No. I did not use "multiple" to define the conjunction operator. — ucarr
In other words, the "and" operator is an attractor that puts multiple members into one set — ucarr
Perhaps you'll argue that connecting is just the same as multiplying. They're related, but they're not identical. We can prove this by showing how 3+4 = 7, whereas 3x4 = 12. — ucarr
multiple | ˈməltəp(ə)l |
adjective
having or involving several parts, elements, or members — ucarr
The underlined part of your quote is incorrect. With A = B, you've set up an equation of the type:
5 = 2+3. This is not A = A, which could be 5 = 5, or 2+3 = 2+3. A and B, as your eye can see, are not identical, as the case with A = A. Stop conflating equivalent with identical. — ucarr
Does it make sense to go from there to saying bell pepper equals the pizza? — ucarr
you're saying a fundamental definition cannot be redefined usefully — ucarr
It's only useful if you don't know the word for A — Skalidris
If it’s best to insert 5 into one context, whereas it’s best to insert 2+3 into another context, then that stands as a minor example of usefully spinning a fundamental definition. — ucarr
multiple | ˈməltəp(ə)l |
adjective
having or involving several parts, elements, or members
The Apple Dictionary — ucarr
If you configure a circle of any size, and you construct it by using the sequence: apple_orange_pear, you can start at any point in the circle and stop at any other point on the circle, and the three parts remain distinct. If you make a complete circle from, say, an apple back to itself, it's not conflated with either the orange or the pear. — ucarr
"Circular" and "undefined" are two different things. If you cannot define something, you cannot establish it as distinct from other things. In other words, if you cannot say what something is, you also cannot say what it isn't. — ucarr
By contrasting "and" with "or," the two operators clarify and explain each other. In other words, the "and" operator is an attractor that puts multiple members into one set, whereas the"or" operator is a separator that puts multiple members into separate sets, as demonstrated by the two expressions above. Now there, I've defined the "and" operator without any circularity. — ucarr
Your first sentence implies consciousness cannot examine itself. Can you explain how this is the case given the fact that, in this very instant, we are examples of consciousness examining itself? If we're not doing that, then what are we doing? — ucarr
Can you explain why this premise is not an impossible premise leading to the logical circularity you're propounding? — ucarr
If, as you imply, consciousness is thwarted by the self-referential state into useless circularity, then that's a claim that supports: consciousness exists outside of the subject/object bi-conditional. — ucarr
brain precedes mind, at least from the materialist point of view: brain and mind always co-exist, but there's no thought without brain, as demonstrated causally by the maxim: absent brain, absent mind. — ucarr
In our context here, it is a measurement system. This is a fact about consciousness, thus establishing its identity as an object. — ucarr
So what? How does that have anything to do with this self referential problem?What does consciousness do? In our context here, it changes the state of superposition into the state of (well-defined) position. — ucarr
This would require a little more than improvements in transportation or communication… This would require that our mind is restructured in a way that does not require “consciousness” to be a building block in our mind. And even if that is managed, this would be replaced by another “building block” and we would then face the same problem for this other building block. We use tools from our mind to understand the world, just like in the Lego analogy I explained later in this message, and it’s impossible to explain these tools when all we have to do so are the same tools we’re trying to explain... — Skalidris
If you want a more formal proof of this reasoning, it’s the same principle as Gödel’s incompleteness theorems: any consistent formal system capable of arithmetic contains true statements that are unprovable within that system. The self reference problem brings contradictions when you're trying to prove something by using that thing itself, just like with the liar paradox, just like the hard problem of consciousness. — Skalidris
It's like saying the detective can't solve the crime if you set up a scenario where the clues are out of his reach. Sure. Nothing to do with logical impossibility though — Baden
Is this an impossible picture? — SophistiCat
Never say never! Yes, this seems impossible today. But science is full of 'making the impossible possible'. Did we conceive that cell phones would exist 300 years ago? That mankind would ever be able to travel to the moon? Judging what is possible in the future based on what we know today has a history of throwing egg on the face of our collective human race. :)
This is why it is viable to call it 'the hard problem' instead of 'the impossible problem'. — Philosophim
your argument is a bit like saying it's logically impossible to prove the existence of time because it's an object in the world and we can't perceive it as such because each act of perception is a static measurement that never captures its flow. — Baden
What or where could anything be but in the world? — jkop
