If time means nothing to a photon, should it mean anything to any of us? — Mike Adams
Genes play a part in determining the characteristics of the individual, but that's only a part. — Metaphysician Undercover
Am I getting this right? — Srap Tasmaner
What type of predictions can be expected of complex system modelling with regard to cultural development in stratified societies? — Galuchat
. If the acorn grows, it will construct an oak tree (in general), but not any particular oak tree, the intent is something general. — Metaphysician Undercover
As I explained, "top-down constraint" is formal cause, but this is inconsistent with "final cause" which gives the thing acting (the agent) freedom to choose a goal. — Metaphysician Undercover
The acorn becoming a tree, is a bottom-up action. — Metaphysician Undercover
Otherwise the human agent has no freedom to choose one's own goals, and this is inconsistent with observations of human behaviour. We freely choose our goals, they are not enforced through top-down constraint. — Metaphysician Undercover
Then what is the thing which is active? Global constraints and local degrees of freedom produce effects on what? — Metaphysician Undercover
This is interesting: — Srap Tasmaner
Thjs is surprising coming from someone who supports the idea of "final causes". What do you think final cause is, if not a dualist principle? — Metaphysician Undercover
In any activity, there is always an "agent". — Metaphysician Undercover
This is the thing which is acting, the agent produces an effect. — Metaphysician Undercover
You claim to support the idea of final causes but then you describe human activities in your neuroscientific way, as if they are all efficient causes. — Metaphysician Undercover
Unless you can describe an interaction between efficient causes and final causes within one model, there is no basis to your claim that you both support the idea of final causes, and deny dualism. — Metaphysician Undercover
I wondered about this, but my guess was what mattered was the percentage. 25% is clearly enough, but my guess is that a much smaller percentage of the population could effect this kind of change. They wouldn't even need to conspire if there was an objective way the choose a target. — Srap Tasmaner
Yet another thought: I'm torn between the idea that cooperation might not be emergent and needs to be a first-class goal alongside competition, and the idea that market theory could be right. — Srap Tasmaner
In such a story, our player 2 would not be a bully but an iconoclastic hero, the one who says the emperor has no clothes. — Srap Tasmaner
1 thought they were all playing 'tag'. 2 was actually playing 'get 4', a quite different game. — Cuthbert
This is what I had in mind: there are theories that expect cooperation to be emergent from competition. — Srap Tasmaner
It would be difficult to identify final cause as constraint, because an agent is free to produce one's own goals — Metaphysician Undercover
To my understanding, pragmatism isn't generally considered to be a cohesive body of agreed upon thought that is acceptable to all of its adherents. — sime
And we do this even if we don't expect to get "yes" or "no", but closer to "yes" or closer to "no", right? — Srap Tasmaner
"AP"? — Srap Tasmaner
If this is the case, then how do we show how a conscious goal "acts" as a final cause to produce a chain of efficient causes (habitual action)? — Metaphysician Undercover
so the bridge between final cause and efficient cause would be found in the relationship between anticipation and habit. — Metaphysician Undercover
Anticipation of the shot, which produces preparedness, is just as important as habit, if not more so. — Metaphysician Undercover
I've been in more than one car accident, driving, where the scene unfolds very quickly, but I've always maintained conscious control over how I operated the controls of the vehicle until the end. — Metaphysician Undercover
Since attention is actually a habit, the better dichotomy would habit/anticipation. — Metaphysician Undercover
So attention really only gives to our minds what has occurred, the past. Now we need a principle, such as anticipation, whereby the fact that something is about to occur, is present to the mind. — Metaphysician Undercover
Would you also describe this as the process of becoming "less and less wrong"? Is there a succinct way to describe that without presupposing a bivalence of right and wrong? — Srap Tasmaner
Unknowability just doesn't look like a big deal in this context. People act on what they believe to be true, or even believe to be probable, and either is rational. You could even know, for a fact, that a proposition has arbitrarily high probability of being true without knowing that it is true; that's surely rational grounds to act on. — Srap Tasmaner
