Why do you want to lock down the use of “convinced” in this way? What purpose does that serve? — DingoJones
Are you still convinced of your definition of "convinced," even though you know of reasons to doubt your definition of "convinced"--such as @DingoJones using that word differently, with no intention to deceive?Would you tell me that you were convinced of X even though you knew of reasons to doubt X? — Metaphysician Undercover
Okay, the string, "unicorn" represents, or symbolizes (both are synonyms of "express") the idea <unicorn>. You seemed to contradict yourself by saying that universals refer to potential instances. — Harry Hindu
Instead of "potential instances" - which seems like a loaded term, I'd use the term "category". Unicorns, cats, dogs and planets are categories. We put things (Uni) in mental boxes, or categories (unicorns) - Uni the unicorn. — Harry Hindu
You said they have different essences because they can do different things. Every thing does something different, which means that each idea is a different essence, and each material thing is a different essence. — Harry Hindu
There is no distinction between what is ideas and what is matter if everything is different from each other. — Harry Hindu
Goats eat grass, but grass doesn't eat grass, so they would be different essences. — Harry Hindu
But wait a second, can you imagine grass eating grass (the idea of grass eating grass)? Would that then make it the same essence as the idea of the goat eating grass? — Harry Hindu
Every thing has a different essence and existence. — Harry Hindu
ach idea would have a different existence and essence. So what? What does that have to do with the difference between what an idea is and what matter is? You've simply explained the difference between things, not the difference between the category "idea" and "matter" — Harry Hindu
It seems to me that one's essence defines one's existence. It seems to me that they are inseparable, as one's essence/existence is a relationship with everything else, so in a sense you did redefine "thing" as "essence/existence". In a deterministic world, that relationship would be deterministic, with no potentialities. — Harry Hindu
"Potentialities" are the result of our perception of time, as if the future is yet to happen and still isn't determined. — Harry Hindu
You still haven't addressed the differences between "idea" and "matter". — Harry Hindu
So, I consider the related general definitions of information, message, communication, code, and data to constitute a foundational concept which applies to both material (physical) and intentional (mental) domains. — Galuchat
You explicitly state in the previous sentence the separation is [by substance?] mental. How would you categorize 'mental separation' if not as an ontological separation?I am not a dualist. I hold that human beings are fully natural unities, but that we can, via abstraction, separate various notes of intelligibility found in unified substances. Such separation is mental, not based on ontological separation. As a result, we can maintain a two-subsystem theory of mind without resort to ontological dualism.
Well I think this is a bit 'low resolution'/unspecific. It's definitively clear neurophysiological data alone isn't sufficient for awareness but that doesn't mean that a certain kind of neurophysiological processing is not sufficient - this is the bigger argument here.1. Neurophysiological data processing cannot be the explanatory invariant of our awareness of contents. If A => B, then every case of A entails a case of B. So, if there is any case of neurophysiological data processing which does not result in awareness of the processed data (consciousness) then neurophysiological data processing alone cannot explain awareness. Clearly, we are not aware of all the data we process.
I don't think the first sentence [of the two in bold] leads to the conclusion in the second sentence.2. All knowledge is a subject-object relation. There is always a knowing subject and a known object. At the beginning of natural science, we abstract the object from the subject -- we choose to attend to physical objects to the exclusion of the mental acts by which the subject knows those objects. In natural science care what Ptolemy, Brahe, Galileo, and Hubble saw, not the act by which the intelligibility of what they saw became actually known. Thus, natural science is, by design, bereft of data and concepts relating to the knowing subject and her acts of awareness. Lacking these data and concepts, it has no way of connecting what it does know of the physical world, including neurophysiology, to the act of awareness. Thus it is logically impossible for natural science, as limited by its Fundamental Abstraction, to explain the act of awareness. Forgetting this is a prime example of Whitehead's Fallacy of Misplaced Concreteness (thinking what exists only in abstraction is the concrete reality in its fullness).
