Israel's strategy is baffling except as an attempt to maintain the conflict for as long as possible as cover for expansions of settlements, expulsions, and further encroachments. — Baden
If you consider what his ideas actually are, it'd seem that were they to actually have been into place, the situation there, though still with certain predicaments, would be preferable to what exists now. United States collaboration with right-wing authoritarian regimes was born out of a cynical anti-democratic anti-Communism and not some form of genuine Neo-Liberalism. — thewonder
There are all kinds of problems with Neo-Liberalism, but I don't think that it is really what to cite as what has made the Liberal democratic project, to me, at least, insufficient. — thewonder
A person's way of life and relationship to the world can be very easily utilized in order to manipulate them. You should only really care about your way of life and relationship to the world, however. It's just something that you can't ever let go of. — thewonder
The idea in Capitalist Realism is that there is no Capitalist ideology. It's already cynicism. I think that the danger is of a more generalized cynicism than any form of indoctrination. — thewonder
User participation within the production of goods and services does offer a certain degree of choice. It's, of course, considerably more troubling when you think about companies collecting massive amounts of data to build profiles of people to know what to market them. The experience is very strange, almost akin to schizophrenia. It seems like the ads are speaking to you directly because they kind of are. — thewonder
I was just saying that it's as if you're not let to feel as you should about the human experience. There's no boundless joy, whimsical caprice, emotional depth, righteous indignation, or catharsis. There seems, to me, to be a somewhat deliberate attempt to disrupt how we naturally feel about things. That's what I'm saying bothers me the most. — thewonder
We desire authenticity to the point of psychological terror. Anything that lets us feel again is somehow good. I've just been invoking extreme examples to point this out. — thewonder
hink about The Waking Life, for instance. People consider for it to be the worst form of pseudo-intellectual trite. It was a good film, y'know? What I'm suggesting is that this idea that we should care for and consider the world as it actually is should not have been a passing trend. — thewonder
But consciousness - on his view - is quite different. We're not talking about more of the same. And thus it cannot emerge. It must therefore be present all the way down. I don't see that you've said anything to block this. — Bartricks
It's fun, y'know? You just have to keep two bookmarks. — thewonder
They believe that their existential status has been called into question. It's their very way of life that they believe to be at stake. If anyone is serious about bringing an end to the war, they will have to take that into consideration. We need Kanye West to bring us there, though. That's what I'm saying about the Postmodern condition. — thewonder
Yes, see, before making families homeless and destroying all their worldly posessions, Israeli terrorists let them know that that's what's about to happen before hand. So it's all good. — StreetlightX
there'd be no reason to suppose it resident potentially but not actualized — Bartricks
I can only assume that you think Strawson is not committed to attributing conscious states to everything. Okay. Why not? — Bartricks
Again, consciousness can't emerge - Strawson doesn't think so. So it is not - not - like liquidity.
So consciousness must be present - fully present - in the building blocks. If it is not fully present in the building blocks, then we have something coming out that wasn't put it. — Bartricks
Note too that as a general rule the mention of quantum mechanics in a philosophical discussion is an admission of defeat. — Bartricks
Now, liquidity - you haven't answered my questions about it. What is liquidity and is it an emergent property or not? — Bartricks
I don't have a clue what a quantum field is. But the concept of materialism predates any such notion. — Bartricks
I don't understand what you said about Descartes. He made several arguments for the immateriality of the mind. They're good arguments. — Bartricks
Descartes did not just arbitrarily believe that minds were not material mechanisms, he argued that they are not — Bartricks
Materialists believe there are objects extended in space. That's a good working definition. — Bartricks
Descartes' arguments have not been refuted and if he were alive today he would still be a dualist and would join me in deriding the stupidity and dogmatism of those who think the mind is material. He didn't suffer fools gladly and he'd have torn Strawson a new one. — Bartricks
There is no reason to think materialism about the mind is true. When faith in a view is widespread, many mistake that for evidence or think that there must be an evidential base for it. But there is no evidential base for materialism about the mind. I have asked to be shown evidence for it time and time again, and in 10 years of asking, no one has provided me with any, just fallacious arguments that won't withstand a moment's reflection. — Bartricks
Consider shape. We cannot get shape from that which is not shaped. Molecules have a shape as much as the objects they compose. They do not have to have the same shape, but they have a shape. Likewise for conscious states. Consciousness cannot emerge from that which is not conscious. — Bartricks
conscious states - not something else - must be fully present in molecules — Bartricks
So Strawson must, onpain of inconsistency, insist that everything has conscious states. Not something 'like'consciuos states, but the real deal. Thus my wardrobe is conscious. My hand is. My ear is. A speck of dust is. Properly conscious. — Bartricks
If one remains a materialist despite being driven to these lengths, then I think one has discovered that one's materialism is a faith. — Bartricks
Yes, I am the same — spirit-salamander
But an experience is a conscious state - to be experiencing something is to be in a state of consciousness — Bartricks
Rational intuitions are our source of insight into what's what. There's nothing else to appeal to. All of our rational intuitions tell us minds are immaterial, not material. — Bartricks
So, my reason is telling me, then, that my mind is not in the business of having properties such as shape, smell, taste, texture. Not, in other words, a material object. — Bartricks
They'd surely need to be in order to avoid having to posit a new emergent property of consciousness? — Bartricks
Just as you can't get something shaped from combining elements none of which have any shape, so too you can't get consciousness by combining that which is not conscious - that's his case, I take it? — Bartricks
My mind appears to be nothing remotely like a material object. Everything - but everything - our reason tells us about our minds conflicts with the materialist thesis. — Bartricks
for panpsychism is manifestly false. — Bartricks
So if materialism is true, then everything must be conscious if anything is?
What possible reason is there to be a materialist given it has such absurd implications? It's perverse. No evidence it is true and plenty that it is false. — Bartricks
Reality is nothing but appearances — Janus