So, I simply deny both horns of your supposed disjunction. God is unqualified being. The beings of experience depend on God. Humans develop logic to think about being in a rational way. So, the order of precedence here is God -> created being (including humans) -> logic (created by humans). — Dfpolis
Is consciousness divided into a perceiver and an object of perception, ie the Cartesian theatre, or is consciousness and perception one and the same? Isn't "awareness" a synonym for "consciousness"?
Where is the "you" that perceives? — Harry Hindu
My view is that I'm perceiving whatever has been transmitted from the tree to the eye to the brain to my consciousness. The light as it travels is not a perception the instant it hits my lens, and the tree itself never moves from the woods. — Hanover
Assuming you're a realist, there is a tree "out there" that somehow is perceived by you. That leaves two things (1) the tree and (2) the perception of the tree. The tree is located in the woods and the perception is located in your head. Your knowledge of the tree is due to the light reflecting off the tree, the lens in your eye bending that light, that light affecting your neurons, and thorough some magic of consciousness, you perceive it. What else could you be perceiving other than some processed physical event in the world? — Hanover
Two worlds A,B and people a,x,b. a lives n A, b lives in B, x lives in both.
In A and B different languages are spoken, also A and B do not share anything but x.
The meta view is exactly this formalization of the two worlds. In this meta view we understand that from the point of view of a, x does speak weird gibberish, but we also know that this gibberish is indeed an actual language. One could say the language spoken in B is a private language in A used only by x.
However as we can choose only the viewpoint of a,b or x in real life, there are only these possibilities:
If we choose a: x is talking gibberish, it's not a language.
If we choose x: I know all languages, they all are public, as I talk to a and b.
If we choose b: same as a.
So there is no private language here, even with the more permissive use of the term above. — SomeName
I think your notion of consent issues is arbitrary . . . — Andrew4Handel
Now this person can talk to people in both worlds in different languages and I believe it makes sense to say that from their perspective all of these languages are public. — SomeName
For a person from one of these worlds, that can only experience one of them and not travel between them, the languages from the other world are completely unintelligible and they would simply not call it a language. — SomeName
But as we can at any point be only one person and have only one point of view we are unable to transcend into some meta view where we could call a language private relative to somebody else. — SomeName
A unconscious person can not express their consent on whether they would like their hand stuck in a fire. Unconscious people can never express an opinion so this period of inability to voice consent does not entail any rights or justifications for someone else to do something to them
Your positions entails that as soon as someone is unconscious or asleep then their inability to consent justifies whatever you do to them. — Andrew4Handel
I don't to need to stick my hand in a fire to know i would not consent to having my hand stuck in a fire. — Andrew4Handel
Well, not only that; but, also the issue of characterizing the life of an unborn fetus, which one never knows really how would unfold, as unworthy of experience. By what standards, or to what purpose? — Wallows
My position is that none consented to being born — Andrew4Handel
after coming to exist they did not consent to anything unless they explicitly consent to it. — Andrew4Handel
My older brother has had MS in its severe form for 20 years that has left him helpless and paralyzed. I can't imagine anyone consenting to that. — Andrew4Handel
"Gross-overgeneralization," would be the first thing that comes to my mind... — Wallows
These are not the consent issues that concern me — Andrew4Handel
At some stage a person will be able to exhibit rational consent.
A very young child already withdraws its consent for a lot of things.
They often say no and can experience harm and desire boundaries. Also there is no reason to believes that the parents are capable of being a reasonable parent and the grounds to judge this problematic. It isn't children that voted for the Nazi's etc.
I think peoples analysis of childhood here is very unrealistic. — Andrew4Handel
However here I am discussing the lack of consent that arises once someone is born until they explicitly give consent at some stage. — Andrew4Handel
I'm not sure I follow. The illusion is what is perceived - so it must be identical to what is perceived? — Devans99
I think that the claim is that the illusion of movement exists in our minds. When the image changes, the afterimage of the previous moments remains as an impression in our minds to which the current moment is contrasted, giving an illusion of movement. — Devans99
- At time t0, I see a completely still image
- At time t1, I see a different completely still image
- It is a different version of the brain at t1 to t0, but it remembers the image at t0, processes the image at t1 and incorrectly (according to eternalism) interprets the difference as movement. — Devans99
Give this a little thought. As I said, logic, as correct thought about existents, is based on the nature of existence. You are suggesting that existence is limiting, but it can't be. Existence is not a predicate like other predicates. If something is red, for example, it is limited, because the opposite of red is not-red and not-red things can exist. But, if, as you think, something were limited by being, what is excluded is not other kinds of things, but non-being. So, "everythng that is logically or ontologically possible" only excludes non-being, which is nothing. Clearly excluding nothing is not a limitation. — Dfpolis
The movement is just an illusion if you treat time like a spacial dimension - with that way of thinking about it - there is no movement. — Devans99
I am sorry you lost me there. You are talking nonsense, do you realize that? If you make symbols, and want to communicate with those, you must denote their meaning, and the reltionship between them.
What you wrote is sheer gibberish to me. Sorry. — god must be atheist
And you seem to be quite happy and comfortable accepting that there are WRONG different views. I am not. — god must be atheist
If there were in reality weak determinism, then there would be weak Darwinism, weak Relativity Theories, weak Quantum Mechanics, weak arguments and weak minds. Oops, I got carried away. Going back to the stream of things; weak determinism would yield weak truths, weak logic, weak time measurements, weak classical physics, weak laws of thermodynamics, weak gravity. — god must be atheist
Sure there is support of determinism (there is no divisions between determinism such as "strong" "weak" etc; — god must be atheist
There doesn't have to be a pattern, because there are so many factors behind a decision its different each time, meaning that the reason why I decide to walk (of the 50%) is different each time and the times I pick the bus are also from different conditions.
If you flick a coin 100 times, the reason why it landed heads so many times and tails so many, is because of the conditions: where it was held in the hand, the energy in the flick, the density of the air, the dirt that kept adding to the coin surface etc. And a lot of those conditions were created because of the conditions of the persons body, their mind, the changing environment, and on it goes. — AngryBear
You raised an objection which you can't defend. — god must be atheist
We choose to walk instead of taking the bus because a condition was created from previous events that made us prefer walking instead of the bus. — AngryBear