To be orthogonal is to be completely independent of the other [for one to not be able to directly influence the other]. I gave examples of instances where physical objects result in changes in objects of experience and awareness itself. The fact that they can influence each other so plainly, I think, gives good credence to the fact that these two things are not orthogonal. And, more importantly, the fact that this is a unidirectional interaction [i.e. that only physical objects can result in changes to mental states and not the other way around without some sort of physical mediator] gives serious reason to doubt an fundamentality to the mental field - at least to me it's clear its an emergent phenomenon out of fundamental material interactions.3. The material and intentional aspects of reality are logically orthogonal. That is to say, that, though they co-occur and interact, they do not share essential, defining notes. Matter is essentially extended and changeable. It is what it is because of intrinsic characteristics. As extended, matter has parts outside of parts, and so is measurable. As changeable, the same matter can take on different forms. As defined by intrinsic characteristics, we need not look beyond a sample to understand its nature.
Intentions do not have these characteristics. They are unextended, having no parts outside of parts. Instead they are indivisible unities. Further, there is no objective means of measuring them. They are not changeable. If you change your intent, you no longer have the same intention, but a different intention. As Franz Brentano noted, an essential characteristic of intentionality is its aboutness, which is to to say that they involve some target that they are about. We do not just know, will or hope, we know, will and hope something. Thus, to fully understand/specify an intention we have to go beyond its intrinsic nature, and say what it is about. (To specify a desire, we have to say what is desired.) This is clearly different from what is needed to specify a sample of matter.
4. Intentional realities are information based. What we know, will, desire, etc. is specified by actual, not potential, information. By definition, information is the reduction of (logical) possibility. If a message is transmitted, but not yet fully received, then it is not physical possibility that is reduced in the course of its reception, but logical possibility. As each bit is received, the logical possibility that it could be other than it is, is reduced.
The explanatory invariant of information is not physical. The same information can be encoded in a panoply of physical forms that have only increased in number with the advance of technology. Thus, information is not physically invariant. So, we have to look beyond physicality to understand information, and so the intentional realities that are essentially dependent on information.
This is very confusing.To express an idea is to instantiate a sign capable of evoking it. So, "unicorn" is an expression because can evoke <unicorn>. Still, it is not a symbol for the idea, because it is not the idea <unicorn>, but imagined/potential unicorns (animals) that both the word and the idea refer to. — Dfpolis
This is just more confusing. This is just a bunch of unnecessary use of terms in a long-winded explanation.While there are categories, <category> is not a fundamental concept. An instance is in a category because its objective nature, its intelligibility, is able to evoke the concept defining the category. If beagles were not able to evoke the concept <dog> they would not be categorized as dogs. So concepts are logically prior to categories -- and concepts refer to all of their potential instances, not just those that we have experienced or those that actually exist at any given time. — Dfpolis
All I am saying is that ideas have causal power. Does an idea of a unicorn exhaust a unicorn like the idea of a horse exhausts a horse? An idea of an imaginary thing does exhaust what that thing is because an imaginary thing only exists as imaginary, not also as real. There is nothing more to an imaginary object than what is imagined. But the idea of a unicorn (an imagined unicorn) has just as much causal power as an idea of a horse (an imagined horse). The difference is that there are no real unicorns to evoke the idea of unicorns. There are only pictures and words.Ideas are not things, but subjects thinking of things. Further, ideas are abstractions. The do not exhaust what we are thinking of. Since ideas are abstractions, they can leave individuating characteristics behind, and so the same idea can be evoked by many individuals. That is why many concepts are universal. — Dfpolis
There is no distinction between what is ideas and what is matter if everything is different from each other. — Harry Hindu
No, that isn't an example of my restatement of your claim.This is a complete non sequitur, and I can't think of how you came to this conclusion. The fact that we have 100 different plastic toy cars does not mean that there is no difference between the idea of plastic and the idea of a toy car. — Dfpolis
Can you please try to stay focused. That isn't what I asked. I don't think you're actually taking the time to read what I'm writing. You seem to only want to push your view.We can imagine many things, but that does not make them exist. Grass that ate grass would have a different essence than actual grass. — Dfpolis
And I already went over this with you where you talked about how you change your intent and I pointed out how this is no different than how an apple changes color, but you didn't respond to it. Your intent, along with the apple's color changes as a result of prior causes. I am showing that their isn't a difference that you can explain coherently because there is no actual difference between what we call ideas and matter. It's all information.I explained it to deal with your misunderstanding my use of "essence," not to explain the difference between the concepts of materiality and intentionality, which I already explained in the OP. — Dfpolis
No, the present state is one of the universe's actual predetermined states.Determinism alone does not eliminate the distinction between actual and potential. Even if the time-development of the universe were fully determined by its initial state at one time the present state was not the universe's actual state, but only a fully determined potential state. — Dfpolis
Time is the stretching out of the causal relationships that make up the universe. A causal relationship is a change (cause and effect).I think you have this backward. Time is a measure of change, and change occurs because what was merely potential becomes actual. Determinism is irrelevant to the reality of change. — Dfpolis
Dfpolis, thank you for the excellent post! — aporiap
You explicitly state in the previous sentence the separation is [by substance?] mental. How would you categorize 'mental separation' if not as an ontological separation? — aporiap
