based on the idea that the human perception of moral values cannot be accounted for fundamentally in terms of those cerebral processes, such as intellectual reasoning, of which the brain is known to be capable, — Robert Lockhart
Well, yes what I've described is very sketchy. The theory involves the idea of ancient pedigree that, concomitant with the material brain, there exists also a distinct and irreducable non-material mind, this being proposed as the fundamental agent of our moral awareness capable of enabling a type of insight not explicable in terms of the neural processes by which intellectual reasoning occurs and hence forcing a recourse to the idea of extra neural processes in order to account for such putative insight. — Robert Lockhart
The theory involves the idea of ancient pedigree that, concomitant with the material brain, there exists also a distinct and irreducable non-material mind, this being proposed as the fundamental agent of our moral awareness capable of enabling a type of insight not explicable in terms of the neural processes... — Robert Lockhart
How is that different from what dualists have been saying for thousands of years? From your original post I had assumed that we are talking about physical evidence. — T Clark
There's nothing blatantly self-serving or logical about such behavior. — ucarr
I’ve heard of a recently proposed theory relating to the subject of moral knowledge, admittedly in its current form very speculative, which, based on the idea that the human perception of moral values cannot be accounted for fundamentally in terms of those cerebral processes, such as intellectual reasoning, of which the brain is known to be capable, concludes that such perception if it be possible may therefore act to provide objective evidence indicative that there exists an element involved in certain types of human understanding which is extra – neural in nature, with all that this would then imply.
Among many speculative ideas, the theory involves the contentious claim that moral values are objective in nature, and not idiosyncratic to individuals, but the reasoning and the implications involved are nonetheless quite fascinating. — Robert Lockhart
Modern neuroscience puts the idea that they cannot be accounted for to sleep, definitively. — Garrett Travers
Do you think that it is a central capability of science that when empirical method proves a set of facts to be the case, this means that this locks in a piece of truth definitely? — Joshs
If so, what do you think makes possible such nailing down of definitive truth? Is it nature of the world itself that makes this possible , or is it the product of a presupposition that organizes our scientific theorizing about the natural world? — Joshs
If the latter, then perhaps we could call this presupposition the ‘morality’ of scientific truth, and recognize it to be transcendent to the neural processes we discover. — Joshs
The idea that science doesn't, or cannot address moral and conceptual framework neurologically, is itself a claim. One that is not true. — Garrett Travers
Science has nothing at all to say about what we ought do. — creativesoul
Modern neuroscience puts the idea that they cannot be accounted for to sleep, definitively. — Garrett Travers
By leveraging well developed computational models to interrogate neural mechanisms and representations, this work has significantly advanced our understanding of concept learning by characterizing the nature of the component mechanisms and their underlying neural machinery. The result is a converging neurocomputational account of concept learning that integrates brain systems involved in attention, memory, reasoning, cognitive control, and reward processing. — Garrett Travers
Is the above quote the section of your evidence that specifically accounts for moral values (through the lens of materialism-physicalism) neuroscientifically?
Is the upshot that moral values are one example of concept learning that is processed by the neural machinery of the brain?
Are the component mechanisms of concept learning physical or conceptual? I ask this question because "component mechanisms and their underlying neural machinery" suggests a bifurcation, with "component mechanisms" being conceptual and "underlying neural machinery" being physical. — ucarr
Hubble's Constant put to rest the idea of the heliocentric model of the universe, did it not? There are certain claims science puts to rest. — Garrett Travers
How we discover that universal manner is up to us, our paradigms, and our paradigm shifts. — Garrett Travers
One could say that in the arts the advent of a new style puts to rest a previous modality of expression. Even when there are revivals of older styles these always reflect the influence of the new approach, so never actually return to the original mode of expression. But this meaning of ‘putting to rest” is clearly different from what one means when one talks about the falsification of a scientific theory. I mention this because of your reference to paradigm shifts. — Joshs
I just wanted to point out that Thomas Kuhn uses the phrase not to convey the falsification of a theory by a new theory but to show the similarity between change in the arts and the sciences.
He doesnt believe science is a cumulative accretion of truths. — Joshs
The creative idiom of a Rembrandt, Bach, or Shakespeare resolves all its aesthetic problems and prohibits the consideration of others. Fundamentally new modes of aesthetic expression emerge only in intimate conjunction with a new perception of the aesthetic problem that the new modes must aim to resolve. Except in the realm of technique, the transition between one stage of artistic development and the next is a transition between incommensurables. In science, on the other hand, problems seem to be set by nature and in advance, without reference to the idiom or taste of the scientific community. Apparently, therefore, successive stages of scientific development can be evaluated as successively better approximations to a full solution. That is why the present state of science always seems to embrace its past stages as parts, which is what the concept of cumulativeness means. Guided by that concept, we see in the development of science no equivalents for the total shift of artistic vision – the shift from one integrated set of problems, images, techniques, and tastes to another.” — Joshs
Couldn't agree. My position is that old hypotheses that contradict science do get dispproved. And neuroscience has gathered no evidence whatsoever that previous philosophical explorations of consciousness are supported. Check out Global Workspace Theory, that's a good place to start checking this out. — Garrett Travers
That’s what I thought. You’re a Popperian, not a Kuhnian.
Kuhn’s response to the argument that a particular approach in science has gathered no evidence to support the predictions of a previous theoretical paradigm is that it is a circular argument. When there is a paradigm shift , what constitutes evidence undergoes a transformation along with the paradigm itself. Thus it is not the same evidence that rival paradigms are talking about. — Joshs
Does the Kuhn content you've quoted contain a component of relativity?
Is Kuhn's statement implying that just as the rate at which time elapses is specific to a local inertial frame of reference, so is an artistic or scientific paradigm (frame of reference) comprised of local beliefs and local evidence that warrant consideration on ther own terms, thus crediting such paradigms as being modular? — ucarr
They are modular , but in a different sense than relative space-time location. The latter is a relativity defined as objective relations structured mathematically. Kuhn’s paradigmatic relativity isnt based on objective structures but subjective values systems. — Joshs
So, our sense of good & evil, no less than our sense of true & false, gets instantiated by neural processing?
Does the literature of neural concept processing say anything about neural networks doing something akin to statistical analysis of individual instances of "right" and "wrong," leading to a model? — ucarr
Our sense of good and evil, is the source of both. — Garrett Travers
I'm thinking subjective values systems, almost by definition, are rooted in relativity, as subjectivity is always local to the individual. Paradigmatic subjectivity therefore implies zeitgeist, ethos. How does Kuhn separate his ideas from such? — ucarr
I think the question was, what is the source of the sense of good and evil. — Metaphysician Undercover
good is attributed to acts, and equilibrium is attributed to a lack of activity. — Metaphysician Undercover
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