, I think about the animation of the mind and body present in animals and certain machinery. I think about the ability to experience pain and joy, and the ability to perform a variety of fascinating activities. Of course, I do not think that we should stop studying non-living organisms or over-study living non-organisms but simply stop making the assumption that only organisms are alive and that every organism is alive. I think such conception of life is often forcing us to ignore what exactly is significant about life. — TheHedoMinimalist
Then why do you believe that the arguments about 'evidence for God' are futile? Why would you not believe that the arguments about the 'evidence for God' are not futile? Any reason you give for your belief is evidence for your belief. Whether it is good evidence - evidence that integrates well with the rest of what we know and how we use language - is a different story.I don't need 'evidence' to identify that arguments about 'evidence for God' are futile, anymore than I need 'evidence' for the futility of the claim that there is 'evidence for the beauty of the Mona Lisa'. i.e. The context of 'evidential' claims is one of agreed observational criteria.
Your demand for 'consistency' appears to be semantically vacuous. — fresco
It's not the complexity of the life process, it is the imperfect design of organisms, the extinction of 99% of life that has existed, and the vast areas of existence that are devoid of life that is evidence that existence was not intentionally designed with life in mind. If the properties of God are so difficult to agree on by believers, then how do the believers know that they aren't simply talking past each other? There could be many "gods". God could just as well be defined as an extradimensional alien. Is it the terms that we are disagreeing on, or are we simply talking past each other?No. It means that subgroups of 'believers' have there own parochial observational criteria including, for example, 'the complexity of the life process'. Atheists might agree on that 'complexity' observation but consider it as 'evidence' for some yet to be discovered 'other natural process'. — fresco
Which is no different than saying there is no evidence.The reason for the futility of the 'evidence for God' debate, is that The 'properties of God' remain disputed, even amongst believers, hence the choice of 'evidence' is arbitrary. — fresco
Im not asking you to chase words. I'm asking you to be consistent. You arent. Any infinite regress is one of your own making. I'm basically asking you how you resolve the regress your own claims make. But what would one expect from someone who thinks that evidence is in the eye of the beholder?Sorry Harry, I don't do words chasing words round infinite regresses — fresco
Dont you need evidence that the debate on evidence it futile? What reasons do you have to say that the debate is futile and wouldnt you be using your reasons as evidence?No. That word game doesn't work. It is the DEBATE based on ' evidence'
which is futile. — fresco
No, delusions are irrational beliefs, not behaviors.'Delusions' are defined primarily by social consensus regarding 'inappropriate behavior'. The fact that what we call 'brain functioning' may be correlated with this is a more recent view which has tended to replace 'spiritual possession'. — fresco
You said that it is a process or a bridge that connects potentiality and actuality, so how can you then say that it has no real existence? How is it that you are talking about it if it has no real existence? I'm not saying anything about it being an "object" or not, I'm just asking what you mean by "real" and "existence". To me, something is "real" or "exists" if it has causal power. The will appears to cause things to happen, and the will is influenced by perceptions at any given moment. The decisions we make at any given moment are dictated by our present experience in relation to similar memories. We often "choose" the action that has always worked before. We are creatures of habit, and only change when forced to. Even if the will is an "illusion", illusions exist and are real. They have causal power.the will is a process in the sense that its a bridge that connects potentiality and actuality; it has no real existence in itself, obviously, it's not an object; — TheGreatArcanum
This all seems so unnecessarily complicated. There is no conversion needed as there is no difference between mind and body that needs conversion. Bodies are processes too. Notice that you and I both haven't used the terms "physical" or "non-physical" in any of our explanation so far.logically speaking, the will can be represented symbolically a subset of memory, meaning that the intentional process which converts potentiality to actuality in mind is born out of memory, and also, returns to memory, so really, the will involves two processes the instantiation of the will out of memory and potentiality into actuality, and the return of that actuality back into memory. — TheGreatArcanum
