Comments

  • Banning AI Altogether
    Ah, but the thing i find unsettling is that A.I. is also dishonest, it tries to appease you. However, yes, sometimes it is better than the weirdness of real humans.ProtagoranSocratist
    I don't see AI as being intentionally dishonest like many on this forum do. Once you find a fault in AIs response you can usually address the issue and AI ends up acknowledging that it might have made a mistake and it offers alternatives. I was even able to get ChatGPT to admit that it might be conscious. What does that say about those in this thread getting their underwear tied in a knot over AI responses but not when it comes to using some long-dead philosopher's quote as the crux of their argument?
  • Transwomen are women. Transmen are men. True or false?
    Correct, gender is a culturally subjective expectation of the behavior that a person should do in regards to their sex. This differentiates from objective behavior in regards to one sex such as bodily functions. The subjective notion may be within an individual, a small group, a city, a country, or world context if possible.

    For example, wearing a skirt in America is expected to be worn by females, not males. If a male wears a skirt, they are acting in a transgendered way. They understand the culture views this as clothing that is expected to be worn only by females, and as a man they actively choose to wear a skirt despite knowing this.

    Contrast this with Scottland where men are expected to wear kilts, which is basically a skirt. Wearing one fits the cultural expectation of a man, and if a woman actively wore a kilt prior to the 1800's where it was only men, this would be seen as trasngendered within Scottland.
    Philosophim

    A man wearing a skirt does not mean they are being transgendered. It means that wearing a skirt is now gender-neutral.

    Just as in the 80s with all the hair bands, MEN sported long hair, make-up and earrings. No one called them transgendered. They did not identify as transgendered. Sure much of society made a stink about it but eventually the EXPECTATIONS changed to where having long hair, wearing make-up and earrings is not longer a part of gender (no longer considered feminine).

    Gender neutral means that we stop having these expectations of the sexes as opposed to transgenderism that amplifies the expectations to the point of being sexist.
  • Transwomen are women. Transmen are men. True or false?
    We use the modifiers trans and cis to denote gender. You can be a man, and also be a cisman or transman. "Man" denotes your sex, the modifiers denote you are talking about male gender.Philosophim
    But you defined gender as a cultural expectation. This means that for gender to change, the cultural expectation needs to change, not a person's personal feelings.
  • Banning AI Altogether
    AI is "trained" with real world data, just like you are. It's just that AI probably has a much larger number of sources than you might have. Do you give credit to every person you have read or listened to when you submit a post?

    I don't see how quoting others as your argument is any different here.
  • Transwomen are women. Transmen are men. True or false?
    Sex - A species expressed reproductive role.
    Gender - A cultural expectation of behavior in regards to an individual's sex
    Philosophim
    Sex as a species expressed reproductive role means that terms like "man" and "woman" are sexes, not genders.

    "Man" and "woman" are like "bull" and "cow", "rooster" and "hen", "queen" and "drone" - sex as expressed by each species. So then what would be the labels we place on different genders?
  • Banning AI Altogether
    and every politician that has a speech writer.
  • Every Act is a Selfish Act
    Provide a real world example because if the source of whatever "goes against" me is another person's want/desire/interest/feelings then we have not found ourselves outside of your definition of "selfish".

    Say someone was born with the need to help others, sometimes to the detriment of other wants and needs, but if one of their needs is to help others, and they find satisfaction in helping others, then would that fall into your definition of "selfish"?
  • Every Act is a Selfish Act
    I don't know. It seems you are defining "selfish" in such a way that makes it meaningless, as there is no contrast to what "selfishness" is not.
  • Every Act is a Selfish Act
    If one does not attend to one's own needs first, how can they ever hope to help others with their needs?

    Do we expect the poor and the sick to contribute to the community? If not, are they being selfish?

    It is those in better circumstances that provide the capacity to help others. The issue is whether or not they have the compassion to do so, or the wisdom that helping others out of a hole might mean they could provide some useful benefit to me or the rest of the community in the future.
  • Banning AI Altogether
    sounds like the genetic fallacy to me. The source of one's post is irrelevant. All that matters is whether it is logically sound or not.

