• Best Arguments for Physicalism

    Awesome, thank you! Getting it to while i work. Very long, so don't expect me to come back any time soon - or at all LOL
  • Best Arguments for Physicalism
    fair enough. I'm just responding to these specific comments - I'm not making an argument for or against physicalism. I was just pointing out that language can't be utilized by everyone in their mind - as with 3D abstraction.
  • Thomas Ligotti's Poetic Review of Human Consciousness
    Then i cannot see what the futility is in relation to?
  • Best Arguments for Physicalism
    I get your point, but it can’t be a dialogue. It’s just the brain keeping you informed that it’s still working.Mww

    I'm not quite sure what you're addressing 'internal dia/monologue' is definitely a metaphor - but many people are unable to form sentences in their mind at all https://www.iflscience.com/people-are-weirded-out-to-discover-that-some-people-dont-have-an-internal-monologue-54881
  • Best Arguments for Physicalism
    is pulling your leg.Banno

    Or their own... which i find to be the case with those types of answers. Tail chasing.
  • Thomas Ligotti's Poetic Review of Human Consciousness
    :ok: Bang on IMO. But, once again, this is a 'poetical' take. It's fun in that light.
  • Best Arguments for Physicalism
    Why can’t everyone do it? What’s the catch?Mww

    Thats the kicker, huh? Why can't everyone do it. Same with internal dialogues..
  • A Measurable Morality
    so I'll post a revised version for you to check out and poke atPhilosophim

    Ok, fair enough - will keep an eye out.

    The idea is that we don't know if there is an objective morality. If there is though, I find all moral questions boil down to needing the foundation of "Should existence be" or "Should nothing be"?Philosophim

    Agree (though i have further thoughts.. heh).

    Bold: Cripes; yeah fiar enough. My initial thought was 'that's incoherent' but i reflected a few minutes and I actually think this is very, very reasonable and a problem not-oft dealt with. Thank you for that.

    all other moral questions are mootPhilosophim

    Do you mean by this, that they are ipso facto immoral given that being is immoral? Or that they just don't matter because there's no possible way to answer accurately?

    Your New List
    (im not great with any kind of formal logic, so bear with any serious mistakes in my comments here please!)
    I would understand the claim 'nothing should exist' as better repped. by "existence shouldn't be". Otherwise, I find room for existence to me moral, but anything existing to be immoral (including the statement). But if existence itself shouldn't be (as an objective moral claim) we are already too far gone to make a comment on it. We exist :)

    If it is F that nothing should exist, and something SHOULD exist, how can we get to a moral agent from 'something'?
  • Thomas Ligotti's Poetic Review of Human Consciousness
    Thank you :)

    Is the position such that the failure to address current or past suffering is somehow invalidating the attempt to prevent future suffering? Or is it a way of saying 'the present is inescapable' such that looking at the future to prevent suffering is futile?
  • Thomas Ligotti's Poetic Review of Human Consciousness
    The excess of consciousness is the "Human".. So to me, it is about bad faith trying to constantly keep away from the existential implications of this.. that we need to deliberate our way into being "caught up", that we know of our own dissatisfaction and must find ways to cope with it.schopenhauer1

    I hear your point (i think) and that's reasonable... But what i quoted seems to contradict, and place this effort in the 'not-human' category. Unsure what to make here, as I grok what you've said but it doesn't seem to follow from the material quoted.

    Unlike other animals, we are self-reflective, ripped asunder from a mode of being that other animals have access to. We instead have as I said:
    That is to say, unlike other animals, we are not "being" but having to make concerted efforts to "get caught up in being". It is not our natural mode, which is rather, a mode of deliberation. This is part of that ever-discussed "human condition"- the excess of consciousness.
    — schopenhauer1
    schopenhauer1

    This doesn't make any sense to me: 'being' isn't a choice. We can't get 'caught up' in being. It is the case that we 'are'. If we don't engage in any of these practices, is the suggestion that we 'aren't'? Realise there's poetics here, but it seems incomprehensible without a bit of translating.. and maybe im being cynical about that.