1. Neurophysiological data processing cannot be the explanatory invariant of our awareness of contents. ....
Well I think this is a bit 'low resolution'/unspecific. It's definitively clear neurophysiological data alone isn't sufficient for awareness but that doesn't mean that a certain kind of neurophysiological processing is not sufficient - this is the bigger argument here. — aporiap
The missing-instruction argument shows that software cannot make a Turing machine conscious. If software-based conscious is possible, there exists one or more programs complex enough to generate consciousness. Let’s take one with the fewest possible instructions, and remove an instruction that will not be used for, say, ten steps. Then the Turing machine will run the same as if the removed instruction were there for the first nine steps.
Start the machine and let it run five steps. Since the program is below minimum complexity, it is not conscious. Then stop the machine, put back the missing instruction, and let it continue. Even though it has not executed the instruction we replaced, the Turing machine is conscious for steps 6-9, because now it is complex enough. So, even though nothing the Turing machine actually does is any different with or without the instruction we removed and replaced, its mere presence makes the machine conscious.
This violates all ideas of causality. How can something that does nothing create consciousness by its mere presence? Not by any natural means – especially since its presence has no defined physical incarnation. The instruction could be on a disk, a punch card, or in semiconductor memory. So, the instruction can’t cause consciousness by a specific physical mechanism. Its presence has to have an immaterial efficacy independent of its physical encoding.
One counterargument might be that the whole program needs to run before there is consciousness. That idea fails. Consciousness is continuous. What kind of consciousness is unaware the entire time contents are being processed, but becomes aware when processing has terminated? None.
Perhaps the program has a loop that has to be run though a certain number of times for consciousness to occur. If that is the case, take the same program and load it with one change – set the machine to the state it will have after the requisite number of iterations. Now we need not run through the loop to get to the conscious state. We then remove an instruction further into the loop just as we did in the original example. Once again, the presence of an inoperative instruction creates consciousness. — Dennis F. Polis -- God, Sceince and Mind, p. 196
In natural science care what Ptolemy, Brahe, Galileo, and Hubble saw, not the act by which the intelligibility of what they saw became actually known. Thus, natural science is, by design, bereft of data and concepts relating to the knowing subject and her acts of awareness....
I don't think the first sentence ... leads to the conclusion in the second sentence.
Empiricism starts with defining a phenomenon -any phenomenon. Phemonema can be mental or physical or can even be some interaction between mental and physical ... — aporiap
So connections are in fact being attempted between what's traditionally been considered a 'mental field' e.g. psychology and 'physical' fields e.g. biophysics. — aporiap
To be orthogonal is to be completely independent of the other [for one to not be able to directly influence the other]. — aporiap
... the fact that this is a unidirectional interaction [i.e. that only physical objects can result in changes to mental states and not the other way around without some sort of physical mediator] gives serious reason to doubt an fundamentality to the mental field - at least to me it's clear its an emergent phenomenon out of fundamental material interactions. — aporiap
I'm unsure why intentions [my understanding of what you mean by intention is: the object of a mental act - judgement, perception, etc] are always considered without parts. I think, for example, a 'hope' is deconstruct-able, and [at least partly] composed of a valence component, an cognitive attitude of anticipation, a 'desire' or 'wanting' for a certain end to come about, the 'state of affairs' that defines the 'end'. and sometimes a feeling of 'confidence'. I can also imagine how this is biophysically instantiated [i.e. this intentional state is defined by a circuit interaction between certain parts of the reward system, cognitive system, and memory system]. So what you have is some emergent state [the mental state] composed of interacting elements. — aporiap
I'm still forming my thoughts on this and this part of your post but I'll give you a response when I think of one. — aporiap
First, the word, "unicorn" does not just evoke <unicorn>, the word itself is evoked by <unicorn>. As I have been saying, words and ideas are both causes and effects of each other, and each carries information about each other. — Harry Hindu
Second, I have no idea what you mean by "imagined/potential unicorns". There is the word, "unicorn", pictures of unicorns, and the idea <unicorn> (a mental image of a unicorn), and the causal relationship between them. That's it. An imagined unicorn is just another name for the mental image of a unicorn. — Harry Hindu
While there are categories, <category> is not a fundamental concept. An instance is in a category because its objective nature, its intelligibility, is able to evoke the concept defining the category. If beagles were not able to evoke the concept <dog> they would not be categorized as dogs. So concepts are logically prior to categories -- and concepts refer to all of their potential instances, not just those that we have experienced or those that actually exist at any given time. — Dfpolis
This is just more confusing. This is just a bunch of unnecessary use of terms in a long-winded explanation. — Harry Hindu
All I am saying is that ideas have causal power. — Harry Hindu
Does an idea of a unicorn exhaust a unicorn like the idea of a horse exhausts a horse? — Harry Hindu
No, that isn't an example of my restatement of your claim.
