That is how implication often works. It allows us to move from the data of experience to new realities, many of which are available to experience. — Dfpolis
Are hallucinations real? — Galuchat
Yes. They are real experiences potentially informing us of the reality of some neurological disorder. — Dfpolis
Natural science seeks to discover general principles for understanding objective reality in abstraction from the knowing subject. — Dfpolis
"Reality" first means what we encounter in experience... — Dfpolis
It depends on how you explicate your terms.
1) What does "actuality" mean to you? Is it accessible, or quarantined?
2) Are you thinking of "events" as disjoint, or simply points in a continuum we happen to be fixed upon? And, how do you conceive awareness?
3) By "Awareness" i mean what makes intelligibility known. So, it rises above sensory perception in that we can perceive and respond in complex ways without being aware in the sense required to know. — Dfpolis
"Reality" first means what we encounter in experience...
When you make "reality" mean more than, or something other than, what we encounter in experience, you're creating a mental construct. — Dfpolis
This is what dream does. It unplugs the connections between the sections of an event, if that is how it works, and re-plugs parts of the memory loop to unplugged parts of other memory loops. — god must be atheist
What laws of physics are involved here? — Glenn Turner
I'm looking specifically at a formalism with an application to law (and/or ethics). The categorization of actions into permissible and impermissible with corresponding sub-categories related to the justification in ethics or law is the end goal. — JosephS
Nevertheless, neuro-phenomenology can potentially have sense in the first-person, in terms of an association between sensory experiences and brain-probing-experiences, as for example in an experiment in which the subject records his experiences when probing his own brain. — sime
Hence language is not mere communication. — Banno
The best articulated definition comes from information theory. — Banno
Didn't Shannon not really define the term? — Terrapin Station
OK - I understood Shannons entropy equation as a definition of information, but I may have read too much into that. — Banno
Knowledge is semantic information, which may be empirical (based on experience, such as tacit/implicit or declarative/explicit knowledge), or pure (based on metacognition).So ... knowledge is when words are used to put information to work? — Marchesk
You are not only informed what someone is saying, but informed that someone is saying something - that language is being used. — Harry Hindu
The mind is nothing but information as an effect of the interaction between your body and the world. — Harry Hindu
Language is not moving information from one head to another.
It's doing things with words. — Banno
Thought includes:...
Are propositions or the propositional form an aspect of this? Is yes, how? As an oject of some action?
If no, then how do you invision thought? — frank
Does the universe have a location?
Everything, whatever that may be: does it have a spatial or temporal location?
I argue no, there would have to be space and time beyond it for that. — frank
A choice between moral or immoral action. But this choice is relevant to normative ethics, not meta-ethics (basis of ethics).If something is said to be right or wrong in Ethical terms, doing so must be based on values that have already been accepted. What choice do the values provide? — RW Standing
And this is relevant to descriptive ethics.Before the deluge. I started this off not with founding ethics in reason. But with using reason to classify and arrange ethical values diagrammatically. In the way they logically relate. — RW Standing
To what degree can reason influence emotions? — Wallows
I'm aware of higher brain functions ability to suppress impulses and direct behavior. — Wallows
Yet, to what extent, "valence dimensions" can be appraised by reason is something that I would be interested in uncovering. — Wallows
I understand the issue as a complex interrelated dynamic between emotions and reason. — Wallows
But, I don't understand the details here. For example, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy can serve as a backdrop where Hume's sentiment towards reason being the slave of the passions, as not being entirely true, at least not on face value. — Wallows
It's a commonsensical approach in my view, to throw away the prejudice of ancient philosophers towards the emotions, along with many of the rationalists, and instead embrace one's emotions towards the ethical. — Wallows
Try this:Is there anything to read on this matter that you guys know of? — Frotunes
Hi, @CurlyHairedCobbler. @Galuchat, here.Hi, CurlyHairedCobbler here. — CurlyHairedCobbler
I'm surprised you would admit to having simplistic conceptions of 'reason' and 'truth'.I'm surprised that having studied both psychology and philosophy you are using simplistic concepts like 'reason' and 'truth'. — fresco
The rationalization of time through weeks etc, and the rationalization of value through money are things that a lot of people don't like, but how did you people manage to overcome the pressure of the cage that tells you what you should do and when you should do it, and did you manage to fly away? — virginia west
No opinion regarding my second question (here)? — Galuchat
Why aren't there similar objections to talking about the specific functions of other organs/systems? — Terrapin Station
The relationship which obtains between brain and mind is one of correlation, not causation. However, you are free to cite credible scientific research to the contrary.I would say the brain is used by our minds to compute things. — AJJ
In its most general sense, a computer is an input-output processor.The brain isn’t doing any computing per se, just reacting to stimuli. — AJJ