Or, will you get home and find it's already this time next year...?
I'm still waiting for Derren to come on the radio and demonstrate that the whole of the last few years has been a massive trick. "Did you all really believe that Donald Trump could become president of the US and then preside over a viral pandemic that's straight out the plot of at least six post apocalypse films?... Even I thought I'd gone too far on this one..." — Isaac
What would be the case if part of the information each step received was the fact that it's neighbour had been studied by the step to it's left and will be studied by the step to it's right. That doesn't defy any self-study because this still all counts as information about the previous step. If also it were to learn that the previous step learnt this about the step before that... Then let's say one of the algorithms in a step was to make a Bayesian inference about where its data came from and went to... Would it not derive the exact system you described despite being a part of that system? — Isaac
Just answer the question. — Bartricks
So, can I presume that you also understand that this means possessing all knowledge is not equivalent to possessing all true beliefs? — Bartricks
You don't seem to understand the difference between a true belief and knowledge. Think. — Bartricks
It doesn't take a scientist to understand metaphysics.. — Metaphysician Undercover
The philosophical 'puzzle' only arises when we expect that lay story to relate in some intrinsic way to what we actually find out in neuroscience and cognitive science. I mean, why would it, it's just a story. — Isaac
Why do you think making a mistake requires a false belief ? — Hello Human
I literally - literally - argued carefully that this is not so. Did you read the OP at all? I feel like I am presenting arguments at an old people's home.
Read. The. OP. — Bartricks
And if he assumed the world could not be understood by human minds, then he wouldn't try day after day to do so. — Olivier5
The problem is professional philosophers invented and defined these fallacies and academic logic.
The answer is found outside academic philosophy. — Protagoras
What more really needs to be said ...
I contend that we are both atheists. I just believe in one fewer god than you do. When you understand why you dismiss all the other possible gods, you will understand why I dismiss yours.
— Stephen Roberts?
In other words: Hitchens' Razor. — 180 Proof
More precisely, scientists operate on the assumption of an objectively real physical universe, understandable by human minds. — Olivier5
Indeed, but this seems to apply only to the totality of the system, which I didn't think was ever in question. If a system is made of subsystem A and subsystem A* (responsible for examining the workings of subsystem A) then 'the system' is examining itself. The fact that it's not examining the totality of itself doesn't remove from the fact that it is examining itself. — Isaac
A separate point here, but perhaps one to get into when I've fully understood your objections — Isaac
Actually, many people like myself choose to help others sometimes only because we feel that this would result in getting more people to help us in the future. Of course, we might often disguise this as genuine altruism and it’s hard to distinguish between the two a lot of times. I think we have actually evolved to be altruistic in part because we expect reciprocation. Though, I do think some people are evolved to be directly altruistic. Still, I think there are definitely cases where someone is motivated to be altruistic for selfish reasons. — TheHedoMinimalist
Egoistic hedonism is the view that one should make themselves feel as good as possible in the long run(at least if we’re talking about prudential egoistic hedonism rather than what’s known as folk hedonism which is the stereotypical form of hedonism. You can read about that distinction in philosophy encyclopedia entries on hedonism). — TheHedoMinimalist
I don’t think that having biological instincts for altruism, egalitarianism, and empathy necessarily would give you the kind of morality that requires you to rescue a child drowning in a shallow body of water. For example, I could imagine a highly pessimistic and suicidal person who has fair amount of empathy towards others choose to ignore a drowning child because he might envy the position that this child is in. — TheHedoMinimalist
So what? You operate (at least as a default position) under the assumption that other scientists don't lie to you about this, when they say that, e.g. they ran the math again and it doesn't work. — Olivier5
The validation you seek is from other minds. — Olivier5
Noticed, and for which he owes you a cocktail of your choice. — Mww
Why not 2 types of stuff. Stuff and the information about stuff. — Cheshire
Why yes, science is based on a dualist framework (empiricism + rationalism), so a logical form of scientism or physicalism would include the mind as the central place where science happens. — Olivier5
Not to my mind. It is dualist in that it postulates the existence of minds and bodies as two different things, provides a possible reason why bodies might have developed minds through evolution (because minds are needed, they do something that cannot be done without them) and describes a realistic relationship between bodies and minds. — Olivier5
What's a vox pop? — frank
Ahhh....another closet Kantian. YEA!!!!! C’mon, admit it. Release yourself to the Force, padawan!!! — Mww
As Searle said, the man on the street is a Cartesian. — frank
What's the draw of property dualism? It takes a tiny bit of philomind to answer that. Last time I talked to 180 he came up pretty short in that area, so I don't expect much — frank
What makes property dualism worth the evil of being open-ended confusion?
— frank
I have no idea — Kenosha Kid
I'm not arguing against dualism per se, only against SD and thereby not undermining PD at all, especially as the latter is only epistemic whereas the former – your (Descartes') position – is extravagantly ontic. (Occam's, anyone?)
There's the argument that the mind is something the brain _does_ and vice versa, the brain is something the mind does. The idea that it's a two-way street — Olivier5
And if there was any science to show that, you could go in that direction. There isn't. — frank
What makes property dualism worth the evil of being open-ended confusion? — frank
Energy is another form, but it's a process of change, not a static object. — Gnomon
A symbol is a subjective idea (metaphor, analogy) that represents an external object or someone else's idea. — Gnomon
Same sort of thing as a body. Quartz clock, registers, blah blah blah. Why? — frank
You're saying that you know you start at 1 and end up at 9, but you can't examine the boxes inbetween using the system itself. But how can you know that without having at least taken a glance at the diagram - you must have 'examined' the system to some extent to even be able to report as much as you have. — Isaac
"It has a box 1 and a box 9. Box one contains the initial thought and box nine the final one, but I don't know what goes on in between"
Is that not a description of the system despite being a partial one? What did you use to arrive at it? — Isaac
It's obvious to your doctor. — frank
Succeeds at what? — frank
Is this really an accurate generalization? — Cheshire
Hanovers approach doesn't require any exposition beyond pointing to what we all know. — frank
It is undisputed that there are (1) minds and (2) bodies. I count two things, which means it is undisputed that dualism is the case.
Neither property nor substance has succeeded in the sense of putting the question to rest for philosophers or scientists. — frank
Substance dualism succeeds where property dualism fails to account for the conceptual coincidence, or interaction, of ideality (mind) and reality (body).
I contend that substance dualism will (1) offer a better explanation for how our thoughts are composed (as I've already discussed), (2) will offer a better explanation for questions related to free will, (3) will offer a better explanation for how we experience the world (providing an anchor for the infinite regress homunculus problem), (4) will offer a better explanation for our ultimate origins, and (5) will offer a better explanation for our purpose and meaning.
you can dismiss it all by saying that the metaphysician has no understanding of that field — Metaphysician Undercover
There's space and the things in it or things and the space in between; is that 1 or 2? — Cheshire
But as everything is a goat, I'll let this pass. — Banno
What makes you think this? — Isaac
The agnostic does not rule out the existence of God whereas the Atheist does. What are your thoughts ? — Deus
Lame. — RogueAI