    Just emphasizing our unique isolated condition as opposed to the rest of nature. We developed self-reflection which puts an extra level of burden and responsibility upon us- one where we have to choose which mechanism to give us ballast.schopenhauer1

    Again, I just don't understand how this is anything but an existential whine. I agree, we have a unique condition - but I have no idea why this imports any kind of extra responsibility or a 'need' to choose any kind of mechanism. As noted, I don't think these things are needed. It seems you might?

    Again, the "exile from Eden" imagery.schopenhauer1

    I guess from here, I would just restate my conclusion on the passage. Appears divorced from anything really beyond fictional sentimentality.

    What would have to be done to live this new mode of being, cut off from being "in the moment", a fully existential being. Self-reflective, wholly different in kind, even if evolved from the same mechanism.schopenhauer1

    Sorry? I guess, if you feel there's a 'need' to overcome the human condition this makes sense to you. It doesn't amke sense to me.

    Older times, being a mode of being like how other animals live.schopenhauer1

    Sure. I would just restate my take. It appears to be an extension of New-Agey nonsense about a Golden Age. That somehow lacking self-awareness was better, and we're jettisoned into self-consciousness (from where?) as if set adrift on an ocean with no oars. Seems silly to me.
  • Best Arguments for Physicalism
    Ok, so I need to read Kastrup. I did not know about the analogy with pipes/water but I already felt the way the intended intuition about pipes/water as computational feels - but about the brain/neural networks. Viz....:

    But this is magical thinking. You'd have to ask yourself the question: how, precisely, does the mere addition of more of the same pipes, valves and water, lead to the magical jump to conscious inner life? Unless you have an explicit and coherent answer to this question, you are merely engaging in hand waving, self-deception, and hiding behind vague complexity."RogueAI

    Bravo Kastrup. Has also jumped my hitlist, along with Ryle.
  • Time travel to the past hypothetically possible?
    To inject myself here, I'd say Kant IS alive in 1776.
  • Thomas Ligotti's Poetic Review of Human Consciousness
    my own conclusion that 'anitnatalism is futile'180 Proof

    Hey mate - would you mind bumper-stickering your basic reasoning here? I am an anti-natalist and so am interested in objections - particularly as you're saying it's 'futile' rather than like illogical or incoherent or something 'defeating'.
  • Thomas Ligotti's Poetic Review of Human Consciousness
    I don't think Ligotti / Zapffe is suggesting it's not human.schopenhauer1

    The tragedy, following this theory, is that humans spend all their time trying not to be human.

    Really? I find that hard to parse from the material you've quoted.

    The epoch had passed when the whole of their being was open to the world and nothing divided them from the rest of creation. — Thomas Ligotti- Conspiracy Against the human Race

    What?

    that which should not be — Thomas Ligotti- Conspiracy Against the human Race

    A further, what?

    The whole of their being was closed to the world, and they had been divided from the rest of creation. — Thomas Ligotti- Conspiracy Against the human Race

    Getting into 'wtf' territory...

    what would have to be done — Thomas Ligotti- Conspiracy Against the human Race

    This sounds like the need you mentioned. I'm unsure why, then, I was asked to defend that position?

    This would not revive among them the way things had once been done in older times; it would only be the best they could do. — Thomas Ligotti- Conspiracy Against the human Race

    This passage seems to be some kind of chimera of Theistic creation thinking and the fallacy of pretending the past was a golden age (ironically, given the 'ideal past' concept from the OP). Obviously, this passage is out of it's wider context so i'm not able to say more than how the passage itself strikes.
  • Thomas Ligotti's Poetic Review of Human Consciousness
    I'm not suggesting there is. I don't think there's any need to overcome anxiety about life and death. It's also part of human behaviour.

