we can speculate in specifics as well. — Mikie
"Me" is a joke answer, I assume. — Mikie
I believe we need to be able to come up with completely new concepts that could have never been fathomed before, — obscurelaunting
How much of the profits does he get?
That’s the question. There is an answer in real life, which is decided by real people. The answer to this also directly affects the “decent life” part. — Mikie
You could do that with a loan too, which will have a pre-defined interest and end date — Benkei
do you feel an obligation to treat someone respectfully in a philosophical discussion? — Pantagruel
TPF now has a new area called "Help," where you can find posts proving guidance and tips on how to use the site. There's a link to it at the top of every page, in the header bar. — Jamal
I think (for what it's worth, probably not much) that there are more and less credible interpretations. I rather like Chris Fuchs QBism, — Wayfarer
there is no way to decide on a correct interpretation of QM empirically — T Clark
You don’t know what “projecting” means. Look it up. It doesnt just mean identifying traits in others that you yourself possess, its attributing traits to others based on your own possession of them. Attributing traits based on the other person actually having those traits is just being accurate and rational. — DingoJones
Anyone got a pair of dunce caps for these chuckleheads? — DingoJones
So if we want to read people's minds one day, we need a way to listen qualitatively to their music -- the thoughts themselves in whatever materiality they take, be it brainwaves or something else. Not just measure quantitatively the level of effort spent in producing thoughts. — Olivier5
The only reason he lasted as long as he did was because of idiots like you who thought they found a sparring part er rather than a troll with a personality disorder. — DingoJones
You’re just lucky they don’t ban for self-righteous
twat-ness. — DingoJones
I would tend to disagree. — Olivier5
As an old math person my suspicion is that "superposition" and "collapse of wave function" is nothing more than experimenting to discover which of multiple solutions of the partial differential equations describing phenomena actually apply in a particular instance. Multi worlds I consider science fantasy. — jgill
I was subjected to Dick and Jane's Weltanschauung which bore scant resemblance to my reality. — BC
I was thinking of something more radical, like some science-induced telepathy, which would then allow us to feel what it is to be a bat. — Olivier5
You want to be careful, many of those studies have been called into question. See Do you believe in God, or is that a Software Glitch? — Wayfarer
Is that the only way to do philosophy? Is it the right way? Are there alternatives? — Banno
Maybe one day the state of our science will allow us to read the minds of bats, for instance. — Olivier5
One day I wish to retire so I could become a farmer, which is something a farmer never said, and something no one ever said is that they wanted to retire so they could become a lawyer. — Hanover
It's rude to refer to the police as pigs. — Banno
By the way, people with aphantasia have a statistically significant higher IQ. — frank
At current rates of posting, Shoutbox 2 will overtake Shoutbox 1 in number of posts at 2:13 am on the 2nd of March 2031. — Baden
You may have something akin to aphantasia so that you have no frame of reference for understanding qualia. — frank
There's a big difference between saying that introspection is potentially a valid form of evidence, and having actually accepted any incidences of introspection as valid evidence. — Metaphysician Undercover
But anyway, I think if you judge the original Chalmer's essay on its merits, it makes a pretty clear-cut case. It's about something very specific - without having to refer to Taoism or Kant or quantum physics. — Wayfarer
I don't know if Kant nor the Tao Te Ching have specific any bearing on the question. — Wayfarer
Phenomenology isn't really philosophy at all. It's psychology. So much of it makes definitive statements about phenomena and processes that can be verified or falsified using empirical methods. — T Clark
As for the Tao Te Ching, it is a statement from that particular source of the perennial philosophy - you could find comparable aphorisms in Christian mystical theology, but again, for those who understand the world that way, there is no hard problem (or any problem :-) ) — Wayfarer