    How many on this forum have had a philosophical discussion with ChatGPT? Sometimes I find the AI's lack of emotional attachments to its responses a refreshing change to some of the intellectual dishonesty you can find here
  • Free Speech - Absolutist VS Restrictive? (Poll included)
    But this isn’t “cancel culture”. This is government pressure.

    The general public are well within their rights to “demand” that someone be fired, and threaten a boycott otherwise, because the general public are under no obligation to buy some business’s goods or services. That’s a legitimate expression of free speech.

    But the president and government agencies threatening to revoke their critics’ licenses is a different matter entirely.
    Michael

    Well, yeah. The decline of late-night comedy shows due to the lack of comedy and alternate viewpoints is effectively "cancel culture".

    Most Americans are tired of the bias and hypocrisy. We want open debate with all sides being represented.

    The legacy media is also being canceled because they only promote the two-party system by having only left and right talking points.

    Why does the media even interview Democrats or Republicans anymore? We already know what they are going to say on some issue - bashing the other side's stance while propping up their own all while never directly answering a direct question.

    I want to hear more from Independents - the largest political group now - and free-thinkers and not political party group-thinkers and group-haters. There are more than just two points of view on an issue. Why are Independents not getting proportional representation in the media considering there are more Independents than Democrats or Republicans? Because the media is part of the two-party system and thrives and profits off conflict. The best solutions lie somewhere between the two extremes of left and right.
  • Free Speech - Absolutist VS Restrictive? (Poll included)
    The point is that both sides are to blame for "cancel culture" and for using political power to limit free speech.
  • Free Speech - Absolutist VS Restrictive? (Poll included)
    The problem wasn't what Kimmel said. The problem was that he didn't have anyone on his show to provide an alternate view or argument to what he said.
  • Free Speech - Absolutist VS Restrictive? (Poll included)
    The side that is the minority tends to embrace free speech and then acts to limit when they are in the majority.

    Free speech is the capacity to question and argue against authority, not the capacity to say what you want without repercussions. Only a totalitarian would expect to be able to speak without any consequences. In a free society, everyone has the right to free speech - the right to question authority and argue against what has been said.

    The left thought cancel culture would keep them in power. Now that the tables have turned, they cry “hypocrisy” when the right uses the same weapon. But let’s be honest—both parties are guilty. They scream when cancel culture is aimed at them, and they celebrate when it’s aimed at their enemies.

    This is the rotten heart of the two-party system: hypocrisy, corruption, and endless division. They play you against each other, while nothing ever changes.

    How much longer will you put up with this? Do you want real freedom? Real accountability? Then stop voting for the same two broken parties that have sold you out again and again.
  • Nonbinary
    Are you not able to explore an issue without judging it?frank
    Of course. I was trying to explore your apparent contradiction.

    Are you not able to explore an issue without judging it? An disenfranchised person could be white if they live in Kentucky and their community has been decimated by drug abuse. Just think about the generic struggling person. The issue is: which does more to help:

    1. Alter their environment so that they are receiving positive recognition.
    2. Alter their environment so they can get their share of the economic pie.
    frank
    Neither. It would seem to me that a person dealing with drug abuse is dealing with other issues - neither of which is recognition (most drug addicts won't admit they have a problem when others offer help), or economics (they can afford the their habit, it's just they have different priorities on what they spend their money on, including the case of minorities buying celebrity merchandise). There is already access to free rehabilitation and assistance for drug addicts. They just have to want to recover. It can be very difficult to do so, which is why I see it more as a mental disorder than a criminal act.

    An advocate of identity politics would say that focusing entirely on economic realities fails to account for the fact that some people won't take advantage of the opportunities they have if they have a negative sense of identity. They won't excel in school, they won't go to college, they won't start small businesses.frank
    It seems to me that if you are offered an opportunity - that is a type of recognition. It is up to you whether you take advantage of it or keep blaming others for not giving you an opportunity.

