Yes. I was being lazy. I’m an extremely lazy person. God bless me. — Noah Te Stroete
Could an artificial brain be conscious? — Noah Te Stroete
I am not claiming I know the nature of this “divine” consciousness of which I speak. Could it also be somehow instantiated in something physical? — Noah Te Stroete
My point was that it is more likely that the physical world exists, and that a conscious mind that is working properly is more likely to perceive it usually accurately. This is an abductive inference. — Noah Te Stroete
When I use the term “better” as in it’s a “better explanation”, I suppose I am really saying that I prefer it. What else could I mean? Do you prefer the explanation that conscious life spontaneously came about? If so, what is your justification? — Noah Te Stroete
I think the whole idea of likelihood for such things is nonsense. That has to do with what likelihood is. — Terrapin Station
It's not a matter of preference. Maybe it is for you, but that would mean that you don't care about the truth or being reasonable. I do. — S
One cannot have certain beliefs about certain things without abductive inference, which may just be a matter of preferences. — Noah Te Stroete
That’s a non answer. — Noah Te Stroete
No it isn't. Your questions were wrong. I corrected you. The answer is that it isn't a matter of preference. — S
Perhaps it’s nonsense. Perhaps not. One cannot have certain beliefs about certain things without abductive inference, which may just be a matter of preferences. — Noah Te Stroete
Because likelihood makes no sense if we don't have data re frequency of occurrence. Even then there are problems with it, but we definitely can't reach a conclusion about it without data re frequency. — Terrapin Station
I don't have any likelihood beliefs about anything that I don't have frequency data for, unless I think either it's 1 ("100%" or certain) or 0--impossible/incoherent. — Terrapin Station
How so or why not? — Noah Te Stroete
What is it a matter of then? “Inference to the ‘best’ explanation.” What does “best” mean here? — Noah Te Stroete
I’m an extremely lazy person. — Noah Te Stroete
Hard to do philosophy like that though, especially the hard questions. — Christoffer
It could mean a number of things, but if it means most preferable to you, then you're not being reasonable, you're just being emotional. — S
I wasn't always this way. I just don't care as much as I once did. In fact, my giving-a-fuck factor has gone down exponentially in the last decade. — Noah Te Stroete
That can be true for personal things, but I don't think it's preferable for philosophy. If people want trivialities, there's Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and so on to be lazy on. Being lazy in philosophical discourses means you really get nothing out of it and just spam discussions with irrelevant stuff. In the end, what do you want to accomplish with participating in philosophy discussions? — Christoffer
Hi, I know I'm being held in existence by a Supreme Being. You don't like the reality doing the conserving, I don't have a problem with that, but it's an undeniable fact I'm being held in existence by that "Entity."
So, there is evidence everyone is aware of. — Daniel Cox
That can be true for personal things, but I don't think it's preferable for philosophy. If people want trivialities, there's Twitter, Facebook, Instagram and so on to be lazy on. Being lazy in philosophical discourses means you really get nothing out of it and just spams discussions with irrelevant stuff. In the end, what do you want to accomplish with participating in philosophy discussions? — Christoffer
I take it to mean most preferable to someone, if not most preferable to the experts. What could "best" possibly mean? — Noah Te Stroete
I feel like my positions are well-supported and thoughtful. — Noah Te Stroete
But most philosophical discussions I witness tend to be evangelical rants in some vague attempt to pick a fight online or some other trivial reason.
When my head feels like burning because I get challenged by really good counter-arguments, I know my knowledge is improving. If not, it's usually a waste of time. — Christoffer
But your position here is neither of those things. Myself and Terrapin exposed a fault in your argument and you've been unwilling or unable to salvage it. It has been refuted. — S
And how is my position not supported by logic, reason, or Occam's razor? It certainly is not contradictory to science either. — Noah Te Stroete
Point out where I went wrong. — Noah Te Stroete
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