It would be more like we have 100 different things with no relationship at all. Everything would be made of a completely different element and with a different function. Using your explanation of "essences" and "existence" there is no possibility for the existence of categories. — Harry Hindu
This would mean that the idea of a horse and the idea of a unicorn have different essences because they both do different things. — Harry Hindu
So why place them in the category, "ideas"? — Harry Hindu
Can you please try to stay focused. That isn't what I asked. I don't think you're actually taking the time to read what I'm writing. You seem to only want to push your view. — Harry Hindu
If two things do the same thing then they would have the same essence. Does the idea of grass eating grass have the same essence as the idea of a goat eating grass? — Harry Hindu
And I already went over this with you where you talked about how you change your intent and I pointed out how this is no different than how an apple changes color, but you didn't respond to it. — Harry Hindu
No, the present state is one of the universe's actual predetermined states. — Harry Hindu
I think you have this backward. Time is a measure of change, and change occurs because what was merely potential becomes actual. Determinism is irrelevant to the reality of change. — Dfpolis
Time is the stretching out of the causal relationships that make up the universe. A causal relationship is a change (cause and effect). — Harry Hindu
Sure, but that isn't to say that the author never had any intent to write anything down. Those words still mean what the author intended even if no one ever reads what he wrote. The same goes with everything else ("material things" as you call them). Just because some effect isn't noticed, or part of some awareness, doesn't mean that the cause never happened. You are basically saying that meaning only arises in the relationship between matter and ideas. I'm saying there is no distinction that you have been able to coherently show between them and that they are both causal and can establish the same kind of relationships - meaningful/causal. Meaning is the relationship between cause and effect.The word is indeed evoked by the idea in the author of a locution, but it must evoke the idea in the recipient if the locution is to communicate. If I look at the word "unicorn," and have no idea what a unicorn is, the string cannot signify unicorns to me. That is why unknown languages are meaningless to us -- because they are incapable of evoking the ideas their authors intended in us. — Dfpolis
If they can't be imagined, then how do you know what they mean? How do you know that you're thinking of <indenumerable infinity> or of <existence> if they don't have any imagery that the words refer to? How do you distinguish between <indenumerable infinity> and <existence> in your mind (other than seeing the words on a screen)?Ideas are not images. First, some ideas are to abstract to be imagined. What is the image of <indenumerable infinity> or of <existence>? How could we have an image of indenumerable infinity using a finite number of neurons? — Dfpolis
Again, if words don't refer to some mental image, then what do they refer to? When the word "human" crops up in my mind, humans that look like me crop up in my mind (Caucasian, white middle-aged male, or maybe a fine-looking woman depending on my mood), and I'm sure it's similar for others. What a words evokes in some mind is what that mind has most of it's experiences with. Again, how could you know that you are thinking <human> instead of <unicorn> if there isn't some mental imagery happening that those scribbles refer to?Second, ideas are indeterminate, while images are determinate. Is the idea <human> black, Caucasian or Asian; male or female; old or young; tall or short? None, of course, but any image will have definite characteristics. — Dfpolis
This is so confusing. I think your problem is that you are over-complicating things. Yeah, a mental image of a unicorn is not a unicorn, but then what does the scribbles, "unicorn" refer to? You have used this string of scribbles, "unicorn" over and over while claiming that unicorns don't exist. Then what do you mean when you use those scribbles? You keep contradicting yourself saying that unicorns don't exist yet you keep using the word to refer to something. What is it? If "unicorn" refers to an image of a unicorn, then the image of a unicorn is a "unicorn".An imagined unicorn is not the mental image of a unicorn, which is an image, not a unicorn, but a mental image thought of as existing. — Dfpolis