    Of course, some people run to these things for comfort - But i would posit theism is a much, much, MUCH more ripe example that, according to some (even atheists) fulfills a 'human need'. My point is merely that these behaviours are human, and do not release or jettison humanity in the subject (imo).
  • Thomas Ligotti's Poetic Review of Human Consciousness
    Zapffe's view is that humans are born with an overdeveloped skill (understanding, self-knowledge) which does not fit into nature's design. The human craving for justification on matters such as life and death cannot be satisfied, hence humanity has a need that nature cannot satisfy. The tragedy, following this theory, is that humans spend all their time trying not to be human. The human being, therefore, is a paradox.

    Huh. This seems to apply to a 'large middle' of humans while assuming positivism. Both seem aspects seem a bit shaky to me. I don't think its reasonable to dismiss Zen, true Stoicism, meditation etc.. as somehow arbitrary attempt to 'not be human'.
    These things are human behaviours.
  • Where is everyone from?
    Any other NZers on here?
  • A Measurable Morality
    6. Looking at existence, it cannot be destroyed. It simply “is”. There is no “ought” or “should”.
    7. Looking at what is, we can come to a conclusion of what “ought” to be. Existence is good.
    Philosophim

    Im not seeing a connection between (6.) and (7.). We can only conclude that it is from (6.).

    8. This conclusion is a choice, not forced. Existence could very well one day “not be”. But since existence “is”, and we are composed of what “is”, we act with the will of existence “to be”.Philosophim

    However, the above is very helpful in terms of supporting why you've made that conclusion. However, i'm unsure how the underlined obtains other than as another choice, not logically necessary. I am an anti-natalist, and so 'being' to me, is not a good thing. The fact is exist is a metaphysical burden i have to mitigate. So, moving to your second set of premises, I reject them all on that basis... I can't get from your first set to your second set.

    If the point is that once the choice is made, it all flows, sure. But that butters no bread for meeeee :)
  • A Measurable Morality
    But can we take the idea that existence is betterPhilosophim

    I don't see how we can do that..
  • Time travel to the past hypothetically possible?
    You say year 2024 1990 ... but this is just some contingent contract of the human civilisations. It doesn't exist in the real world. It could be year 0 tomorrow if we all agreed.Corvus

    This is true, and a serious problem for discussions of time as currently being explored.

    But this doesn't mean 'time doesn't exist'. It means are symbols for it are arbitrary. I'm not trying to say it does or doesn't exist - just that this doesn't go to that question i don't think.

    It may be that it's actually the year 14,564,335,235 AT (all time).
  • A Case for Moral Realism
    Does that take away from the plentiful evidence that the categories do exist? Certainly not.Bob Ross

    (yes, there's some incredulity in this question) Are you seriously comparing 'ethical views' to the reality of categories of triangle?

    There being no formula of what is exactly wrong or right in any given situation does not make the categories empty.Bob Ross

    (response to first quote, in light of the above quote:) because this lack of formula does essentially mean you cannot predict 'which' category an act falls into at all, rather than imprecisely. Your moral intuitions only can do so. They are your categories. This seems to suggest that vague ranges of moral culpability apply to acts - and that seems reasonable, but still not a realist position. My understanding is that realism entails that whether an act is good or bad can be established as a 'fact' in any given instance.
  • All that matters in society is appearance
    Are good looking people nicer than average looking people, or are good looking people less nice than average looking people?Agree-to-Disagree

    Interesting question. In my experience, 'good looking' people are less nice.. to me. But that's almost certainly a bias about my desires.

    I would say though, traditionally ugly people seem on avg to me more truculent and quick to argue and then dismiss than are people who don't see themselves as somehow already at a disadvantage aesthetically.
  • Agnostic atheism seems like an irrational label
    You can't justifiably believe there is such a rock, and you can't justifiably believe there isn't.Relativist

    Yes. I am 'atheist' in relation to the rock. I do not commit one way or the other. Yet....

