According to the definition, people who plug in into the machine can and only can experience pleasure. My argument against it would be like the following:
1. The existence of something depends on the existence of something opposite to it.
2. Pleasure is one of these things.
3. Pleasure depends on the existence of its opposite, which is pain.
4. In the hypothetical experience machine, only pleasure exists.
5. In the hypothetical experience machine, pain does not exist, so neither does pleasure.
6. One definition of a thing cannot conflict with another definition of it.
Conclusion: Experience machines cannot exist. — Howard
And its pretty sad to see someone presumably over the age of 10 resorting to the good old "I know you are but what am I" anyways. — Seppo
To briefly summarize Kastrup’s metaphysics in my own words and from my own understanding of it: all that exists is one (inherently spaceless and timeless) consciousness, and each metabolizing organism is a dissociated localization of this one consciousness. He uses the analogy of dissociative identity disorder (DID) from psychology to express how the one consciousness localizes (dissociates) itself into seemingly many subjects. The inanimate universe as a whole that we all perceive is simply what the one consciousness looks like from our dissociated perspectives. As a naturalist, Kastrup does not believe that the one consciousness in its “pure” form is intrinsically self-reflective like we are, since it did not undergo the evolutionary process that we did. — Paul Michael
the most popular arguments against Teleology are statistical quibbles. — Gnomon
I'm not equipped to make statistical arguments one way or the other. — Gnomon
I expected some science-based arguments against the notion of progress in evolution. Instead, all I get are absolute denials, and two word arguments : " . . . . . because science" , with no evidence or logic. — Gnomon
Excerpts from posts by outraged believers in random rather than regulated Determinism :
"information on beliefs"
"I believe this is not true."
"do not believe"
"I don't believe"
"I reel in terror" — Gnomon
I don't think an experience of a god - even if I grant that the experience is genuine - counts as an explanation of anything God is said to have done or wants from humans. The experience explains the experience and may well count as proof of God by the believer, but it does not provide an elucidation of anything further. — Tom Storm
I am impressed by the opinions of Foolso4 and Olivier. — god must be atheist
Martyrs are supposed to die, for a cause, and Gandhi did not. — god must be atheist
But he shamed some oppressors with the suffering he imposed on his own self.
The same that shook the world is the common thread between Gandhi and martyrdom. — god must be atheist
if ineffable, then what's up with all the preaching anyway...? Weird. — jorndoe
Gods have no explanatory power. — Tom Storm
How many theory ( I'll never use the term 'believe' in this forum ;) ) that your reality depends
mostly on what you focus on and if you stop paying mind to something that it no longer has any weight on your personal environment even if it is affecting others around you? — Pixel Blast Chamber
First, notice what I said in the first sentence: "before God created time and space." It is undoubtedly absurd to talk about 'before," or to use any temporal language to describe the period (another temporal term) before God created time and space. After all, there is no time, so how can we talk about a time before time existed? — Raymond Rider
This brings about the "second time problem." If time has always existed, then why did God create everything else when He did? Why did He choose that specific point in time to create the universe? — Raymond Rider
Someone here is a buffoon. I'm not ruling out the possibility that it's me, but I don't think so. — jamalrob
Someone here is a buffoon. I'm not ruling out the possibility that it's me, but I don't think so. — jamalrob
Right, and as already noted its completely speculative and baseless, and the fine-tuning argument in particular rests on a claim about probability that can't be sustained. The only form of the anthropic principle that is credible is the so-called "weak" anthropic principle, which is more or less just a tautology. — Seppo
I was just making a relevant distinction between Empirical scientists, who get their hands dirty, and Theoretical scientists, who get callouses on their pencil fingers. Albert did no physical experiments, and he used mathematics only to translate his qualitative subjective scenarios into the universal language of logical relationships. — Gnomon
No, not really. The anthropic principle merely tells us that there is a selection effect on any observations we can make, in virtue of the fact that we exist in the first place to make those observations. — Seppo
It's not martyrdom indeed, but the idea is very similar: the weak testifies of a scandal by facing the strong in a totally asymmetric manner. — Olivier5
I suspect that you think I'm making a scientific claim, when I say that "evolution is qualitatively progressive". But, since I'm not a scientist, I don't make authoritarian statements about the quantitative mechanics of physics. I do however cite those "soft" scientists, such as Einstein, who are more theoretical & philosophical than empirical & technological. — Gnomon
Certainly. But I think that the points I brought up reflected or implied that ... — Alkis Piskas
It was used by Gandhi — Olivier5
Denial is easy; understanding is hard.