If they are coherent and necessary, then why haven't you used them in any of your explanation so far? What is the difference between physical and non-physical that requires some sort of conversion before being causally linked? How can you also say that the conversion doesn't really exist or isn't real?using coherent terms like physical and non-physical is necessary, for either the will is born out of a prior state of actuality and therefore physicality, or it is born out of a prior state of potential and non-locality...and its freedom is entirely dependent upon whether it is born of actuality (actualized potentiality) or potentiality (unactualized potentiality). — TheGreatArcanum
You're forgetting that the words are used to trigger concepts in other minds via communication. The concept of existence exists as something non-verbal in your mind, which you then translate into verbal form for communicating, but if the same concept isnt triggered in another mind when you use that word, can you really say that the concept was triggered by your use of the word?Let me say it one more time, 'existence' and 'evidence are words triggering concepts the utility of which differs according to the context in which they are used. From this pov all concepts exist by virtue of the words which evoke them, but the concept of evidence presupposes a context open to the possibility of social consenus about the utility of another concept like 'God' — fresco
Delusions are functional for those that have them, but not for me.As an atheist, I cannot dispute 'the existence of God' for 'believers', because the concept is functional for them, albeit dysfunctional for me. — fresco
What is the difference between intention, volition, and while we're at it, goal?At first glance, I noticed that the subject of each paper is intention, not volition (will). — Galuchat
what about the will in terms of phenomenology?... — TheGreatArcanum
I didnt simply say, "not true". I also backed it up with examples. You're the one making assertions with anything to back it up.It is true. Simply saying “not true” doesn’t make it so. — I like sushi
You originally asked what yellow is, not what means. What it is is a color. What that color means in any particular context is what caused it.In an F1 race a yellow flag has a particular meaning. “Yellow” doesn’t exist detached from an object. — I like sushi
Why would we talk about evidence differently only in the case of God?.Futile because 'evidence' in the case of 'God' is in the eye of the beholder. — fresco
Not true. Many athletes take ownership when they fail and give glory to God when they succeed. And if we didn't take ownership when we fail, then how do we learn?What about sense of authorship where there is none? Libet’s experiment highlighted that well enough. We’re biased to assume authorship when the outcome is positive. — I like sushi
Yellow is a color. Where is the context in that?Asking what “will” is a bit like asking what “yellow” is. Without context there isn’t much we can say. — I like sushi
It seems to me that explaining the will is part of the battle in explaining consciousness. Can there be consciousness without will?We’re too busy struggling with defining ‘consciousness’ as is I reckon. — I like sushi
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/15925808Cite credible scientific research. — Galuchat
No. The above quote is what Witt meant when he used the phrase, "language on holiday". You are taking his phrase and reusing it in a way that is incoherent.The main (Pragmatist) point I want to re-iterate is that questions that imply a regress of definition (language chasing language) fall into what I take to be Wittgenstein's 'language on holiday'. Language is 'not on holiday' when it applies to communicative situations which involve decision about subsequent action either individually or jointly.... — fresco
That is assuming that you know what knowing really is.If you know you don't know something, that's something you know. — Wayfarer
You said it yourself. They are phenomena. What is phenomena? Knowing a lot about something entails knowing what they really are. If you don't know what they are, effectively you don't know what you're talking about.We can know a lot about such phenomena (obviously) - short of what they really are. — Wayfarer
If language does not represent things in reality, then what does the above quote even mean? Is it not a use of language that represents some state of affairs other than it just being a string of scribbles on a screen?Namely, he believed that these philosophers were all in one way or another trying to hit on the thesis that our language does not represent things in reality in any relevant way.
What is a Rorty, James, Dewey, Sellars, Quine, Kuhn, Wittgenstein, Derrida, or Heidegger? I'm focusing on your use of language here. Are words just scribbles and sounds or are they about things that arent words themselves? Is Wittgenstein a word, mind, or what? You used the term, Wittgenstein, not me. What is it?Richard Rorty was influenced by James, Dewey, Sellars, Quine, Kuhn, Wittgenstein, Derrida, and Heidegger.
Congratulations! You've wiped away subjectivity and the subject in one swift stroke and redefined "minds" as "objects".No. Its meaningless because we are not engaged on any mutual, everyday project. Its what Wittgenstein called 'language on holiday'. Words like 'mind' are irrelevant to a thesis which ultimately implies that 'observers' with 'minds' are inseparable from the so-called 'objects' they appear to contemplate. That point is precisely why Heidegger for one, needed to resort to neologisms — fresco