Wayfarer yesterday jumped from intelligence to consciousness as if it is the same thing. — Carlo Roosen
"How can we objectively measure and explore the purely subjective experience of being conscious?" With our current understanding of science, we can't. — Philosophim
So I agree that "....the hard problem of consciousness is impossible to solve", but I don't see the logical proof because it seems we are talking about two different things both referred to as consciousness. — Carlo Roosen
Dreams, hallucinations and imagination don't fit easily into discussions on consciousness, do they? — kazan
Well, it is apparent to me that we have already begun to understand our universe with the brains we currently have now, and i don't see any reason why this trajectory will not continue. — punos
Every tiny fraction of the universe partakes from the same fundamental logic that everything else does or it doesn't exist. I would say that the probability is 100%. — punos
It's not arrogant because it's the other way around. It is our minds that follow the logic of the universe. — punos
What if you may already intuitively understand that the statement is lacking substance? — Vaskane
Therefore, if someone uttered the statement, it would beg the question, "Which sentence do you mean?" — Corvus
The term "paradox" is overrated and abused. Most "paradoxes" are simply self-contradictory, self-refuting or circular statements or statements based on a false hypotheses. — Alkis Piskas
There are such factors as perspective and relativity, which alone leave certain paradoxes "open" or "unsolvable". E.g. The Ship of Theseus paradox (thought experiment). — Alkis Piskas
Having distinct and unique thoughts is what produces the idea of individuality. — Metaphysician Undercover
But that's not how we conceive of an individual, as having a a separate "I", the "I" being something general. The "I" is the complete package of the individual. So you propose a separation of the "I", but it's unrealistic. — Metaphysician Undercover
To propose a fictitious one is to say that things could be otherwise, but since the notion of individual is the true concept what purpose does the fictitious one serve? — Metaphysician Undercover
It is a reply in that it focuses on the formation of consciousness, or rather the formation of qualia and individuality. That's a dimension that needs to be included if we are to break down our intuitions of consciousness. — Christoffer
You ask what we think about your reasoning, but there's no clear conclusion you make. It reads more as a speculative meditation on the subject than deconstruction down to a conclusion. — Christoffer
anytime a "ball of energy", supposedly a consciousness, passed from one subject to another, it would find itself completely disoriented, being in a completely different frame of reference, sort of like if you went to sleep in Tokyo and woke up in London, except much more extreme. — Metaphysician Undercover
This would produce all sorts of irreconcilable confusion for the consciousness because it would not be able to distinguish forces of change coming from the inside, from forces coming from the outside, leaving it incapable of intentional activity. — Metaphysician Undercover
the question of qualia and our subjective experience as a consciousness is another discussion that fits this thread better. — Christoffer
As long as you think reality is something that has to be ‘matched to knowledge’ you’re screwed from the get-go — Joshs
There is no conceptual space for the role of the subject in that method — Wayfarer
Individuation is indeed a fundamental part of human being, but mystics have long pointed to states of consciousness beyond that of 'me and mine'. — Wayfarer
That it's very jumbled. It's full of mixed metaphors and partially-grasped ideas. — Wayfarer
I think neither of these really reflect the problem of explaining phenomenal experiences — Apustimelogist
"Consciousness" is an empirical problem yet to be solved (i.e. testably explained) and not merely, or even principally, a speculative question ... unless by "consciousness", Skalidris, you mean a 'supernatural' (i.e. non-empirical) entity. :chin: — 180 Proof
Its just a very visual example of creatures not recognizing 'Themselves". — Philosophim
You even suggested it had no benefits — Hanover
I don’t believe this is just a random trait that stayed within us while having no advantages, so what could it be? — Skalidris
Don't we already have such fields, though, including those of sociology, anthropology, and cognitive sciences? — javra
but this doesn't come close to defining what "human nature" in fact is — javra
do you really feel like you're "in control of your thoughts" when you're not drunk? — flannel jesus
“the proof is in the pudding: rape happens in the world and always has”. This genetically determined aspect of human nature is so called “reality” as they see it. — javra
but rather a method by which we can dispel the bullshit and prop up truths - especially those truths that have utility or are impactful. — ToothyMaw
In fact, those things are required for a human to navigate the world socially and otherwise, I would argue. — ToothyMaw
we catalogue human nature and teach it so as to avoid Weltschmertz? — ToothyMaw
Point being it really boggles the mind how such small little gestures or even inaction can literally change the world and lives of countless people — Outlander