    Your wife could be a alien, but there's no evidence of it- so you should believe she's not an alien.Relativist

    Prima facie, No. No i shouldn't. And prima facie, these above two quotes are contradictory. If i can be 'agnostic' to the rock, i can be agnostic to my wife's potential alienality. I have no evidence one way or the other. I cannot make any reasonable conclusion. I have no reasons.

    However, I know my wife. I can observe and experiment to ascertain whether she has any inhuman properties in some way to deduce whether there's an alien element to her. I do not need to take either conclusion on faith without reason.

    The rock - on the other hand - I cannot. I do not have a sufficient reason to reject OR accept the fact of the rock (until I turn over every rock on the Moon - which i shan't). I simply have absolutely no intuition as to whether it exists, despite it being logically possible. So i abstain. Not seeing an issue here, other than a bully-ish determination to force me into a position I do not hold and have no reason to support. At least, in this case, it could be established. As with Deism.

    But consider unicorns.Relativist

    Similar to my delineation above, this is entirely different from the case of a Theistic God imo. A physical, observable object (Unicorn) which has never been observed (other than in the mind) can, as you rightly say, be relegated to 'non-existent'. It's reasonable to 'believe' it does not exist because the evidence WOULD be there if it did (which is the case with a Deistic God).
    Something, the existence of which, could not be observed in that same way requires a different process to establish as 'extant' to my mind. This is why your 'deism' cannot be agnostic. It admits of a discoverable God (but this goes to the wording issue I re-traverse below).

    If I can be agnostic as to economic theories, why can't I be agnostic as to the existence of an impersonal, non-interacting deity?Relativist

    "given the above". 'agnostic' is an useless term in any arena if all it means is *shrug*.

    "Agnostic: a person who believes that nothing is known or can be known of the existence or nature of God"

    If you're a Deist, you are not able to use the term above. Point blank period. Argue the definition all you want, but to my mind you're just confusing yourself.

    If you're going to label me a "deist", based solely on the fact that I think it's worth considering,...Relativist

    I am not. Sorry if that wasn't clear. My point is that is the only word that assists in labeling you at all, since you're precluded from using 'agnostic' as it relates to God. Your point about 'agnostic' being essentially a field-less word is a matter of misusing the word in other areas- and is an example of the problem i went over at the end of my post with a suggestion as to how to solve that issue. Huxley specifically coined the word to apply to mystical and mystico-religious issues. It has been hijacked in other areas as an imprecise analogy.
    So this isn't an actual objection to my position - just a restating of the problem I had identified. I would prefer new words to discuss 'Deism' since the word 'Atheist' literally doesn't touch it - therefore, using Agnostic to refer to both deism and theism is really unhelpful.

    My position is that worthwhile discussions depend on going much deeper than the meaning attached to labels.Relativist

    Agreed, in principle but I would point out that if we cannot understand what each other is saying given the words are not helpful, I can't actually see the discussion as worthwhile. This exchange may be an example. You are not making logical sentences about your belief manifest. Maybe peculiar to me, but I have no interest in going deep into people's views without a reasonable understanding of their language and knowing it is consistent with the meaning of the words they are using. It makes every exchange feel like a Twitter war. And that is absurd in the highest, as i'm sure you're aware.

    It's a fact that these terms are not understood consistently by everyone.Relativist

    But it is a fact that these words have definite meanings, overwhelmingly subscribe by our institutional sources of meaning. That people misunderstand them is the entire thrust of my point. That is a serious obstacle to even beginning a meaningful discussion. I cannot discuss your 'agnostic deism' because those terms are contradictory. New Agey nonsense is the biggest peddler of this shit, if you ask me. 'quantum' being the worse offender.. And that said, if what you're suggesting is that we let everyone re-define words so they can use the ones they are aesthetically drawn to and bore us with their illogical, shitty reasonings for doing so, I simply get off your bus and run as far as i can. But, this also seems to be commensurate with your view on non-commitment to theism.

