180 Proof
:up: :up:When observing ourselves, we are observing a puppet moving as though it is alive. Its aliveness is sustained by a complex process of actualisation which is hidden from us, unconscious. So we are only viewing an apparently conscious puppet. But because the puppet is a highly real projection, we think it is real, alive and inexplicable, it seems to have a life of its own. We are not aware of what makes it alive, which is behind the scenes, a complex biological machine. — Punshhh
Do you know the power of a machine made of a trillion moving parts? ... We're not just robots. We're robots, made of robots, made of robots. ~Daniel Dennett — 180 Proof
Really? :chin:Organisms are self organizing in a way no machine can be. — Wayfarer
Punshhh
Gnomon
Ha! I don't do a lot of "presuming" about such technical questions, because that is peripheral to my amateur philosophy hobby. But I'm currently reading a book by Federico Faggin*1, who is a credentialed expert in computer-related technology. And he details a variety of "problems" and "specific issues" that could limit software & hardware design from reaching the goal of duplicating human reasoning.You're presuming that "real world" human reasoning is somehow beyond duplicating. I don't see any problems at all, because any specific issue you might bring up could be dealt in the design- either in software or hardware. — Relativist
Esse Quam Videri
Not an impasse but a misunderstanding. — Wayfarer
The point is categorical, not psychological. There is a difference between reflexive awareness and object-awareness. By way of analogy: just as the eye is present in every act of seeing without ever appearing as a seen thing, subjective consciousness is present in every experience without itself appearing as an object of experience. — Wayfarer
Forms are real in Aristotle’s sense, but their reality is not the reality of an object of perception. Their mode of being is inseparable from intelligibility itself. And if that is the case, how could they 'exist in the world in a mind-independent way'? — Wayfarer
Mww
a proper understanding of the empirical depends on a proper understanding of the transcendental — Esse Quam Videri
Gnomon
Apparently, disagrees with your definition of Philosophical questioning. He seems to picture himself as a Socratic gadfly, arguing against the Sophists, whose fallacious logic and situational rhetoric was goal-oriented instead of truth-seeking. In my early reading about Philosophy, Socrates was portrayed (by Catholic theologians?) as the good-guy, separating True from False, and the Sophists*1 were bad-guys, preaching relativity & subjectivity. Yet, unlike 180's sneering & disparaging & humiliating trolling-technique, Socrates' philosophical method*3 was dialectical & didactic & persuasive.How else do we know "what is true"? — Gnomon
Notice that in the context of science, this is usually limited to a specific question or subject matter, but can also then be expanded to include general theories and hypotheses. Philosophical questions are much more open-ended and often not nearly so specific. That is the subject of another thread, The Predicament of Modernity. — Wayfarer
Mww
I see consciousness as inherently reflexive. — Esse Quam Videri
It can (and manifestly does) use experience, understanding and reason to appropriate itself as experiencer, understander and reasoner. — Esse Quam Videri
Wayfarer
When form enters the mind it is still bound to the matter of the organism, but in a different mode of existence — Esse Quam Videri
…if the proper knowledge of the senses is of accidents, through forms that are individualized, the proper knowledge of intellect is of essences, through forms that are universalized. Intellectual knowledge is analogous to sense knowledge inasmuch as it demands the reception of the form of the thing which is known. But it differs from sense knowledge so far forth as it consists in the apprehension of things, not in their individuality, but in their universality. — Thomistic Psychology, A Philosophical Analysis of the Nature of Man, by Robert E. Brennan, O.P., Macmillan Co., 1941.
Esse Quam Videri
I think you’re rather over-dramatising my view. My argument isn’t against realism as such, nor against inquiry into it. It’s against the presumption that reality is exhausted by the objective domain. — Wayfarer
Wayfarer
I apologize if I've read too much into your critique. Hopefully the discussion has proved interesting nonetheless. — Esse Quam Videri
Wayfarer
Really? — 180 Proof
Wayfarer
Paine
For Aristotle forms exist in substances. Their existence is, in some sense, constitutive of substance. This is what I meant when I said he considered form to be immanent to material substances. For him form is literally inseparable from matter. When form enters the mind it is still bound to the matter of the organism, but in a different mode of existence. In that case the form exists in a way that determines “what” the organism is thinking about or perceiving, rather than in a way that determines “what” the organism is. — Esse Quam Videri
412a6. Now we speak of on particular kind of existent things as substance (οὐσία), and under this heading we so speak of one thing qua matter, which in itself is not a particular thing, another qua shape and form, in virtue of which it is then spoken of as a particular, and a third qua the product of these two. And matter is potentiality, while form is actuality---and that in two ways, first as knowledge is, and second as contemplation is. — Aristotle, De Anima, 412a6, translated by D.W. Hamlyn
412a11, It is bodies especially which are thought to be substances, and of these, especially natural bodies; for these are sources of the rest. Of natural bodies, some have life and some do not; and it is self-nourishment, growth, and decay that we speak of as life. Hence, every natural body which partakes of life will be a substance, and substance of a composite kind. — ibid. 412a11
412a16. Since it is indeed a body of such a kind (for it is one having life), the soul will not be body; for the body is not something predicated of a subject, but exists rather as subject and matter. The soul must then, be substance qua form of a natural body which has life potentially. Substance is actuality. The soul, therefore, will be the actuality of a body of this kind. — ibid. 412a16
Wayfarer
Boethius, in his commentaries on Aristotle ...always translated ousia as substantia, and his usage seems to have settled the matter. And so a word designed by the anti-Aristotelian Augustine to mean a low and empty sort of being turns up in our translations of the word whose meaning Aristotle took to be the highest and fullest sense of being. Descartes, in his Meditations, uses the word 'substance' only with his tongue in his cheek; Locke explicitly analyzes it as an empty notion of an I-don’t-know-what; and soon after the word is laughed out of the vocabulary of serious philosophic endeavor. It is no wonder that the Metaphysics ceased to have any influence on living thinking: its heart had been cut out of it by its friends. — IEP
412a11, It is bodies especially which are thought to besubstancessubjects, and of these, especially natural bodies; for these are sources of the rest.
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