It's not as if Native Americans, for example, who have extremely high rates of alcoholism, are just weak willed. It's part of their genetic response to the substance. — Hanover
Some people just don't have the genetic disposition to react to chemical substances as others, which also explains the alcoholic who seems compelled to drink. — Hanover
There's the idea that one doesn't need religion in order to be moral. — baker
That phrasing borders on tautological. "X will tend to happen in a system when the environment around that system is favourable for X". Replace x with literally just about anything and that sentence structure holds. Right? — flannel jesus
I quickly found several other sites with references to a "missing law" to be added to Darwin's 4 or 5 "principles — Gnomon
It's not necessarily obvious that things must become more complex over time — flannel jesus
The difference is, it's easy to see an advantage for all of these activities: it "makes sense" that we get pleasure from sex, or else we wouldn't reproduce, that we exercise be so healthy,... But what about alcohol? If alcohol and drugs didn't exist or triggered a negative reaction that would make us avoid it, what would we lose and what would we gain?Humans seem to have always enjoyed altering their consciousness and augmenting their quotidian experiences through all manner of activities - sex, exercise, hiking, travelling, flying, sky diving, deep sea diving, exploring, rock climbing, art, dance, music, cinema, performance, costume, meditation, gambling, massage... — Tom Storm
But that's the thing, if you didn't consider something interesting sober, why would you want to alter your state to find it valuable? Who would you trust more to access the value of things, your sober self or your drunk self?They can make life a bit more interesting and fun. — Tom Storm
But alcohol is not primarily about escape or alteration of mind. In moderation it's a lubricant to conviviality — Vera Mont
Yes, then why do we tend to change our perception of reality rather than change our reality itself? I never understood this, if I find people uninteresting, I'm not going to get drunk to have fun with them, I'm going to find people with whom I can have fun when I'm sober...if one is properly 'tuned up' - that is, physical fit and mentally calm - then it is likely the need for such artificial aides to well-being will correspondingly be reduced. — Wayfarer
Do they really? It is so normalized to drink during social occasions. Why would you want to cause an illusionary state whenever you socialize, how does that make any sense?responsible drinkers know this is an illusion and temporary state, — Outlander
Okay, so let's imagine you have to choose between spending some fun time doing something you only like when you drink, or doing something you like when you're sober, would you consider them both as valuable in your life? Some people stare at lights when they're on LSD, would you consider staring at lights a valuable thing in your life? Some people have sex with people they don't even like or are attracted to when they're drunk, would you consider that a valuable experience in your life?Just because you're sober or awake, as you think, doesn't mean you're any more coherent or in touch with the absolute nature of things than someone who is perhaps a bit less than sober. — Outlander
l so let me tell you a story based on the truths and falsehoods of what people commonly prescribe to be a case or "unchangeable situation" of such. — Outlander
The only way forward for it is to abandon dualism, and in evolutionary terms this would be a catastrophe rather than part of a gradual evolution. . . — FrancisRay
Because the most realistic depictions of people I’ve read have involved unpredictable and illogical behaviour. — Jamal
an independent thinker would need some sort of education to learn the terminology and ideas employed by the current field of academics he wishes to present his ideas to otherwise it would seem like he was talking in a different language. — simplyG
existing ideas have to be understood first in order to overcome them — simplyG
The pace would depend on the amount of good ideas being produced — simplyG
due to some people having intuitions more compatible with recognizing the merit of the new idea — wonderer1
even all the Maths and Geometry theorems, that we are able to prove in so clever and irresistible ways, can be considered just another way how power is able to impose itself as the fundamental law, fundamental rule, in nature, in ideas, in everything. — Angelo Cannata
Is he capable of recognizing political decisions that are unfavorable to others? — Leontiskos
it’s important the wrong ones don’t get elected as they could end up affecting your life. — simplyG
He believed in more of a "saintly" kind of compassion — schopenhauer1
I helped a person who was in a very bad situation — Angelo Cannata
The currently accepted cosmology - big bang, inflation. It's plausible but incomplete. — T Clark
=> The probability that the “true” theory can be made by our imagination, and therefore from knowledge from 1): that tiny part of the universe, is even more ridiculously small. — Skalidris
The right word is "unlimited." Humans languages can generate an unlimited number of propositions. — T Clark
If you assume they are with no evidence, it invalidates the analysis. — T Clark
I'm not required to provide reasons for my disagreement with you if you didn't provide justifications for your statements in the first place. — T Clark