Another contradiction! Unicorns don't exist, yet all there is to a unicorn is what we imagine! Then unicorns exist as what we imagine (mental imagery). What does your unicorn look like? How do you know you're thinking of a unicorn? Please answer that question and the previous one about how you distinguish between indenumerable infinity and existence in your mind. How do you know you're thinking of one as opposed to the other? How do you know what those strings of symbols mean?As unicorns don't exist, all that there is to a unicorn is what we imagine it to be. — Dfpolis
Actually, I'd go so far as to say that categories only exist in minds. Therefore the only kind of category is a mental category, (or a concept).The point is that categories are based on concepts and concepts are based on objective intelligibility being actualized by minds. So, appealing to categories does not avoid dependence on mental concepts. — Dfpolis
And so can matter. I already went over this. Effects refer to their causes and effects can be "material" or "intentional". The tree rings refer to the age of the tree because of how the tree grows, and the tree rings will mean the age of the tree even if no one comes along to see them. The tree stump and its rings still exists. It still reflects light, even if their are no eyes to capture that reflected light. That reflected light could make other things happen - material things - without ever encountering a mind to branch off the causal path into new directions.So why place them in the category, "ideas"? — Harry Hindu
Because they have something (not everything) in common: their whole being, all they can do, is refer. — Dfpolis
You obviously didn't understand my point if you didn't understand how it helped me. You actually just proved my point here. Your intent is the same as the color. You are the same as the apple. In other words you are no different than an apple (you are both constants that change), and intent is no different than the color (what changes). So again, how are intents different than matter if in both cases there is a constant and something that changes?And I already went over this with you where you talked about how you change your intent and I pointed out how this is no different than how an apple changes color, but you didn't respond to it. — Harry Hindu
Yes, I know. I did not respond, because I did not understand how it helped you. Say an apple changes color from green to red. The principle of continuity, what remains the same, is the apple, not the color. One color ceases to be, and the other comes to be. In the same way, if I change my intent, I, the intending subject remains, but my old intent ceases to be and my new intent comes to be. The principle of excluded middle allows no continuity between willing to go and not willing to go, or between no being red and being red. — Dfpolis
Sure it is. It is your perception of time that makes you see the future as something that doesn't exist yet.Being actually predetermined is not the same as actually existing. — Dfpolis
I explained this already when I spoke about how our minds operate at a certain frequency of change relative to the other processes of the universe. Your mind stretches those causal relationships. The speed at which you experience the world is dependent upon your conscious state. Lethargic lizards experience the world as a blur, where the causal relationships are blurred together. When they warm up, those causal relationships stretch into something more discernible (causes and their effects).I have no idea what "Time is the stretching out of the causal relationships that make up the universe," means. I have a very good idea of what "Time is the measure of change according to before and after means." We have no power to stretch causal relations. We do have the power to measure change. — Dfpolis
Thanks! Can't believe it's already over.You are welcome. I thank you for your thoughtful consideration and wish you and yours a joyful Christmas.
Okay the last sentence is what really clears it up. This sounds like nominalism, is that correct?The basis for logically distinct concepts need not be separate, or ontologically independent, objects. In looking at a ball, I might abstract <sphere> and <rubber> concepts without spheres existing separately from matter, or matter existing formlessly. Thus, by ontological separation, I mean existing independently or apart. By logical distinction, I mean having different notes of comprehension.
Further, while concepts may have, as their foundation in reality, the instances that can properly evoke them, they are not those instances. The concept <rubber> is not made of the sap of Hevea brasiliensis. Natural rubber typically its. So, generally, in contrasting logical and ontological I am contrasting concepts with their foundation in reality.
Finally, concepts are not things, but reified activities. <Rubber> is just a subject thinking of rubber.
There are a some things I have issue with the missing instruction argument:It is low resolution. My purpose was to convince the reader that we need more than mere "data processing" to explain awareness -- to open minds to the search for further factors.
