Yes good one.
You'd think God has a inferiority complex with all that worshiping going on. Obviously no truck with a nihilistic Atheist then. — ovdtogt
The God of the Old Testament is arguably the most unpleasant character in all fiction: jealous and proud of it; a petty, unjust, unforgiving control-freak; a vindictive, bloodthirsty ethnic cleanser; a misogynistic, homophobic, racist, infanticidal, genocidal, filicidal, pestilential, megalomaniacal, sadomasochistic, capriciously malevolent bully. — Richard Dawkins
Do we take aspirin for a good reason or bad? Both I think. Good that we have it, bad that we need it. — ovdtogt
It shows that the need for Gods persists in modern society. — ovdtogt
If 'Christian' religion is right I'd be in Hell by now. I prefer a meaningless life. — ovdtogt
Fame has this mystical quality of turning shit into gold. I think this is what the alchemists were looking for all the time.
Often the difference between something being profound or crazy is the person saying it.
The difference between great and mediocre contemporary art is the artist who made it. — ovdtogt
If religion is wrong, life is literally meaningless (unless the satisfaction of emotions becomes a job). — Yahya Al Haj Eid
Mirroring is anything where the way you are is used to predict the way something else is. For example in our language, we just assume that our associations have something to do with the thing someone else said, just because we have those associations. It doesn't work all the time and we do modify our thoughts of what someone meant by what we know of him, but as the basis, our language simply uses mirroring to predict what others mean. Very fast - doesn't need definitions, but does require everyone to be programmed in a very similar way. — Qmeri
Yes, and that is exactly a form of communication that doesn't use mirroring - a logical language which is based on definitions. Definitions don't need mirroring since they are defined the same irregardless of what you associate with them. And that's what our communications with aliens and AIs will be like - making definitions and saying things simply by those definitions. It's much slower and the things we don't know how to define with purely logical means become near impossible to talk about. — Qmeri
This is the reason why complex mirroring requires so precise similarity from the systems that use it. — Qmeri
The main reason we have not been able to replicate human conversation with computers is because we use mirroring in human speech. This means that we trust that our phrases cause almost the same associations in the minds of the participants of the conversation. And then we just have to modify these associations a little to understand one another.
The problem is that our associations are dependent on almost everything that makes up a human mind. They are affected by the mood of the situation, how things look like, what the current events are and how they affect the particular group that is talking, our human needs and priorities and other things that are very particular to human programming.
This causes that our speech works only between systems that have almost the same human programming so that the phrases cause almost the same associations. We can see this even between humans of different cultures. Even if the cultures speak the same language, it becomes hard for them to understand each other if the phrases and contexts cause different associations in those cultures.
Because of this:
A - we will never have a fluent conversation with aliens unless they are programmed almost exactly like us.
B - we will not program an AI that can speak human in the foreseeable future because we don’t have the empirical knowledge of how human mind is programmed to replicate that programming in an AI and thus enable the AI to use mirroring.
C - if a single human changed his programming in a major way (for example by emphasizing logic in his thinking beyond normal) he would gradually lose his ability to fluently communicate with other people unless other people changed at the same rate.
Not that this means that we can’t communicate in any way in these situations. Logical languages like mathematics are still a way to communicate even without mirroring. — Qmeri
Feelings... So, what do you make out of her feelings? Is it empathy or something else, like anger or outrage? — Wallows
As for example, when someone proposes an argument to us that we cannot refute, we say to him, "Before the founder of the sect to which you belong was born, the argument which you propose in accordance with it had not appeared as a valid argument, but was dormant in nature, so in the same way it is possible that its refutation also exists in nature, but has not yet appeared to us, so that it is not at all necessary for us to agree with an argument that now seems to be strong."
Sextus Empiricus
Does the prospect of a unknown future refutation make the strongest argument weak? Should it at the very least temper a dogmatic approach to knowledge- and certainty-pronouncements — ZzzoneiroCosm
Addendum: It's wise to beware (moreover) of an uknown future refutation of the possibility of an unknown future refutation.
Is it possible to refute the possibility of an unknown future refutation? — ZzzoneiroCosm
I find it really unfortunate that we have to have children, like Greta Thunberg, promoting something that should be obviously clear about dangers that we all face collectively.
Not to isolate Greta as one case on the matter, the same thing is going on with the U.S. if anyone recalls the school protests after the Sandy Hook mass shooting.
The issue seems to be complex. Children are rejecting going to school and the curriculum over perceived dangers or injustices. In economics, this is strangely similar to the prisoner's dilemma, in terms of accepting a future where both are free to do what they want and are coerced by punishment not to fink on one another. Yet, the children are finking on the adults, who they (should) perceive as their more informed fiduciaries. How do you even begin to explain that, and perhaps more importantly in what terms? — Wallows
Yeah, you dug into the argument and understood the issue as I presented it. Or otherwise, I don't really have anything against a negative version or "soft" version of hedonism. — Wallows
Hedonism is a philosophical position that in my view suffers from two main flaws.
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1) That people are only motivated by pleasure. (a straw man of sorts)
2) This point follows from the first, in that people will encounter a slippery slope fallacy in regards to pleasure, and assume that because of this people will all end up engaging in activities that will promote pleasure.
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My rebuttal to these two main points that often hedonists tend to get accused of is to profess a soft version of hedonism that limits suffering instead of pleasure. One can assume, that instead of increasing pleasure directly, it will also be present or arise due to less suffering.
