But you didn't answer my question: have you ever had a song stuck in your head? — RogueAI
I think that any form of egoistic hedonism firmly falls into the self-help category. — TheHedoMinimalist
Thus, I don’t think morality necessarily has to be about us interacting with others. — TheHedoMinimalist
I don’t think that the supposed moral progress that you speak of had been brought about by something like a global village of people having a united voice. For example, you mentioned how only a minority of people benefit from gay marriage but it should also be mentioned that it seems that almost nobody gets harmed by gay marriage either. So, I think we hardly had any incentive to be against gay marriage to begin with. — TheHedoMinimalist
I’m also confused regarding what issues like abolition, suffrage, and civil rights have to do with reciprocal altruism or morality being in our DNA. I don’t think that the Northern states that fought to abolish slavery in the past ever had the favor returned to them by the freed African slaves and the men who marched with MLK to give African Americans civil rights didn’t seem to get rewarded by African Americans in any way. — TheHedoMinimalist
If anything, it seems to me that we have biologically evolved to be very tribalistic and put our ethnicity above other ethnicities(after all, isn’t that what our pre-historic ancestors did). — TheHedoMinimalist
Have you ever had a song stuck in your head? — RogueAI
I feel you are generalizing the behavior on extreme cases. Where I was trying to point out situation that seem more reasonable and in a mild degree. — SteveMinjares
Like a good example is if a CEO has to lay off 20,000 employees so the company can survive due to poor sale revenue. And having to dismiss the fact that your decision could affect 20,000 families and there financial stability. Maybe contributing to the unemployment rate.
And this example show that if you find yourself in a loose-loose situation and you have to choose the lesser of the two evils scenario. Psychopathic thinking in a rational, less extreme and non-dysfunctional sense can make the decision easier to rationalize. Especially if you take in to consideration the emotional distress that comes with these type of decisions. — SteveMinjares
Oration is an action they perform and I like the way they do it. None of that means or implies that they have powerful speech. — NOS4A2
But I think that calling an hypothesis "science", when the hypothesis is not at all consistent with observations, as the need to assume mystical, magical entities like "dark matter" and "dark energy" demonstrates, is worse than insanity, it's intellectual dishonesty. — Metaphysician Undercover
more generally your approach in all such conversations of:
1. doing no research into a field
2. demonstrating no understanding of that field
3. concluding from your zero understanding that the field must be at fault
4. concluding from your deduction that you must know more than anyone else
is extremely pathological, and not in any beneficial way. — Kenosha Kid
No, because the idealist says that the cause of your experiences is a mind(s). — RogueAI
No, it's not implausible to actually have a song playing in your head. I have a song playing in my head right now. Do you think it's implausible? Do you think I'm lying or mistaken? — RogueAI
Right, we know how you use that word "insane": " the 'inflationary period', while brief, was insanely rapid". — Metaphysician Undercover
Since you have absolutely no idea as to any of the specifics concerning this "insanely rapid" expansion, it makes no sense for you to call this "science". — Metaphysician Undercover
If someone is born an altruist then wouldn’t being altruistic make that person feel good? If that’s so, then wouldn’t this give them a purely selfish self-help sort of reason to be altruistic? — TheHedoMinimalist
If people can rationally work out their moral philosophy for themselves then it seems that they can presumably create a moral philosophy without duties where actions can only be morally praiseworthy or morally blameworthy in a supererogatory sort of way. — TheHedoMinimalist
In addition, it seems to me that moral existentialism would suggest that anyone who claims to be part of the morality game is part of the morality game simply by virtue of asserting that they are part of the morality game. — TheHedoMinimalist
I’m not sure why anyone would think that the obligation is dependent on the number of children that need to be saved rather than the amount of effort that would be required of you. — TheHedoMinimalist
I think there’s good evidence that a belief in the supernatural was somewhat beneficial to the survival and reproduction of our ancestors. It can bring people a great deal of hope and it might ward off pessimistic life attitudes that are probably bad for survival and procreation. Nonetheless, if I made a comment that religions are just arbitrary things that we get to decide through philosophy and they don’t have any ontic value then you probably would think that this invalidates religion. It probably wouldn’t matter to you that there is an evolved characteristic for religious behavior that is objectively real. Though, maybe you do think the same way about religion as you do morality. — TheHedoMinimalist
At the end of the day, it kinda feels like your non-ontological understanding of morality kinda already dismisses the idea of genuine moral duties(at least the kind of moral duties that I think most people care about). — TheHedoMinimalist
