I would be more sympathetic to atheism if science could explain consciousness. As it is, I think it's more likely we're aspects of a universal one-mind. — RogueAI
I would be more sympathetic to atheism if science could explain consciousness. As it is, I think it's more likely we're aspects of a universal one-mind. — RogueAI
The human mind "wants" explanations for the unknown, and meaning for events — Agree-to-Disagree
and god provides these. — Agree-to-Disagree
There was never any outright rejection, I just stopped. — T Clark
What basis do you have to think that it is possible for a mind to exist, sans an information processing substrate for the mind to supervene upon? — wonderer1
How about answering my question? Do you have something more than incredulity for an argument? — wonderer1
But god doesn't explain anything — Tom Storm
:up:I think this is partly the idea behind apophatic theology at least. — Count Timothy von Icarus
What basis do you have to think that it is possible for a mind to exist, sans an information processing substrate for the mind to supervene upon?"
If substance emerges from process, what would claims like Katsrupt's that the world is made up of "mental substance," even mean vis-á-vis competing claims that is is "physical substance." — Count Timothy von Icarus
Universal consciousness conceptually doesn't have those trappings. If you reject religion for similar reasons, a lot of atheists are going to consider you a like mind — flannel jesus
non sequiturs [...] follow [...] therefore — Bob Ross
By “elaborate”, it seems (from your OP) that you are referring to laymen’s beliefs about God. — Bob Ross
(typically involving lengthy stories, religious texts, divine intervention/participation, personal/divine revelations, personal deities, rituals, commands/rules, fate designations) — jorndoe
By “idealized”, it seems to me that you are referring to formal theological arguments for God, is that correct? — Bob Ross
predicated off of idealism. — Bob Ross
they are personifying God, which obviously makes no sense. — Bob Ross
I'm guessing atheism primarily is concerned with the former (elaborate), and agnosticism more found in the context of the latter (idealized) — both of which could be held by one person, and thus need clarification. — jorndoe
Sort of. Bad arguments for God, or simply ill-thought out metaphysical explanations of the world [...] — Bob Ross
It seems it'd be possible to deny this is the right question though, or even a meaningful one. If information is primarily process (good arguments for this exist) and if the pancomputationalist physicists are correct and information is our core ontological primitive, then superveniance itself is a mistaken concept. — Count Timothy von Icarus
And I'm inclined towards this view because:
-Consciousness and other natural phenomena appear to require strong emergence.
- Jaegeon Kim's argument that strong emergence cannot exist given a substance metaphysics is convincing. — Count Timothy von Icarus
So here is the position that has emerged. It begins by embracing ontological physicalism. Taking mental causation seriously, it also embraces conditional reductionism, the thesis that only physically reducible mental properties can be causally efficacious. Are mental properties physically reducible? Yes and no: intentional/cognitive properties are reducible, but qualitative properties of consciousness, or “qualia,” are not. In saving the causal efficacy of the former, we are saving cognition and agency. Moreover, we are not losing sensory experiences altogether: qualia similarities and differences can be saved. What we cannot save are their intrinsic qualities—the fact that yellow looks like this, that ammonia smells like that, and so on. But, I say, this isn’t losing much, and when we think about it, we should have expected it all along.
The position is, as we might say, a slightly defective physicalism—physicalism manqué but not by much. I believe that this is as much physicalism as we can have, and that there is no credible alternative to physicalism as a general worldview. Physicalism is not the whole truth, but it is the truth near enough, and near enough should be good enough.
Thus, if it seems like we need strong emergence. Since substance superveniance rules this out, then it seems like superveniance isn't the right concept. Plus it has other unresolved problems. — Count Timothy von Icarus
But god doesn't explain anything. When we say god created the world, it's equivalent to saying, 'the magic man did it.' God as a (pseudo) explanation does not tell us how or why, it answers nothing. — Tom Storm
A survey of scientists who are members of the American Association for the Advancement of Science, conducted by the Pew Research Center for the People & the Press in May and June 2009, [...] According to the poll, just over half of scientists (51%) believe in some form of deity or higher power; specifically, 33% of scientists say they believe in God, while 18% believe in a universal spirit or higher power. [...] Finally, the poll of scientists finds that four-in-ten scientists (41%) say they do not believe in God or a higher power [...] — Pew Research
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