That goes without saying. No one speaks about absolutes in the physical world as examined by science (physics, etc.)No, an absolute reality outside of the one accounted for by physics and biology requires a God. — Garrett Travers
Pardon me? :smile:Where do you formulate this mysticism? — Garrett Travers
... or rather subjectivity? Do nοt "I think" and "highly impossible" sugest subjectivity?I think, that such a absolute state is highly impossible to exist.
— Alkis Piskas
This is a statement of absolute objectivity. — Garrett Travers
You said "It has always seemed to me that belief in an objective reality requires a belief in God.". Are not beliefs and God related to religion? And, does science deal with either of them?I wasn't making a statement about religion. What I wanted to say was about science. — T Clark
Certainly. But I think that the points I brought up reflected or implied that ...I think objective reality is a metaphysical entity, not something that exists in the world. — T Clark
I believe I've already answered this . If we can, we ought to improve upon even our "adaptive illusions" when necessary, no?If something is maladaptive, then by all means we should get rid of it. But what if some of our "illusions" are adaptive? In fact you had said that our meanings and purposes are mostly adaptive illusions. — Janus
You're still missing the point. Whether or not there are real neural correlates to my hopes, desires, fears, expectations, assumptions and so on; those emotions, dispositions or whatever can never be inter-subjectively determined to be real per se for the simple reason that only I know them, and you must rely on my testimony that I have them. So, they are demonstrably subjectively real only to me. — Janus
That goes without saying. No one speaks about absolutes in the physical world as examined by science (physics, etc.)
Where do you formulate this mysticism? — Alkis Piskas
highly impossible — Alkis Piskas
Reality does not make mistakes and that is why we strive for meaning. A justification for Meaning. — Alkis Piskas
OK. Thanks.This clears up the opinion you asserted that sounded like mysticism. My apologies. — Garrett Travers
Again, these are not my words. It's the title of this discussion! :smile: (Just scroll up to the top of the page to verify.)Reality does not make mistakes and that is why we strive for meaning. A justification for Meaning.
— Alkis Piskas
This is a statement of self evident fact. — Garrett Travers
Again, these are not my words. It's the title of this discussion! :smile: (Just scroll up to the top of the page to verify.)
Why do you insist on putting words in my mouth? :grin: — Alkis Piskas
Certainly. But I think that the points I brought up reflected or implied that ... — Alkis Piskas
You mean, you can't see that the title of this topic is "Reality does not make mistakes and that is why we strive for meaning. A justification for Meaning." and that these are not my words? What about the quotation marks and highlighting that I use? Don't they mean anything to you? How more clear can it be?Why do you insist on putting words in my mouth? :grin:
— Alkis Piskas
I don't, the manner in which you post isn't clear. — Garrett Travers
Right, we don't. And I don't think that you have misunderstood what I said.I don't think you and I have any beef. Unless I've misunderstood what you're saying, we're agreeing with each other. — T Clark
You mean, you can't see that the title of this topic is "Reality does not make mistakes and that is why we strive for meaning. A justification for Meaning." and that these are not my words? What about the quotation marks and highlighting that I use? Don't they mean anything to you? How more clear can it be?