I agree. Idealism is counter-intuitive, but it doesn't suffer from a similar problem as the mind-body problem because it supposes that something we already know exists (hallucinations that people can't tell from reality) exists on a massive scale. There needs to be evidence for that, of course, but the claim itself is not susceptible to a category error. I think the mind-body problem is evidence that there's a category error going on, and you can't get the mental from the physical. — RogueAI
MLK and Winston Churchill were great orators, and so on. I'm just trying to be clear where these feelings are coming from. One doesn't need to believe speech has power to note the genius of Shakespeare's writing, simply because the feelings and ideas one gets when reading it isn't generated in the ink and pages. — NOS4A2
More like a terrible hypothesis though. Anyway, this stuff is not even science at all, so it shouldn't be presented as an example of science, or, counterpunch.an example of scientific failure. — Metaphysician Undercover
Even if I did believe in the computational theory of mind (I don't), we've avoided entirely how a subsection of sounds from the mouth or scribbles on paper possess more power than others. Now they have "influence", which according to the dictionary is "the capacity to have an effect on the character, development, or behavior of someone or something". It's magical thinking all the way down. — NOS4A2
"It's what's encoded and how it's processed that is important". If I try to translate this back to biological terms, I find only one type of object that encodes and processes speech: the human body. — NOS4A2
Ya know what? I’d like to take a survey, of people in general, after a quick perusal of this:
https://web2.ph.utexas.edu/~vadim/Classes/2012f/vertex.pdf
.....followed by a quick perusal of this:
https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/4280
.....with the survey question being, which one of these is the least useless, with respect to a theoretical description of goings-on between the ears of the human rational animal.
2hReplyOptions — Mww
I wonder if some of what's happening with modern hunter-gatherers (it's quite common that they move to quite a different culture from most Western ones on encountering 'development') is that they are essentially skipping the stage where the future (of improved technology/control) seemed rosy and uncomplicated, and going straight from not having that option to having that option but with the knowledge that it comes with complications (and opportunities). So with the Cree, they were able to transition straight from a state where their culture worked in a limited environment, to one where it was again useful in the new environment - equally limited, but this time by law and government grants etc. — Isaac
You of course define 'physical' in a different manner, which appears to include ideas. If ideas are considered physical, or material, then I have no problem with such a 'weak materialism'. It solves the obvious logical contradiction of 'strong materialism' (=the idea that ideas don't exist). — Olivier5
Wouldn’t reciprocal altruism be in the realm of self-help philosophy though? After all, I could imagine a self-help philosopher telling people that you do nice things for others and not harm them because that will effect how they treat you. — TheHedoMinimalist
After all, if moral duties are nothing more than evolved mechanisms to ensure that others treat you well, then why should we assume that they have some sort of real ontological existence. — TheHedoMinimalist
building more advanced societies would help — ssu
I mean yeah there's all this science, but what are we supposed to do about it? Just cut out fossil fuels without a real replacement? To me that's scary. Epstein's point is that fossil fuels protect and enhance people's lives. Fossil fuels protect people from heat waves. And yet the environmentalists want to limit them. I find it to be worrisome. — Kasperanza
Physical reality is what we (minds) make of what we perceive. — Olivier5
Configuration of neurons are brain states, but changes in neuron configurations are mental states? — Mww
Yeah, pretty much. Up/down, right/left, right/wrong, ad infinitum. Physical/non-physical. In the human cognitive system, for any possible conception, the negation of it is given immediately. — Mww
Isn’t a single Feynman diagram depicting the interaction of one electron with one positron, or the interaction of two electrons, exact? In what way is it not? — Mww
This precision being made, when you scan my brain you may be searching for neural correlates for my experience, but my experience is accessible to you only by my telling you about it. — Olivier5
The upshot is that in the modern age, polarising available narratives might be just too easy and so not really apply the pressure they used to. It's just too easy to find a group to join these days so little pressure to join one slightly outside of your comfort zone. so we need more real-life social groups rather than virtual ones as they are less flexible, and so more able to pull in the direction of social change — Isaac
We're either going to make it happen or we're dead. — Xtrix
Thus "physical" means by and large: "perceivable by the senses, not just imagined by the mind." And "non-physical" must mean something like: "not perceivable by the senses, but imagined or created by the mind."