Obviously, if you doubt that evolution is progressive, then it's not "obvious or self-evident" to you. — Gnomon
It is even quite apparent in biology, as "progressive speciation" is well documented, despite the occasional extinction events. — Gnomon
Whether you call the apparent increase in complexity & organization "progressive" depends on your personal perspective. As you can see from the excerpts below there are plenty of experts to whom biological progression is obvious. — Gnomon
Whether you call the apparent increase in complexity & organization "progressive" depends on your personal perspective. — Gnomon
As you can see from the excerpts below there are plenty of experts to whom biological progression is obvious. — Gnomon
The Anthropic Cosmological Principle implies that the evolution of the cosmos is teleological. — Gnomon
Every bit of this is incoherent. Reality is objective. It's not a metaphysical claim, it's a physical one. As in, physics. Nothing about your position is clear. — Garrett Travers
I hope you will pardon me if I don't respond directly to your categorical claim that my expressed opinions are incorrect. — Gnomon
A reality doesn't have to exist for objects in it to interact? — Garrett Travers
Objective means, in the context that we're talking about : not dependent on the mind for existence. — Garrett Travers
actual. — Garrett Travers
So, again, I'm going to need that example of something that exists that provides no evidence of itself existing. — Garrett Travers
Then you are going to have to provide an example of something extant that does not present itself as observable via evidence, given the ability to perceive such a thing through either the senses, or instruments created to detect it. Otherwise, you are saying something that is incoherent. — Garrett Travers
To claim that there is one true reality that we can attain through empirical reason, above and beyond our perspectival access to the world, is confusing an assumption with an absolute truth. — Joshs
You have just demonstrated that you perceive that reality by talking within it with someone else also in it, through objective hardware, designed by objective technological standards, to send such messages as contain your objective statement of the objective meaning of reality in association with perception, which you could not have done without perceiving the objective reality within which you objectively chose to operate. But, we can play pretend all day if you want. — Garrett Travers
If there were no reality, you'd not have been able to send such a message to me, which simply verifies that the only reality to speak of is the one we occupy. — Garrett Travers
As you noted, the experts are not unanimous in their assessment. Positive progression is a matter of interpretation, and the scope of your worldview. — Gnomon
Philosophers, through the ages have mostly agreed that our world appears to be designed, and tried to guess the intentions of the designer. Their conjectures may prove wrong in the details, but agree on the general direction : upward.
— Gnomon
That evolution is progressive is hard to deny.
— Gnomon
As I noted, I believe these statements are incorrect. — T Clark
References won't convince you, if you are not looking at them from an open-minded perspective. — Gnomon
For example, reverse the timeline in the image below --- is the athletic ape better than the couch potato? Now substitute the image below for the blob, and do you see any progress? :joke: — Gnomon
Objective reality is a recognition of a self-evident, self-emergent, productive, law abiding, patternized, immutable plain of existence. Not an assumption. — Garrett Travers
It can and does exist without the assumption of God. — Garrett Travers
Now, that doesn't mean one cannot postulate a super ordinate existence, but no evidence suggests such existence, thus one is reliant on making supernatural claims of an infinite variety. — Garrett Travers
I've only ever known people who believe in God to think along these lines. — Garrett Travers
To NOT believe in the objective reality in which you live requires the belief in a god. — Garrett Travers
Certainly. An absolute reality requires a God. But people, so much misled by religious dogmas and bias of all sort,as well as lack of critical reasoning and undestanding, don't even treat God as something absolute. — Alkis Piskas
The bottom line is, I think, that such a absolute state is highly impossible to exist. But even if it does exist, we are not able to conceive it. anyway. — Alkis Piskas
The vast majority of people (including "thinkers") believe there is and talk about an "objective" reality. Isn't this the "base" reality and the reality "outside of human observation", that you are talking about?
n such cases I use to ask, "If there is an objective a reality, who is out there to tell?" — Alkis Piskas
"Objective" reality appears to require an infinite, absolute viewpoint to at least be posited as possible. It does not currently seem possible, and were it to exist, we run into the problems above vis-á-vis our current conceptions of information. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Not that this is particularly relevant, I find I agree with you on all counts - re time, reality, imposed structures/'laws'. — Tom Storm
