There is a reasoning process from start to fininsh. Sorry for they typos above. — Garrett Travers
No, it is not rational if by rational you mean that there was some precise pre-existing order and the shifts in science you mention are transition that are completely regulated by that pre-existing of order. What kind of advance i. knowledge would — Joshs
So imagination, once stirred, often leads to initiative, and initiative to action, and action produces something unexpected for men to contemplate and experience, and, finally, the newest experience throws the recollections of prior experiences into fresh perspective, thus reducing them to the level of mere chronicler's facts, facts whose historical meaning takes its shape from present rather than past interpretations.” — Joshs
The proposition has remained entirely unaddress by anything other than simple opinion that isn't consistent with any modern scientific understanding of nature. — Garrett Travers
Ok so a reasoning process is fine. I reason that Berlin is my favorite city in the world because I met my wife there and we had some great days and nights travelling around. How valuable is this type of reasoning philosophically? — Tom Storm
I have gone back through all of your posts in this thread and I didn't find any reference to specific sources or references which would provide evidence about a "modern scientific understanding of nature" and how it relates to your position. You are just performing "seems to me" philosophy. I acknowledge I am doing the same, but I haven't made the type of definitive claims you have. — T Clark
It is specifically your reason that uses everything else, not the other way around: — Garrett Travers
In your experience (accrual of data), values are not conceptual understandings (a conceptual understanding derived from data). You just contradicted yourself. — Garrett Travers
Can you provide a quote from the linked source that supports the view that "reason [not the brain or its constituents] uses everything else." — ZzzoneiroCosm
Reason is the method by which the brain uses all of those functions to create abstractions from data that inform behaviors, and derive values with the collection of more data. — Garrett Travers
Now you're just being silly. — T Clark
t's valuable because you get to understand that you are in fact an independent, co-equal producer of the source of value in the world. And that only a system that respects such, can be considered a valuable one, as those that don't destroy the source of value to sustain themselves. — Garrett Travers
Again, a source to support this claim? — ZzzoneiroCosm
Reason is : think, understand, and form judgments by a process of logic.
Do you really mean to imply that Kuhn conveyed to you that revolutions in paradigms happen not as a result of this definition, and all of the behaviors in the sciences that fall into this category? — Garrett Travers
Other than that, can you try to clarify what point you're making with these passages — Garrett Travers
Are you deliberately choosing not to read? Here, let me help. And remember, I said the conditions were that we do this right, no bullshit. So, let's not beat around the bush.
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4927039/
https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fncom.2017.00007/full
https://www.sciencedirect.com/topics/medicine-and-dentistry/prefrontal-cortex#:~:text=The%20prefrontal%20cortex%20(PFC)%20plays,prospective%20memory%2C%20and%20cognitive%20flexibility.
Start with these, it's a process of understanding what is happening with the brain. Much more where these come from. — Garrett Travers
I guess the point I’m making is that we have to make a distinction between formal logic and forms of pragmatic logic. Only pragmatic logic gives us the creative innovations of the sciences as well as
the arts. — Joshs
compatibilities among unique events, this is different from formal logic , which can only operate on structures that are in some respect absolutely identically repeatable.
Pragmatic logic recognizes that the world doesn’t sit still for us , not even for a moment. We can pretend that the world consists of such identically repeatable structures , but this is only an idealization, a convenience to simply things.
Kuhn’s notion of paradigm change does not rely on formal logic but something closer to the way change
takes place in the arts. — Joshs
Are you deliberately choosing not to read? Here, let me help. And remember, I said the conditions were that we do this right, no bullshit. So, let's not beat around the bush. — Garrett Travers
I took a quick look. I didn't see anything applicable to the questions we are discussing. — T Clark
I'm asking you to provide a quote, not a collection of sources.
You've made a claim. Now support it with a quote from your sources.
Providing pages and pages of reading material - that isn't an argument. — ZzzoneiroCosm
I thought you used the work capitalism in one of your propositions but now I can't seem to find it. Can you get me to it if you did? Thanks. — ZzzoneiroCosm
ZzzoneiroCosm — Garrett Travers
That's not how this stuff works. — Garrett Travers
So, the pfc's function, how the brain differentiates between data signals, and the recuurent neural networks that integrate data have no relevance... Gotcha. — Garrett Travers
Okay. You want to prioritize the brain (you say reason, but then you talk about the brain, so I'm more comfortable saying the brain) over the emotions. How do you want to say that? The brain rules the emotions? The brain controls the emotions? The brain creates the emotions?
Some kind of clear formulation of reason's dominion backed up by quotes from your sources.... — ZzzoneiroCosm
The subject on the table is whether the source of human values is based on reason. You say yes. I say no. The articles you linked to have nothing to say about that. — T Clark
lol. Be sure to observe the quotes I left from those journals just below your comment. In short, my position is reinforced by data, yours by opinion. — Garrett Travers
From what I can gather, the brain controls everything. — Garrett Travers
From what I can gather, the brain controls everything. — Garrett Travers
So the brain controls reasoning and also anything irrational or emotional in the human system(s)? It controls, in a word, everything in the human system(s)? — ZzzoneiroCosm
Do you concede that the brain is in some sense itself controlled by the variety of incoming stimuli? — ZzzoneiroCosm
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