The question of how Ramsey became an advocate of pragmatism is a fascinating piece of intellectual biography. He was as unhappy as Russell, Moore and Wittgenstein with William
James’s suggestion in his 1907 book Pragmatism:
Any idea upon which we can ride . . . any idea that will carry us prosperously from any one part of our experience to any other part, linking things satisfactorily, working securely, simplifying, saving labor, is . . . true instrumentally. . . . Satisfactorily . . . means more satisfactorily to ourselves, and individuals will emphasize their points of satisfaction differently. To a certain degree, therefore, everything here is plastic. (James 1975, 34–35)2
It was Peirce’s more sophisticated pragmatism that influenced Ramsey
The question, then, is why a neutral "naturalistic" description is desirable, or why a neutral description is seen as superior to a description with normative undertones. Is it purely on the basis of scientific "objectivity", or is it also perhaps a psychological defense mechanism of sorts? Is it not easier to "deal" with an apparently savage reality by construing it as blind, purposeless, unintentional and amoral? — darthbarracuda
The position presented in the essays is that we can't absolve patriarchal problems within the patriarchy itself. It's radical feminism. Fixing these issues can only happen if the patriarchy itself is dismantled. And in this case the patriarchy is traced back in time through millennia of biological evolution. Rape, battery, violence, etc can not be solved though conventional means but only through the eradication of the patriarchy (which is oftentimes theorized to be connected to capitalism and religion). — darthbarracuda
It's hard for me to imagine a male with a vagina that is actually a male. Male-ness seems to be inherently tied to the capacity to penetrate, flood, neutralize and dominate. — darthbarracuda
Males might not be "intrinsically rapists" as the essays annoyingly imply, but I don't think it's implausible to say males' physiology evolved as to maximize the chances of spreading genes, which oftentimes means rape. — darthbarracuda
In ecology, r/K selection theory relates to the selection of combinations of traits in an organism that trade off between quantity and quality of offspring. The focus upon either increased quantity of offspring at the expense of individual parental investment of r-strategists, or reduced quantity of offspring with a corresponding increased parental investment of K-strategists, varies widely, seemingly to promote success in particular environments.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R/K_selection_theory
What we are looking for here is the motivation to get something done, and this is prior to any such a division. — Metaphysician Undercover
So the motivating factor is to be found within these internal parts, rather than within the conscious mind. But to motivate the will power, is the closest thing we have to motivation without activating habits, because the will power to refrain from action is to deny the action of habits as far as possible. So it is the motivation behind will power, what motivates willpower, which is the motivation to resist activity, that we will find the purest form of the motivating factor. — Metaphysician Undercover
Although James plays down attention's role in complex perceptual phenomena, he does assign attention to an important explanatory role in the production of behaviour. He claims, for example, that ‘Volition is nothing but attention’ (424).....
James's somewhat deflationary approach to attention's explanatory remit means that, when it comes to giving an account of the ‘intimate nature of the attention process’, James can identify two fairly simple processes which, he claims, ‘probably coexist in all our concrete attentive acts’. and which ‘possibly form in combination a complete reply’ to the question of attention's ‘intimate nature’ (1890, 411).
The processes that James identifies are:
The accommodation or adjustment of the sensory organs, and
The anticipatory preparation from within of the ideational centres concerned with the object to which attention is paid. (411)....
Here, as in his more frequently discussed treatment of emotion, it is distinctive of James's approach that he tries to account for a large-scale personal-level psychological phenomenon in a realist but somewhat revisionary way, so as to be able to give his account using relatively simple and unmysterious explanatory resources. An alternative deflationary approach—one which James explicitly contrasted with his own—is the approach taken in 1886 by F.H. Bradley.....
https://plato.stanford.edu/entries/attention/#WilJamHisConDefThe
Cool.Alright, I'll try to piece something together. — praxis
Because of dissatisfaction. No matter how complex a behavior, it comes down to that. — schopenhauer1
But you do not seem to recognize attention as a habit. — Metaphysician Undercover