In my book, I offer the following:
The missing-instruction argument shows that software cannot make a Turing machine conscious. If software-based conscious is possible, there exists one or more programs complex enough to generate consciousness. Let’s take one with the fewest possible instructions, and remove an instruction that will not be used for, say, ten steps. Then the Turing machine will run the same as if the removed instruction were there for the first nine steps.
Start the machine and let it run five steps. Since the program is below minimum complexity, it is not conscious. Then stop the machine, put back the missing instruction, and let it continue. Even though it has not executed the instruction we replaced, the Turing machine is conscious for steps 6-9, because now it is complex enough. So, even though nothing the Turing machine actually does is any different with or without the instruction we removed and replaced, its mere presence makes the machine conscious.
This violates all ideas of causality. How can something that does nothing create consciousness by its mere presence? Not by any natural means – especially since its presence has no defined physical incarnation. The instruction could be on a disk, a punch card, or in semiconductor memory. So, the instruction can’t cause consciousness by a specific physical mechanism. Its presence has to have an immaterial efficacy independent of its physical encoding.
One counterargument might be that the whole program needs to run before there is consciousness. That idea fails. Consciousness is continuous. What kind of consciousness is unaware the entire time contents are being processed, but becomes aware when processing has terminated? None.
Perhaps the program has a loop that has to be run though a certain number of times for consciousness to occur. If that is the case, take the same program and load it with one change – set the machine to the state it will have after the requisite number of iterations. Now we need not run through the loop to get to the conscious state. We then remove an instruction further into the loop just as we did in the original example. Once again, the presence of an inoperative instruction creates consciousness.
— Dennis F. Polis -- God, Sceince and Mind, p. 196
Thus, we can eliminate data processing, no matter how complex, as a cause of consciousness.
Why make the dichotomy between "natural" and "psychological" objects? I think psychological constructs that are well defined and have some clear physiological correlates [e.g. reward system and valence - limbic system; awareness - reticular activating system] are fair game for being considered 'natural phenomena'. I don't think there has to necessarily be a hard dichotomy. Besides, even in the physical sciences we don't have access to 'things in themselves' anyway, 'electron', 'proton' are known by virtue of the effect of their intrinsic properties on measurement devices and not by actually physically observing them. I feel this is analogous to the way in which we can't observe 'pleasure' or 'pain'. Of course those constructs are simply less well defined and less concrete, but -in the same way the atomic model was refined after more fine-grained experimentation- the psychological ones I feel can come somewhat closer to that in time. The point is that these fall within the range of natural objects albeit of a lesser degree as opposed to something wholly different so as to involve a completely different way of knowing or learning about them.I have no problem with empiricism. I see the role of philosophy as providing a consistent framework for understanding of all human experience. My observation is directed specifically at natural science, which I think is rightly described as focused on physical objects, or if you prefer, physical phenomena.
Aristotle, who I think has made as much progress as anyone on understanding the nature of consciousness, based his work on experience, but treated our experience as subjects on an equally footing with our experience of physical objects.