    It may also be motivated by the naive assumption we should only believe things that can be "proven".Relativist

    I do not think that is the case. It seems clearly a result of not believing anything on insufficient evidence, as a principle. Both sides have insufficient evidence for their respective positive claim. It takes courage to say "I don't know, and I'm going to move forward with gusto, in uncertainty, despite that..". Is there any reason to think your position, or mine, is a better take? Nope. They are opinions that don't matter other than as interpersonal curiosity. Why it's caused wars is something for psychologists to deal with..

    I should be clear, all of the above and my previous comment are not arguments about 'facts of the matter'. There are facts in the argument (the etymology and definition of these words) but what i am doing is outlining a systematic use of the words that actually bloody helps instead of throwing up my hands and saying 'everything's wobbly and we need to spend our lives talking past one another because of it'. I simply don't think that's true, and am attempting to serve up a method for not falling into the illusion it is (on my account).
  • Best Arguments for Physicalism
    Our consciousness might be the most complex emergent property in nature, when only looking at it in comparison to others, but we're also just a last point in a gradient of intelligence among animals.Christoffer

    I think this is what maters. We are what McKenna called 'the moving wave-front of eternity'.
    We're at the front of the line, and as such, we are somewhat obligated (i don't actually think this - im being poetic) to be astute about how we bring the universe forward in time. In that sense, the nature of our consciousness is a key to understanding what's going on there. If we are the top of that hierarchy, and that our consciousness has developed most recently compared to other, less complex kinds - it is special and we're well-supported in treating our consciousness as special.
  • Best Arguments for Physicalism
    Anyone else you'd append for someone to explore?
    — AmadeusD
    Chapter five here is worth a read. Thanks, Ludwig V.
    Banno

    Thanks mate. Ryle is about half-way down my hit list currently - Just jumped a few spots.
  • Best Arguments for Physicalism
    Looks like you are active here but relatively newMark Nyquist

    Very active, and will continue to be. But yes, very new I've recently found out :P I am also, for 'context of me' starting my Philosophy BA as a conjoint with an LLB (bachelor of Law) that i'm part-way through this year.

    I shall take note.
  • Best Arguments for Physicalism
    Right, right. Ok, cool thank you!
  • Agnostic atheism seems like an irrational label
    Humpty-Dumptys are running around having words mean "just what I choose them to mean," all in order to bolster a position for the sake of polemics.Leontiskos

    A-theism means A-theism.
  • Best Arguments for Physicalism
    No brain external information.Mark Nyquist

    What's the sitch when the information is in transit?
  • Agnostic atheism seems like an irrational label
    We can't have knowledge of very many things, because knowledge is strictly defined as belief that is justified, true, and the justification is adequate to eliminate Gettier problems. But we can (and should) strive for justified beliefs.Relativist

    As a pre-amble, i'm glad to see this. I see no obstacle in Gettier problems due to the justification criterion.

    I believe a God of religion does not exist. Not just"absence of belief" - that's for wimps ( IMO- no one should make this noncommital claim). I also believe unicorns and fairies don't exist.

    I believe it's possible that some sort of intentional entity exists, that may account for the existence of the universe, and/or for the nature of consciousness (ie an immaterial solution to the hard problem). If I actually believed in this, I'd call myself deist (but still.an a-theist). But I don't actually believe it, I just think it's worth considering. Hence, I call myself an "agnostic deist", but still a-theist, and my general position on knowledge in makes me virtually an agnostic (we can't know much of anything) in general.
    Relativist

    I find the italicised pretty odd. What's the problem with non-commitment to something you don't claim any knowledge of? I'm unsure whether there's a rock the exact size of the cabbage in my fridge on the Moon, so i abstain from any take. Absence of evidence and all that...

    That said... here's my take on you, written as if fact to make it clear what my take actually is (I do not undertake to debate the take below, but it may be fun!):

    My understanding of 'theism' is that it entails belief in a 'Creator' personal God. In that light, IFF you actively reject this (believe theistic God/s cannot exist) you're anti-theist. As for 'agnostic deist' that seems incoherent. Below..