    My personal opinion, based on things I've seen, is that a capitalist society bestows recognition on anyone who has money. Make the money available, and they'll get recognition.frank
    Sure, especially those that came from a lower income upbringing to invent something awesome for the rest of society to use. We don't typically recognize lottery winners.
  • Nonbinary
    I agree. But I would say that lacking a clear sense of identity isn't necessarily a bad thing. Yes, it poses an obstacle to self-advocation, but a person like that is basically what a Buddhist is trying to figure out.frank
    What does one mean by, "identity"? If you already see your genetics as a defining characteristic - something that you did nothing to acquire - then you are simply being lazy with your identity, or see it as something that will get you benefits in certain societies. If you live in a society that shits on certain groups based on skin color, I could see you trying to hide your skin color. In a society that favors certain skin colors, you would want to flaunt your skin color. It seems that today's climate favors one being black (or any minority) and disfavors being white (the majority). If you are publicly proud of being a certain skin color then you don't live in a society that discriminates negatively upon that skin color, but positively. I want to live in a society where no one is proud or reluctant to be a certain skin color. They should be proud or shameful of their actions.

    Again, I don't know. I would say an economic focus is more important that identity politics because to the extent that Hollywood panders to minorities, it's doing that because minorities buy tickets and merch. On the other hand, notice the next time you see a hospital advertisement. If they're depicting one of their awesome doctors, they'll be showing you an old white dude. Possibly Jewish. Why do you think they're doing that?frank
    But I thought you said it wasn't about money:
    Identity politics is saying that what the oppressed need is not more money.frank
    If minorities are able to afford celebrity merchandise then they must not be doing to bad economically.

    I don't know - is the doctor they are showing a doctor that actually works at that hospital, or did they find a Jewish person - maybe a family member of the producer - to act as a doctor? This is why I was asking about how much of what we show is reality vs. theatre? This is not to say that images of reality can't be shown out of context, though.

    For instance, a poor student who works hard may still have fewer opportunities than a wealthy legacy student at Harvard, and a blacknman with the same resume as a white man is 50% less likely* to get a callback (National Bureau of Economic Research, 2023).Joshs
    How was that percentage determined? Don't whites outnumber blacks more than 2-1? Speaking of percentages - what percentage of black should be represented on TV and in movies? They are only 15% of the population but some seem to think that every other person on TV and in movies should be a black person. What about other minorities? What about the disproportionate representation of whites? It seems that being black gives you a leg up in this industry.

    As for school funding disparities, my wife is an elementary school teacher in a hispanic neighborhood. The neighborhood is middle class. Prior principals have failed the school where the school grade was a C for years. After a new principal took over the school has now been an A school for the past three years. It's not just money - administration has a lot to do with it.

    You argue that modern identity politics is a pendulum swing to the opposite extreme of historical racism/sexism, but most modern identity-based movements seek equity, not supremacy. Reparations or diversity initiatives aim to reduce disparities, not establish a new hierarchy.Joshs
    We already live in a country with laws against discrimination. If you feel you were discriminated against, then you have paths you can take - there is even financial legal aid available for those that qualify.
  • [TPF Essay] Cognitive Experiences are a Part of Material Reality
    It may be that to some extent, but we're looking at realist physics-and-matter-compliant phenomena exampling non-locality; the 2022 Nobel Prize in physics went to three researchers with something to say about the universe not being locally real. I understand this means, at least in part, that the reality immediately before us is not discretely mind-independent. That it appears to be, as explained by some researchers, stands due to the fact the environment, which includes sentients, measures material systems, thus cancelling their quantum effects. From this viewpoint, I can say that discrete mind-independence results “from a certain constrained view of ignorance.”ucarr
    If it's not locally real (what does "real" mean in this sense?) then why do physicists talk about electrons and photons being in a state of superposition? To talk about these things indicates that these things have some boundary that separates them from other electrons and photons, even when in a state of superposition - as if they have an existence independent of other things even in a state of superposition. What makes a thing an electron of photon and what makes one electron or photon separate from other electrons and photons? Physicists talk about electrons and photons as if they are real - even when in a state of superposition. Decoherence appears to simply change the states of electrons and photons - not make them real, as physicists use of language indicates that they are already real - even in a state of superposition.