Those words still mean what the author intended even if no one ever reads what he wrote — Harry Hindu
Just because some effect isn't noticed, or part of some awareness, doesn't mean that the cause never happened. — Harry Hindu
You are basically saying that meaning only arises in the relationship between matter and ideas. I'm saying there is no distinction that you have been able to coherently show between them and that they are both causal and can establish the same kind of relationships - meaningful/causal. Meaning is the relationship between cause and effect. — Harry Hindu
If they can't be imagined, then how do you know what they mean? How do you know that you're thinking of <indenumerable infinity> or of <existence> if they don't have any imagery that the words refer to? How do you distinguish between <indenumerable infinity> and <existence> in your mind (other than seeing the words on a screen)? — Harry Hindu
Again, if words don't refer to some mental image, then what do they refer to? — Harry Hindu
I think your problem is that you are over-complicating things. — Harry Hindu
what does the scribbles, "unicorn" refer to? — Harry Hindu
Another contradiction! Unicorns don't exist, yet all there is to a unicorn is what we imagine! — Harry Hindu
What does your unicorn look like? How do you know you're thinking of a unicorn? — Harry Hindu
How do you know what those strings of symbols mean? — Harry Hindu
Actually, I'd go so far as to say that categories only exist in minds. Therefore the only kind of category is a mental category, (or a concept). — Harry Hindu
So why place them in the category, "ideas"? — Harry Hindu
Because they have something (not everything) in common: their whole being, all they can do, is refer. — Dfpolis
And so can matter. I already went over this. — Harry Hindu
So you have yet to explain the difference between "matter" and "ideas". — Harry Hindu
how are intents different than matter if in both cases there is a constant and something that changes? — Harry Hindu
Being actually predetermined is not the same as actually existing. — Dfpolis
Sure it is. It is your perception of time that makes you see the future as something that doesn't exist yet. — Harry Hindu
Your mind stretches those causal relationships — Harry Hindu
This sounds like nominalism, is that correct? — aporiap
Why would the program not be conscious when running the first 5 steps of the algorithm? — aporiap
Why not it simply loose consciousness when the program has reached the missing instruction in the same way a computer program freezes if there is an error in a line of the code and simply resume running once the code is fixed? — aporiap
The way this scenario is construed makes an issue for any kind of binary descriptor of a continually running algorithm [e.g. any sort of game, any sort of artificial sensor, any sort of continually looping program] not just specifically for ascribing consciousness to an algorithm. Eg. Say you call this algorithm an 'atmospheric sampler'. Say you take one instruction out now it is no longer an atmospheric sampler algorithm because it cannot sample, let it run until after the instructional code, now repair the instruction and it has become an atmospheric sampler seemingly a-causally. — aporiap
The implicit assumption is that the complexity of an algorithm is what generates consciousness and that complexity is reduced by reducing the number of instructions. — aporiap
This assumes data processing can only happen in a turing machine like manner — aporiap
Perhaps this is why say, a neuron, which is a single processing unit is not capable of consciousness whereas a conglomerate of neurons is. — aporiap
Why make the dichotomy between "natural" and "psychological" objects? — aporiap
even in the physical sciences we don't have access to 'things in themselves' anyway, — aporiap
The point is that these fall within the range of natural objects albeit of a lesser degree as opposed to something wholly different so as to involve a completely different way of knowing or learning about them. — aporiap
So a datum (asymmetry or symmetry) is epistemically and ontically foundational? — Galuchat
What is interesting is the ''hard'' in The Hard Problem of Consciousness. Why didn't Chamlers use ''impossible''? — TheMadFool
Are you taking this a step further and claiming this is the IMPOSSIBLE problem of consciousness? — TheMadFool
Please rethink this. Kant was bullheaded in his opposition to Hume's thesis that there is no intrinsic necessity to time ordered causality. As a result he sent philosophy off on a tangent from which it is yet to fully recover. — Dfpolis
If I understand you correctly, you mean the observer by ''knowing subject'' and you consider it different from the observed - the ''known subject''.
Why? — TheMadFool
What other concept makes you feel that way? If I understand you correctly you don't consider material (scientific) explanations adequate to explain the ''knowing subject''. — TheMadFool
Why and how is the ''knowing subject'' different from the ''known subject''? — TheMadFool
what is your idea of Hume’s thesis that Kant was bullheaded about, with respect to “time-ordered causality”? — Mww
I’d guess A.) you’re talking about the effect on our knowledge of a thing being antecedent to the causality of the thing’s impression given to us by sense, or, B.) you’re talking about the simultaneity of the external impression on sense and the internal knowledge of the object so impressing. — Mww
Lest one think that essential causality plays no role in modern thought, the laws of nature operate by essential or concurrent causality. Mass-energy being conserved by the law of conservation of mass-energy is identically the law of conservation of mass-energy conserving mass-energy. So essential causality is alive and well today. It is just not discussed by most contemporary philosophers. — Dfpolis
But energy is not conserved by the Principle of energy conservation. It is conserved due to the dynamics undergone by a system obeying the laws of physics. — Inis
Kant seems to have felt that (....) Hume's analysis must be flawed. — Dfpolis
To avoid any confusion, let us distinguish the laws of nature, which are operative in nature, and the laws of physics, which are approximate human descriptions of the laws operative in nature. — Dfpolis
How is the builder building identically being the building built any different than the ball hitting identically being the hit ball? — Mww
all empirical relationships concerning cause and effect are contingent with respect to human knowledge, which implies if any absolute necessity, that is to say, the falsification of which is impossible, must arise from a priori conditions. — Mww
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