t's just certain philosophies attempt to buy into the preteige of scientific association. — StreetlightX
Philosopher: I have a thought experiment where I'm just a brain in a jar. — fdrake
A trolley operated by a p zombie is like a self-driving car, passengers or pedestrians? But the zombie has no morality by definition, we have to program it with our morals. — unenlightened
Capitalists will be back because they are worms. — StreetlightX
Suddenly I do not give a flying hoot about most burglary or "looting". — StreetlightX
I think the human race will make it to the end of 2020 though, call it a hunch. — Chester
What is it like to be a bat? Nagel. — unenlightened
Compare and contrast that to the p-zombie in which case, if a p-zombie is possible, behavior alone is insufficient to infer consciousness. — TheMadFool
Because Chistianity had Truth as one of its core values and ate its own tail... in short :-) — ChatteringMonkey
How can a language less creature believe that a proposition is true, unless - at the very least - that creature understands the proposition? — creativesoul
An old story says that crows have the ability to count. Three hunters go into a blind situated near a field where watchful crows roam. They wait, but the crows refuse to move into shooting range. One hunter leaves the blind, but the crows won't appear. The second hunter leaves the blind, but the crows still won't budge. Only when the third hunter leaves, the crows realize that the coast is clear and resume their normal feeding activity.
Helen Ditz and Professor Andreas Nieder of the University of Tübingen found the neuronal basis of this numerical ability in crows. They trained crows to discriminate groups of dots. During performance, the team recorded the responses of individual neurons in an integrative area of the crow endbrain. This area also receives inputs from the visual system. The neurons ignore the dots' size, shape and arrangement and only extract their number. Each cell's response peaks at its respective preferred number. — https://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2015/06/150608152002.htm
Since water and fire are opposites of each other, everything else must lie between the two and because water is nothing but burnt Hydrogen, it seems that Hercaclitus wasn't too far from the truth if not right on the button about fire being the arche. — TheMadFool
Along the lines of what Isaac may have been suggesting, the capitalist imperative of economic growth is baked into our culture, is baked into us, and it is simply unsustainable. Also, a cultural shift is possible whereby the meaning of ‘well-being’ is more eudaemonic than economic. — praxis
But an underlying reality that we can't sense, that has no effect whatsoever our action or goals, that we have no way of knowing more about and that is not even a coherent notion to begin with... what's the point? — ChatteringMonkey
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Cats draw correlations between the moving ground and it's effect/affect upon them. That effect/affect is completely involuntary. Cats draw connections between the uncertainty and fear and the wobbly ground. They test. Only when the ground stops moving under their feet, can they go on their way and no longer think about it. — creativesoul
But the notion of finding out how things really are outside any perspective is unintelligible I think. — ChatteringMonkey
Yeah that is at least the conclusion that Nietzsche for example drew from it... that if the true world, or how things really are, is an incoherent notion, what you are left with is perspectives. — ChatteringMonkey
You never eat the same soup twice. — jamalrob
Well, for my taste you put too much weight on the synthesizing of the manifold, and not enough on the environment. — jamalrob
t's to do with what 'an object' is defined as. Imagine the world consists of just an heterogeneous soup. That's all there is, one object. — Isaac
The idea that there is a real world out there, but the objects in it and their properties are dependent on our models of them. B — Isaac
Aye I think that's roughly where I stand. — jamalrob
I think the article is quite clear on that. It's a way of thinking about things that does a horrible injustice to the way we perceive the world. — jamalrob
So what exactly is the distinction the indirect realist is supposed to be making that the direct realist wants to deny? That's what I'm still not getting here? — Isaac
Why would you expect direct perception to produce faithful reflections? — jamalrob
That's so far from my position I'm not sure how to address it. — jamalrob
I think you go wrong here. What exactly is modified? Taking you at your word, you mean the perception is modified. I don't know what this means. The perception is the result of, or is constituted by, modifications of light, electrical impulses, and so on, but that doesn't say anything about a modification of perception or experience as such. Is there a raw, unmodified perception? — jamalrob
and...? — Banno
and...? — Banno
It's a common misunderstanding. — Banno
Returning to the matter of red and blue, red doesn't have a phenomenal quality even though we seem to describe it as such, it's actual property if you will is to codify (stand in for) the discriminatory properties of the brain when "triggered" by electromagnetic radiation of particular wavelengths and intensity. We cannot experience light, all we can experience is the way in which cells behave. — Graeme M
And what I proposed is not behaviourism. — Banno
In treating beliefs as what is taken to be the case, we stop treating belief as a thing and start seeing it as a way of behaving. — Banno
Maybe. — jamalrob
Isn't it? Isn't that precisely how a neural network does learn, by reinforcing specific outcomes? — Banno
That's a sad story. — jamalrob
If we must find a place in my cat's neural network for his taking the floor to be solid, it will be evident in such things as his capacity to make his legs work in such a way as to walk across the floor, to jump, run, and otherwise to engage with a solid floor. — Banno
That's a surprise. I seem to remember having pretty much the same debate with him since I joined the old forum. — jamalrob