Makes sense? — Olivier5
But precisely because the mind is physical......
— Kenosha Kid
Errr.....what????? — Mww
Am I going to be embarrassed in the morning?
— “Kenosha Kid
I should hope so. — Mww
You should have no issues with the fact all theories are only logically proved when empirical validation is impossible. — Mww
The Principle of Complementarity? — Mww
Yes, exactly, that's it! The time has come, scientist, to correct your stand on nonphysicalism. — TheMadFool
How would one define or identify the non-physical? — Tom Storm
How can it be said something doesn’t interact with the physical, if that something hasn’t made sense as a concept? — Mww
That the mind is a valid concept is given merely from the thought of it, — Mww
Supervenience is a post-modern analytic construct, which is irrelevant in epistemic methodologies in which “mind” doesn’t hold any power. — Mww
I submit to you, Good Sir, that you have already imbued your comments with a conception that has made itself known to your thinking, if not to your words. You have attributed “quality” to the concept of mind, as the only possible means for you to state what it is or is not, and what it can or cannot do. How would you suppose, guess, want, need or just think any of that, without some ground by which to make those judgements, when experience offers no help? — Mww
Which is impossible, because it is the case that he must necessarily employ the very things he is attempting to revoke. — Mww
What's ill-defined? — TheMadFool
Are you a priest? :rofl: — TheMadFool
There's got to be a correspondence (a 1-to-1 correspondence) in terms of logical implications between epistemology and ontology. — TheMadFool
You speak as is they're completely independent of each other. — TheMadFool
At least you had to intellectual honesty to consider option 3. something nonphysical is happening. :up: — TheMadFool
That's exactly the issue here. If "laws" can change science is reduced to nonsense! — TheMadFool
Change in one must be reflected in the other - that's how it works, no? — TheMadFool
This means that he cannot rely on the bystander effect as he would literally be the only doctor that could have helped the dying children with the rare condition. — TheHedoMinimalist
How could one refute sans a definition? — TheMadFool
Your befuddlement is understandable. I too am equally if not more confused. — TheMadFool
See: Violation of energy conservation in the early universe may explain dark energy
Ergo, following your lead,
2. If x is physical then either x violates physical laws or x doesn't violate physical laws — TheMadFool
You misunderstand me. The achievements of physicists are irrelevan to my argument. That's all. Do you mean to argue that just because physicists have made so many contributions that they're right about their take on nonphysicalism? Shouldn't it be the exact opposite? :chin: — TheMadFool
scientists and physicalists always maintain something physical is going on whether physical laws are being violated or not — TheMadFool
What is a physicist's stand on the nonphysical? — TheMadFool
No, they don't define non-physical at all. It's not on their radar; if it is, they're not doing so as physicists but as metaphysicists. — Kenosha Kid
Many physicists and consciousness researchers have argued that any action of a nonphysical mind on the brain would entail the violation of physical laws, such as the conservation of energy. — Wikipedia
Dark energy you say is physical. Ergo the physical violates physical laws ( :chin: ). It's the "scientific" way. — TheMadFool