These are all rhetorical questions. They show my great astonishment. You don't have to reply. — Alkis Piskas
I believe I've already answered this ↪180 Proof
. If we can, we ought to improve upon even our "adaptive illusions" when necessary, no? — 180 Proof
I am not missing any point. Sensations, such as the ones you are describing, are not real. They are sensations of that which is real; ancillary sensatory effects resulting from brain activity that only the person to which the brain belongs can detect. It is you who are missing the fact that the only thing real in the equation you are trying to assert is the brain and body it is attached to: You. You are real, and your emotions and thoughts cannot be detached from neural activity, which is a material phenomenon. — Garrett Travers
You are assuming what you need to show; that is that anything which cannot be objectively (inter-subjectively) shown to exist cannot be real. I agree that such things cannot be objectively real, because the criteria for that is inter-subjective demonstrability. — Janus
You are missing that fact that subjective feelings as they are experienced, as opposed to being thought to be some third person observable processes, are real, and in fact the most real phenomena, to the experience. — Janus
That's why I say that what is real should not be thought to be exhausted by the objective. — Janus
It is YOU who must demonstrated what YOU are claiming to be real that cannot be observed as evidence. — Garrett Travers
If you observed your own experience you would see that there are many phenomena therein which you could not possibly demonstrate to be real. — Janus
Of these it should be said that they are not objectively, but subjectively, real. — Janus
I just don't think 'illusion' is the best word to define something which has undoubtedly been experienced. — Janus
Luckily, everything that happens to me has a material explanation in association with my cognition, which is produced by my brain. So, no, you're wrong. — Garrett Travers
No such thing. Thoughts are produced by an objective brain. No way around it. — Garrett Travers
The illusion is thinking the sensation does not have a material explanation. It does, and it's called: the brain. — Garrett Travers
No I was right; you apparently do suffer from a terrible poverty of subjective experience. — Janus
I haven't claimed that subjectively real phenomena could not be produced by objectively real phenomena; so you are attacking a strawman. — Janus
Again I haven't said that sensations don't have material causes. I think your focus on the brain is too narrow, though. The genesis of sensation is the living embrained body/ world. — Janus
There is no subjectively real. — Garrett Travers
Subjective: based on or influenced by personal feelings, tastes, or opinions. — Garrett Travers
The only real aspect of these sensations, is the brain producing them
I'm glad to see you're finally understanding. Yes, this has been specifically my assertion this entire time. — Garrett Travers
You seem to think there is an objective matter of fact concerning whether or not subjective experiences are real. It;s really just a matter of the definition of the term 'real'. Of course if you restrict it to mean 'objectively real, then you are tautologously correct. — Janus
So where does the term 'real' figure in that definition? — Janus
Also, the sense of subjective their is different because ti refers to opinions or judgements, not experiences themselves. Subjective feelings, tastes and opinions are not based on subjective feelings, tastes and opinions, they are subjective feelings, tastes and opinions. — Janus
According to your hermetically sealed, self-serving definition of 'real', yes of course; but can you empirically demonstrate the truth of that claim? — Janus
'real' — Janus
All valid arguments and facts of identity are tautological in nature. It's you're first clue something is correct, or complete fabrications of the mind. — Garrett Travers
It doesn't that was the point. — Garrett Travers
actually existing as a thing or occurring in fact; not imagined or supposed. — Garrett Travers
I don't know what this means, looks like word salad. Completely incoherent. — Garrett Travers
Tautologies tell us nothing about what is the case. You are committing a rookie category error. — Janus
Not a very good point then since you seemed to be claiming that the definition had some bearing on the term 'real' — Janus
Yes, just like any subjective experience as such. — Janus
No need to think of them as being nothing but neural processes — Janus
Try using yourself (i.e. your brain in your terms) a little more and you might get it. — Janus
I don't persist with those who show themselves to be, as you have, a dogmatic ideologue, for long. — Janus
Reality is real, Janus. — Garrett Travers
Not accepting the facts of science is what is dogmatic. — Garrett Travers
Science consists in observation and theory, prediction and experiment, not merely in facts (the bare facts of observation). I think a little reading in the philosophy of science as well as phenomenology may help you gain a more comprehensive understanding. — Janus
You exist. — vanzhandz
Alright!Cogito ergo sum. — Descartes
Time exists. If time did not exist then one would not have the ability to discern past from present. — vanzhandz
Reality can not make mistakes. — vanzhandz
Reality has a blue print. — vanzhandz
I don't know if and what kind of energy a memory consists of ... But if it is, then it should be really huge, esp. considering the images stored in a computer, even in compressed form! This shows clearly that memory cannot be located/stored in the brain, as scientists try in vain to establish since a long time ago!
All this is quite interesting!storing digital text and image codes using DNA. A cubic cm of DNA is capable of storing 5 petabits of information ... — Count Timothy von Icarus
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