Looking at it, again, from a kind of biological anthropology - the evolution of the h.sapiens forebrain was one of the most (if not THE most) spectacular and unparalleled events known to evolutionary science. — Wayfarer
this fantastically elaborated brain anatomy, which enabled language, conceptualisation, tool-making, story-telling and many of the other essentially human characteristics of our species. — Wayfarer
But again, if you have a broader definition or conception of sentience, maybe more could be said. — Manuel
That is a topic approach by anthropology. There is content online about the origins of animism, which is considered the most primitive, thus earliest, kind of religion. — Lionino
Conceptualisation relies on abstraction, the ability to represent and to imagine. — Wayfarer
Socrates never abandons his pursuit of the good.It is not for him an intellectual puzzle to be solved. It is a way of life. The pursuit of the good is good not because the good is something we might discover. The pursuit of the good is ultimately not about knowing the good but about being good. — Fooloso4
We could possibly relax the definition of the predicate isProvable(n) to isRational(n). Say that if the majority of the observers believe that a natural-language sentence is rational, then it is. — Tarskian
Very marginal, imho. Read Philosophical Investigations instead. — 180 Proof
But I don't know what you mean by 'applicable to non-formal languages'. — TonesInDeepFreeze
An excellent book that discusses arguments about Godel-Rosser outside of mathematics and philosophy of mathematics is 'Godel's Theorems' by Torkel Franzen. — TonesInDeepFreeze
What would "extend the import to non-formal languages" mean? — TonesInDeepFreeze
I don't think Godel's has anything to do with natural languages. — tim wood
I'll bite. Non-formal language is descriptive, as such useful - "true" - wrt certain criteria, and as such never itself the truth. And the same for formal/technical language, the efference being that those users usually do not worry about truth. — tim wood
It took me quite a while to figure all this out--I have had just the last few years to enjoy knowing who I am, understanding where I have been, what's coming up (at 77, one is into the last few chapters (maybe pages) of the book). I'm not complaining; my life was, over all, good. I had good friends; I loved and was loved; I had pretty good health; I was reasonably happy much of the time. Regrets? Sure. Mistakes? Absolutely. — BC
Gavin Newsom — 180 Proof
That said, why should philosophy not have a normative role as well. Maybe we are not discovering what the essence of “Truth”, “Knowledge”, or “Free Will”, but philosophers are inventing what these terms ought to mean. — Richard B
We don't all cope equally well. — Vera Mont
Might also be useful to recognise the distinction between narcotics and hallucinogens. They’re very different. I don’t know where cannabis fits in the scheme. — Wayfarer
No. It was the other way around.
Indeed, one could almost say that hard drug producing countries (Myanmar, Afghanistan (opiates), Columbia (cocaine), China and Mexico (fentanyl) are engaged in biowarfare by flooding the United States and Europe (and other places) with drugs whose long term (or in the case of fentanyl--short term) use may result in death or disability. — BC
I'm not quite sure what an "emotional imbalance" is. Say more. — BC
I thought so. I wonder why you think this way? Care to elaborate? — Tom Storm
You asked this from the beginning and it seems to me this has been answered. Is it that you don't agree or do you not like the answer? — Tom Storm
Human beings in most cultures throughout history have used substances and had roles for mind altering experiences. We relish and build lives around exhilarating activities, risk taking, extreme sports, adrenalin inducing movies, etc, etc. Kids often go around in circles in order to spin out and fall over. We seem to be hard wired to try and mix things up with thrills, euphoria, elation and other similar sensations. Unless someone is on the spectrum, boredom and routine are often experienced as 'soul' destroying. Particularly when younger. — Tom Storm
On the contrary all my formal education seemed designed to create the "ideal" conforming angst-ridden robot, that is all governments can cope with. — unenlightened
To be amenable and flexible is part of sanity when it is a conscious choice, but when it becomes unconscious and rigid conformism, it is a madness of false identification and leads to horrors. Magas, Nazis, cultists, fanatics and zealots of all persuasions all suffer from the loss of reality in favour of ideology. This is sadly the mental condition of normality, that confers on the sufferer a complete confidence in their distorted thinking. Psychodelics in particular serve to break down the identification somewhat - with luck, the cracks that are made in the psycho-ceramic's everyday insane certainty will allow a glimpse of reality to reach the sufferer. — unenlightened
Drugs, seem like a distraction
— Shawn
So we agree on (this 'recreational' path of least effort) after all ...
... perhaps addictive intoxication (i.e. escape, distraction, self-anaesthetization) is the religion of the masses.
— 180 Proof — 180 Proof
If I understand you correctly, you're suggesting that drug-taking is an attempt to fulfill a "spiritual" need? — 180 Proof
If so, what's this "spiritual need grasping for? — 180 Proof
And why isn't "spiritual" fulfillment just another form of futile ego-gratification (like e.g. overconsumption, status-seeking, addictive intoxication, etc)? — 180 Proof
Do you think AI could and should plan your life? — NOS4A2