Idealists die don't they? — Cavacava
What is the difference between the phenomenal that we sense, and what the BIV senses...? I don't see what's different so then what is the use of a distinction where there is no distinction. — Cavacava
BIV....if it is a perfect simulation then how would it make any difference, and if it does not make a difference then what good is the notion. — Cavacava
If it makes no difference in our lives, it isn't fit material for philosophy. — Bitter Crank
One in 60,000 is just to close for comfort. (You face higher odds of dying from other things that you continue doing, because your attitude allows you to.) — Bitter Crank
So it's not "Can we be certain that the sun will rise tomorrow?" but "Ought we be certain that the sun will rise tomorrow?" — Banno
I used to subscribe to the singularity movement where many things will happen at once when AI arrives on stage; but, my personal opinion is that it might take longer than an instant for things to change. — Posty McPostface
I also think we will likely become a multiplanetary species within the next decade or more. — Posty McPostface
How do you think changes will occur, or what is your conception about the future as you see it? — Posty McPostface
As I see it, phenomenalistic/subjective idealism faces three challenges:
1) Avoid the collapse to solipsism
2) Account for the apparent permance of particulars
3) Account for the apparent fact that numerically distinct people can perceive one and the same thing in different ways (i.e. from different perspectives). — MetaphysicsNow
Whether you can have Berkelian idealism without also requiring God to be around in the quad is an interesting question. — MetaphysicsNow
dealing with issues concerning nominalism v realism about properties , personal identity over time, adverbialism and representationalsim in the philosophy of mind, to name just a few. — MetaphysicsNow
o have a role for God in the sustaining of the Universe. An earlier contributor is quite right to bring in quantum mechanics where the issue of non measurement comes to the fore as having an influence on events. — Edmund
Why is inherently selfish bad? — schopenhauer1
Because pleasure isn't an intrinsic but an instrumental good and therefore inherently selfish. — Thorongil
I am not advocating going backwards in time. I am just pointing to our ignorance and how beholden we are to larger forces we had no hand in and did not create ourselves but certainly dictate modern life for us. I can't explain its significance more than there is an alienation or atomization to this. — schopenhauer1
The point of my post was to address the fact that we are mostly ignorant of the very processes and things we take utilize in daily life. We become passive participants and eventually become beholden to the given which is: — schopenhauer1
Would I do a better job of providing all of these requirements myself? Emphatically no! I cannot be an expert in everything. — Shatter
Now the burden is to show when things weren't bad, and why they weren't, and how we can maybe fix that. It's easy to decry things. It's very hard to explain how to make things better. — csalisbury
"If this interpretation of the data is correct, then aging is a natural process that can be reduced to nanoscale thermal physics—and not a disease" — StreetlightX
At first sight, consciousness seems redundant. Seemingly a person or animal could react to the world 'normally', without the intervening step of internal consciousness. Kind of like a machine following an algorithm, or the Behaviourists’ black-box model of stimulus-in / response-out. But dead inside, like a Zombie. This notion raises the question of "why do we need consciousness?" — Kym
An illusion? Well, a convenient fiction at least. It turns out the these is no distinct redness in the material world. There is in fact a seemless array of available wavelengths across very wide spectrum (most of which is quite invisible to us but still real). We perceive a distinct redness after our red colour cones are triggered by a certain range wavelengths. — Kym
the problem has always been one of legitimacy. In allowing arguments from racists, say, to be aired, what is conferred upon them is legitimacy: one admits it as an option to be considered at all in the first place — StreetlightX
I expect Kant would have been entirely comfortable with the notion that our in-built mechanism for arranging information is an approximation to a paradigm whose differences are only visible at scales that are beyond ordinary human experience. — andrewk
we process raw inputs within a framework of three space dimensions and one time dimension. — andrewk
It is not going to destroy the fabric of society. — Maw
Yes, it mind vibrating. — Rich
That said, the world's total fertility rate has been declining for some time and will continue to decline, so the world's population is not expected to continue increasing at an exponential rate for very much longer. — Thorongil
The skeptic' is a bogeyman in philosophy discussions, nothing more. — fdrake
The skeptical challenge remains the same in both scenarios. — Moliere
Conditional: brain in vats and memory editing. Should be believed? Nah. Kind of thing people can get therapy for. — fdrake
Yes. But as long as they are understood to be idealizations and not actualized, then I don't see the problem. As an analogy, we have a concept of infinity. It doesn't follow that the universe is necessarily infinite. Similarly for the simulation. — Andrew M
I have no idea how that addresses my point, which is that given our axioms and definitions, that Pi is irrational deductively follows. Unless you want to say that a simulated world can defy logic, the same is true in a simulated world. — Michael
Given the same axioms and definitions, whatever deductively follows in the real world will deductively follow in a simulated world. — Michael
Why would you suppose reality has a value for pi? — Andrew M
All that shows is that you are mistaken about what you possess being subtlety. Subtlety cannot be heavy; its character is the very opposite of heaviness. — Janus
1) All ideas must be perceived. — Bishop Berkeley
a) Our ideas of sense must have a cause — Bishop Berkeley
1) All ideas must be perceived.
2) Sensible objects are collections of ideas.
3) Objects continue to exist even when they are not perceived by any finite minds. 4) Therefore, there is a nonfinite spirit or mind which perceives objects. — Bishop Berkeley