    My understanding of deism is that it removes the requirement of a personal or supernatural aspect of the 'supreme being' notion and instead asserts that 'the deity' is part of the natural, discoverable world. To my mind deism entails that we can discover this deity. Since we can have knowledge of it, agnosticism is precluded (as it is the position we cannot know whether a God or Gods exist). If the knowledge criteria doesn't go through for you, anywhere, then just take that word as 'the literal best guess'.

    So, I would say you're an anti-theist, and a deist. I would have inserted, over 'deist' a term specific to holding out on belief in a deistic God rather than theistic - if one exists. I also note this might be your 'wimp' moment :nerd: Is there a deistic God or not, Relativist? hehe.

    But here's an issue - If agnosticism is meant to be a position on Theism, we're in a pickle using agnostic anyway, regardless of what Deism entails. If it's not, we're using shitty words given Atheism only relates to theism but apparently agnosticism can cover deism too. Here, a word which separates the two theories, AND the two positions would be great.

    If atheism and agnosticism deal with the same thing, but only agnosticism can relate to deism we can't be having a worthwhile discussion about htem, using these words only.

    Maybe that is the actual issue here.

    Word 1: Deism, Yes. I have evidence
    Word 2: Deism, No. Have evidence against
    Word 3: Deism, Maybe and I believe I can know.
    Word 4: Deism, cannot know

    Theism: Theism, yes, I have evidence.
    Atheism: Theism, Maybe, but im not convinced.
    Anti-theist: Theism, No. I have evidence against.
    Agnostic: Theism, cannot know


    Edit: Sorry, I entirely missed this:
    and why should I start using that particular label?Relativist

    Mainly, because 'agnostic deist' makes absolutely no sense given the above (perhaps peculiar to my amalgamated position on all these things taken together). So, to begin you need a new term.

    You are anti-theistic, and you are abstaining from belief, but are open to, deistic God/s. The words I've used fit perfectly your position, given we essentially preclude not being able to know of a deistic God so can't use agnostic.
  • Agnostic atheism seems like an irrational label
    Suppose you come up with a set of definitions that meet your hopes, and then you encounter someone like me who says he's an atheist. Are you going to argue my use of the label, or are you going to enquire as to what I really mean?Relativist

    You can do both.

    Whenever I encounter someone who is (to my mind) misusing these words, i ascertain their position and then ascribe what appears to me an actual accurate enumeration of it.

    I am an theist, because i refrain from belief in a God, and believe we could know, if God/s existed, of their existence in some way. Not because i 'identify' as one.
  • Best Arguments for Physicalism
    The alternative to both is found most explicitly in that grandmother of philosophy, Mary MidgleyBanno

    There's my weeks delve.

    Anyone else you'd append for someone to explore?
  • Best Arguments for Physicalism
    We both were members of the predecessor forum to this one, and possibly the one before that. But you’re right, none of us know each other personally, it is purely a medium for the exchange of ideas.Wayfarer

    Oh, interesting. As a new addition i had no idea there were prior iterations. Neat! What a great little community.
  • Best Arguments for Physicalism
    Saying that a long post is a reason for "no insight", makes absolutely no sense.Christoffer

    I believe these were intended as two separate attributes.

    It is long. And it provides no insight. Could be wrong, but that seems the case to me.
  • All that matters in society is appearance
    I have generally found that there is almost no correlation between a person's appearance and who they are. But it is true that people who scowl and frown a lot may well be unpleasant or preoccupied...Tom Storm

    Yes, I would say its fairly safe that when people are clearly affectatious in their presentation can be judged on it :P
  • All that matters in society is appearance
    It is about repeatedly (though not always) confirmed personal experience.Lionino

    is this a 'constant conjunction' thing? My experience has been the inverse..
  • Best Arguments for Physicalism
    Ahh ok, lol all good. Thank you