Can anybody give an example of something being conscious and yet not aware at the same time? — Purple Pond
Should I accuse you of changing the topic, quibbling, dodging the point, of being an idiot. — woodart
I can control the direction and content of my thoughts. However, I observe myself wandering a lot during the day. Can this understanding tell us something about dreaming? Dreaming seems like wandering – sometimes there is a direction – like sexual dreams. Most of the time my dreams seem unfocused; like my wandering during the daytime. The similarity does not seem coincidence – what do you think? — woodart
By "good experience" and "bad experience" do you mean "moral experience" and "immoral experience"? — Michael
If so then I'd question the concept of a moral/immoral experience. What are such things? — Michael
But until you explain the relationship between the thoughts and/or feelings of another and moral truths, this claim isn't justified. — Michael
So what does empathy, as you've defined it, have to do with moral truths? — Michael
So what does that have to do with moral truths? — Michael
As I said, you seem to be implying that rightness and wrongness have something to do with the emotional (or cognitive) conditions of others (and my assumption is that you're implying that rightness is concerned with "positive" conditions and wrongness with "negative" conditions. — Michael
Empathy is the ability to understand and share the feelings of another. Therefore if empathy is a means to access moral truths then moral truths have something to do with the feelings of others. Correct? — Michael
You seem to be implying that something is moral if it makes others feel good and something is immoral if it makes others feel bad? — Michael
Are moral truths accessible? — rickyk95
I believe dreams to simply be partial thoughts, images, and sounds that we have experienced throughout our days; particularly those that [have] been thought on recently. — Lone Wolf
The type I dream, a thought-like mentation, is the consequence of the memory replay when the declarative memory data is retrieved from the temporary memory store to the conscious subsidiary systems of the working memory for processing during NREM sleep. On the other hand, type II dream, a more dream-like mentation, often occurs during REM sleep, when the procedural memory is being transferred from the temporary memory to the long-term memory.
As usual with these philosophical questions, it comes down to the definition of "free will". — Harry Hindu
If free will is simply the ability to make decisions, then that gives computers free will. — Harry Hindu
If free will is related to the amount of choices one has at the moment of decision then free will comes in degrees as it is related to the amount of choices, which could be just one, or several. — Harry Hindu
If asked, I would normally respond "Tea, thanks" without consciously thinking about it. Yet I would still consider that I had chosen tea. — Andrew M
I was explaining how appealing to quantum mechanics to justify claims of free will are inherently flawed: it's because randomness does not equate with freedom. — VagabondSpectre
Emergent properties are in fact determined by lower levels. The lower level complexity is why we consider it emergent. — VagabondSpectre
Such a random will might be undetermined by Newtonian physics, but it IS determined by quantum mechanics. — VagabondSpectre
Choices can be spontaneous. — Andrew M
Every time we make a choice there is a decision making process. — Purple Pond
I totally agree with the fact that language and communication was a huge step, but no more than in the sense of giving us the capacity to express in a more clear manner thoughts that had been already present in our minds until we found words. — Eugen
I believe that notions like gods, universe, other universes, immortality have been here since humans were humans. — Eugen
On the other hand, animals don't think about gods and parallel universes. — Eugen
I was asking if human evolution will transform us in[to] something that we have no capacity to understand... — Eugen
To have a method is to be doing the same thing that has been done before; but to be creative is to come up with something new. It is unwise to expect that doing the same thing will result in something new. — unenlightened
What are the methods for creating a new philosophy? — hiroko
I've been doing a module at undergrad level on 'philosophy of emotions'. Broadly, theory suggests... — mcdoodle
He [Roddy Cowie] found that some feeling we call 'emotional' is in place more or less all the time, on people's own first-person accounts, but that the role of 'the emotions' is exaggerated by commentators, in that most emotional moments can't easily be tied to a single emotion. — mcdoodle
So, is math ability synonymous with intelligence/thinking ability, or do you agree with my assessment that math is just a specific skill in the wider scheme of intelligence? Do you think its more important for me to learn math or just get over it? — Avidya
In this paper, we develop an impure somatic theory of emotion, according to which emotions are constituted by the integration of bodily perceptions with representations of external objects, events, or states of affairs. — Luca Barlassina
Reducing our choices to a pair of polar opposites means we can act with counterfactual definiteness. There is simple clarity. — apokrisis
I feel emotions. But what are emotions, and how do I feel them? — darthbarracuda
We are naturally organised to respond to the demands and opportunities of the world in a dichotomous fashion - either relaxing or tensing in some appropriate holistically orienting and prepatory fashion. — apokrisis
I suffer from chronic anxiety and am nearing the end of twelve sessions of CBT. — Andrew4Handel
What kind of social environment produces denial (i.e., an unconscious defense mechanism used to reduce anxiety by denying thoughts, feelings, or facts that are consciously intolerable)? — Galuchat
Typically, childhood abuse, physical, sexual, or psychological. More generally, a dependent relationship that is simultaneously intolerable and inescapable. Such is my best current understanding, anyway. — unenlightened
But one becomes dysfunctional in relation to a social environment, and that is what we call 'mental illness'. — unenlightened
As you say, anyone can find themselves in an environment they cannot cope with, and the details of what they cannot cope with will vary with the individual. But one becomes dysfunctional in relation to a social environment, and that is what we call 'mental illness'. — unenlightened
...can psychology really be called a science? — rickyk95
The act of reasoning, i.e., using logic to come to a conclusion is not a psychological condition. I would say that using a dictionary (if that's where you got this) is not the best way to come to a conclusion on this subject. — Sam26
This is not to say that psychology cannot be studied, or that people cannot be treated. — unenlightened
It's not a very successful science. — unenlightened
For the most part beliefs have more to do with psychology than reason. — Sam26
It seems to be that the way psychologists and psychiatrists diagnose mental illness is through conversation with the patient. — rickyk95
The problem is that too many people have made an emotional investment in what they believe. — Harry Hindu
Too many people don't integrate their ideas into a consistent whole and end up being inconsistent. — Harry Hindu
Do christians use the same teachings to describe how they feel about medical ethics? — Ellie