Rebuttals of this type often take the form of claims that reduce racism down to the the level of "brains" or "neurons." This is a coherent claim, although it does entail reductivism in the aforementioned form — Count Timothy von Icarus
As in the exact same way it produces sight, smell, taste, heart beat, blood circulation, etc. Literally just like that. — Garrett Travers
That's why when your brain stops working, you stop being conscious. Very straight forward, mainstream neuroscience.
As in the exact same way it produces sight, smell, taste, heart beat, blood circulation, etc. — Garrett Travers
Abstractions generally have to be able to cause physical effects for a physicalist. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Nevertheless, if I write something that gives you the shits, your pulse will accelerate slightly, your adrenals will uptick a little. But nothing physical would have passed between us.
Thus people today stop at the laws of nature, treating them as something inviolable, just as God and Fate were treated in past ages.
Numbers, grammatical rules, the principles of logic, scientific principles - none of these have a scientific explanation and cannot be meaningfully reduced to physical laws. They also can’t be meaningfully accounted for as products of evolution either without reducing them to biology,
These abstracts are, in fact, generated – via autopoiesis – in ecologies of (human) brains
The apple-image, the thought-apple, I ate in my nightdream or daydream last night or this afternoon, respectively, that I don't doubt you'll be glad to reduce to brain shocks and twitches. — ZzzoneiroCosm
I wonder if you've ever picked up Freud's Civilization and Its Discontents. The oceanic experience Freud describes in the opening pages - Freud writes that though he acknowledges the existence of the oceanic experience he has never himself had the experience. — ZzzoneiroCosm
The former tend to feel there's something distinctly psychical about the physical world. The others are happy to reduce the world to the physical. — ZzzoneiroCosm
The brain is not the same thing as its products, then? — bert1
What's the empirical difference between my temporarily ceasing to be conscious, and my mind temporarily ceasing to exist? — bert1
Does a brain 'produce' sight? — bert1
Does a brain 'produce' smell? — bert1
A brain causes a heartbeat, perhaps. The heart itself beats. I'm not sure any production is going on. — bert1
Is consciousness nothing other than a kind of brain function? — bert1
extant — Garrett Travers
A reduction would require it to be something less complex than what you're describing. The symphony of 80 billion neurons across the most complex piece of multistructural matter to ever exist in the known universe, that of which is responsible for the generation of every piece of machinery and technology, every piece of music, every artwork, being reduced to delusions and imagination is, in fact, the reduction. — Garrett Travers
So by extant you mean physical. So you're asking us to show you some physical thing that isn't physical. — ZzzoneiroCosm
It isn't a reductionism because nothing is excluded. You've misunderstood. Nothing you mentioned is excluded. Whereas you're committed to excluding some X in your picture of the universe. That's why it's a reductionism. — ZzzoneiroCosm
There is nothing true about this statement whatsoever. You have been dispensed with, guy. Move on. — Garrett Travers
"Many physicists have uncritically adopted platonic realism as their personal interpretation of the meaning of physics."
This follows from the trend of mathematicians who employ platonic realism in their axioms, to describe mathematical values as mathematical objects. — Metaphysician Undercover
The brain regulates it entirely. Nothing else to it. It beats because they brain tells it to.
This is incorrect. Heart cells will beat in culture, disconnected from the body, and they synchronize their beats if they touch. You may be interested the sinoatrial node is the main player in mediating heart rate, but plenty of other factors outside the brain play a role (hormones, consumption of exogenous chemicals, etc.). — Count Timothy von Icarus
A wide array of biological functions take place outside the direct intervention of the brain. You might be interested in the enteric nervous system, the "brain of the gut," which coordinates digestion without much connection to the rest of the nervous system. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Other parts of the body also shape conscious experience. The endocrine system plays a huge role in emotion, the regulation of wakefulness, satiety, feeling like you need to take a leak, etc. As someone whose wife is about 9 months pregnant, I'd say you ignore the role of hormones in cognition at your own peril! — Count Timothy von Icarus
Great post. — RogueAI
demonstrate the existence of something that is non-material. — Garrett Travers
Thoughts (apple-image, apple-thought) exist, no matter what you say. Your reductionism excludes them. — ZzzoneiroCosm
If you say they don't exist you've just decided to define the word existence in terms of the physical. — ZzzoneiroCosm
.The brain regulates it entirely. Nothing else to it. It beats because they brain tells it to.
These are individual parts of the body, all of which is dependent on the regulation provided by the brain.
Nevertheless, if I write something that gives you the shits, your pulse will accelerate slightly, your adrenals will uptick a little. But nothing physical would have passed between us.
I don't see how this holds. If we had you both hooked up to various types of neuroimaging devices we could see correlates of both the process of writing the text and the process of reading it. We could also predict, at the scale of neurological substructures, where in the brain activity would increase during those activities. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Again, I'm only using the current definition:
existence - the fact or state of living or having objective reality. — Garrett Travers
Again, I'm only using the current definition:
existence - the fact or state of living or having objective reality. — Garrett Travers
F=ma is a concept that humans generated to understand how to properly categorize it as a pattern. — Garrett Travers
existence - the fact or state of living or having objective reality. — Garrett Travers
Physicalism...is the claim that the entire world may be described and explained using the laws of nature, in other words, that all phenomena are natural phenomena. This leaves open the question of what is 'natural' (in physicalism 'natural' means procedural, causally coherent or all effects have particular causes regardless of human knowledge [like physics] and interpretation and it also means 'ontological reality' and not just a hypothesis or a calculational technique), but one common understanding of the claim is that everything in the world is ultimately explicable in the terms of physics. This is known as reductive physicalism. However, this type of physicalism in its turn leaves open the question of what we are to consider as the proper terms of physics. There seem to be two options here, and these options form the horns of Hempel's dilemma, because neither seems satisfactory.
On the one hand, we may define the physical as whatever is currently explained by our best physical theories, e.g., quantum mechanics, general relativity. Though many would find this definition unsatisfactory, some would accept that we have at least a general understanding of the physical based on these theories, and can use them to assess what is physical and what is not. And therein lies the rub, as a worked-out explanation of mentality currently lies outside the scope of such theories.
On the other hand, if we say that some future, "ideal" physics is what is meant, then the claim is empty, for we have no idea of what this means. The "ideal" physics may even come to define what we think of as mental as part of the physical world. In effect, physicalism by this second account becomes the circular claim that all phenomena are explicable in terms of physics because physics properly defined is whatever explains all phenomena. — Wiki
Whenever you realize that such givings are a miscalculation between your nature and the universe, you will understand completely. Besides, the only way for us to master reality and learn its secrets, is to first obey its inviolable laws. Functions and meaning in the human sense will be revealed in time, as so much already has. A lack of explanation means only an absence of knowledge, that does not mean something extraordinary. Especially when one considers that the entire body of data of all fields of science indicate a material universe, an objective reality. To prove me wrong, all you have to do is present a single shred of evidence to the contrary — Garrett Travers
just like you tried to with reductionism. — Garrett Travers
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