Is this a position that many hedonists embrace? It seems like the only "logical" version of hedonism that everyone ought to aspire towards. — Wallows
I think that "simple" and "complex" are relative concepts, like "big" and "small". So I can't see how they could take on a universal meaning...? — ZhouBoTong
01 goes first right which means it goes 1/2 the distance between 1/2 and 1 which are points on a line to first give 3/4. Then it left shifts halfway to the next point which is 1/2. This means it sits halfway between
1/2 and 3/4 which is 5/8. This value is halfway between 1/2 and 3/4. This is why I would normally use a square with a line going halfway down the middle. Each shift creates a new line and you only move halfway to your next line ok — Umonsarmon
What you are saying basically: a sane and healthy person needs both food and drugs. Mens sana in corpore sano — ovdtogt
Ok here we go remember we start at 1/2 and then shift either left or right by half. Lets say that 1 is left and 0 is right.
1 goes to 1/4 (i.e halfway between 0 and 1/2
-1 just gets represented as the key -1/4
0 right shifts from 1/2 to 3/4 — Umonsarmon
Err no. 0 would be a shift from 1/2 to either left or right depending on what direction you wanted to use. 1 maps to a left or right shift that would be the opposite of 0. This means that -1 would map to either -1/4 or -3/4 depending on what you did — Umonsarmon
Miracles are evidence of a person's lack of understanding — ovdtogt
I would just use a -a/b value and then list that next to its a/b twin — Umonsarmon
None of this disputes that society is made up of people...does it? So in a part of society, there is consciousness, that makes that part of society more complicated than all of society? That makes zero logical sense. I think I get your point, but I hope you are seeing that it is the various potential uses of the words "simple" and "complex" that are the source of the problem.
And until we understand it better I will not call consciousness complicated. What if consciousness is simply the touch of god, and nothing else? I get you are trying to make this discussion more scientific than that, but I have explained my hesitation to label things as simple or complex outside of context, and I don't have enough context to label consciousness. Is a dog's consciousness simpler or more complex than a human's? How so?
I see this thread suddenly got busy, so no need to get back to me if you have more exciting posts to respond to :smile: — ZhouBoTong
There's not much that anyone can prove does not exist. And it's one of the least important or interesting things about God. — unenlightened
Sure.....In the context of miracle's/logic, as well as religious beliefs, I would say more specifically the choice is made through inductive reasoning. That's an important distinction.
The other distinction you made: gravity--->computation and/or instinct--->'denial' or ignoring both leads to death.
And another point you made I think relates to the Will to believe; Schopenhauer, Kierkegaard, Maslow, William James and even Einstein to name a few talked about that so-called intrinsic nature or feature that we have called the Will. The connection there usually makes it way back to existential things like human instinct, sentience and intuition, or an innate sense of wonder.
So briefly, I would say in this context TMF, rather than your 'informed choice' you could replace it with logical inference. And more specifically, inference based upon unexplained phenomena from conscious existence (or from conscious human Beings ) if you prefer.
But yeah, The Will is an intriguing topic no doubt...and quite extensive to say the least. Does that interpretation clarify? — 3017amen
That's clearly unacceptable as a definition, given the logical consequences. There aren't any miracles.
Hitchens is correct that miracles wouldn't necessarily imply, or even count as evidence towards, the existence of God. There are any number of possible explanations that could be given. It could be attributed to the work of magical faeries, for example. — S
Premise (2) is the more problematic one. One could object that God need not be posited to explain violations of the laws of nature. For instance, the only reason we have to believe that there are unbreakable laws of nature in the first place is because we have never, in the past, seen otherwise. But it does not follow from this that future events must follow the laws of nature. Just because we have always seen things follow the laws of nature in the past does not mean that things will always continue to do so — Teaisnice
1. If God exists, then He would be maximally powerful.
2. If God is maximally powerful, then He can violate the laws of nature at will.
3. If God can violate the laws of nature at will, then miracles are possible.
4. Therefore, if God exists, then miracles are possible. — Teaisnice
“Our essence of Mind is intrinsically pure. If we knew our Mind perfectly and realised what our Self-nature truly is, all of us would be enlightened.” (Bodhisattva Sila Sutra - ca 450 BC)
At around the same time the concept of Selfrealisation bloomed in the philosophical circles of Greece under the heading “know thyself”, and became famous through Socrates who claimed “Knowledge is inherent in man, not outside. Wisdom is learning to recollect”
In the Orient this was apparently taken seriously, as – particularly in India, Tibet & China – it brought about a variety of teachings & schools as well as methods & approaches attending the different needs and temperaments of the aspirants of Selfrealisation.
That “know thyself” made it in the Occident barely beyond philosophical exercises, is probably because it established in the same period the ratio of dualism which subjected knowledge to the feedback mechanism of the intellect. This is not to say that eastern aspirants do not use intellectual techniques, but they are taught how far to utilise them (which is not all the way to the beginning) whereas western thinkers think that they have to think all the way to the end. — waechter418
I think the word "negligible" should not be used in the context of chaotic dynamical systems. Clearly if a slight variation at the beginning of an iteration process leads to bizarre behavior that variation, no matter how small, is not negligible. Just the contrary. Your notion of "cumulative contributory causation" is well put. — John Gill
In chaos theory, the butterfly effect is the sensitive dependence on initial conditions in which a small change in one state of a deterministic nonlinear system can result in large differences in a later state. — Wikipedia
Unless I'm working from a misunderstanding of the two, truth value results from following the rules of correct inference. Whereas truth conditions are what makes a belief true. True belief are prior to language acquisition, and definitely during. Being true does not require following the rules of correct inference. Having truth value does. Truth value is not equivalent to truth. — creativesoul
This is interesting, because I don’t agree that chemistry has done the creating here. This is what I mean by the difference between creating and evolving. Chemistry has evolved, but it didn’t create - not by itself, anyway — Possibility