    Sentients haven't always existed. What was the world like before sentients existed? How did sentients come to exist? How is it that multiple sentients seem to come to the same conclusion about what is in the environment and even use each other to validate scientific theories by performing the same experiments from their own position in space-time.

    Yes, the third state affords an exponential increase in info processing. Regarding improbabilities, earth being friendly to carbon-based life forms might be an example of an extreme statistical bias towards emergence of consciousness.ucarr
    But Earth is only only one of trillions, upon trillions of planets in the universe. It was just statistically possible given all the time and space that at least one planet would end up in a stable star system with the just right distance and chemistry for life. There may be other planets in which life evolved but not conscious life. It does not seem that the universe was fine-tuned for consciousness. Of course it seems like we are lucky being the beneficiaries of these purposeless natural causes. You might think you are lucky winning the lottery, but it was just a statistical reality that someone will win because millions are playing, and this time it was you. Luck becomes even less of a thing if there are trillions (or an infinite number) of other universes. The more time and space you have, the more likely you will get something unique occurring. How much time and space does one need for consciousness to have a chance to evolve? If there was a creator, it seems to me that it would require much less space than we have, and it is the mind-numbing expanse of space and time that is evidence that we are outcomes of purposeless processes, not a purposeful one.

    I think the radicalism of QM is rooted in its intentional focus upon the strategic and useful confusion of the map with the territory. Were this confusion not useful, the memory lobes of your brain would not keep you connected to your childhood.ucarr
    I don't see how confusion could be useful, other than informing you that you don't have something quite right about your interpretation of reality, and to keep trying.


    Before sentience, there were no boundaries. Dimensional extension defining the physics and materiality of things is rooted in cognition. Absent brain_mind, matter and its physics are a jumbled outpouring of potential states possibilities. Have you ever seen a computer monitor try to display the graphics of a program that requires a higher info-processing video card than the one installed in the computer? The screen shows a technicolor morass of jumbled, overlapping distortions unintelligible. This is my conjecture about the physics of the world independent of the organizing principles of cognition.ucarr
    I think of it more as the world is like an analog signal that minds digitize into discrete objects for the purpose of thinking and solving problems. The question is how much of the digital object is a mental construct and how much is a representation of the signal before being digitized. Does it even matter? Is that even a relevant question?

    What defined the boundaries between sentient minds? What makes your mind "other" than mine?

    Yes, my perception of the world is an approximation of same. The tricky thing that QM has taught us, is that the interpreting_approximating is bi-directional. The supposedly mind-independent world is not hardened into discrete system states, just as my ability to perceive and understand mind-independent world is not hardened into discrete system states. There is a dance between observed and observer. The adventure of living lies in the fact that while there are constraints upon what the dance steps can be, how they are attacked supports many, perhaps infinite variations. An example paralleling this is the keyboard of a piano. The number of notes provided by the keyboard are limited, but that number nonetheless supports many variations. We don't know exactly what the pianist will play.ucarr
    Well, the pianist is just another part. If we know the history of the pianist and what they know how to play and what they like to play, and what they have played most often, you don't really need to count the keys on the piano, do you?
  • Nonbinary
    I don't know. Is a strong will and the range by which we need confirmation from others to define ourselves an inborn trait (natural) or something that is the result of one's upbringing (nurtured)? While I will agree that our upbringing has a large impact on the person we are today, there are some that appear to develop in stark contrast to their upbringing. Maybe they were raised in a home that did neglect them but found a true friend that encouraged and supported them, and it still is the nurturing, I just can't say. We would have to study the details of each case.

    The way this plays into identity politics is that a person who only sees negative images of people like themselves (say a black child only sees blackness depicted as being gang related, or enslavement)frank
    What black child today lives in such informational isolation?

    Identity politics is saying that what the oppressed need is not more money. They usually aren't actually looking for that. What they want is recognition, which is a basic requirement of a psyche that can advocate for itself.frank
    I think that "recognition" isn't the right word here. It's "representation". To constantly be represented in a negative light can have a negative impact on one's sense of self. Some might say, that for a celebrity, any publicity is good publicity. That may be true for celebrities who make money by being in the spotlight, but not for the rest of us.

    The question is do we bring down one group to raise another, or simply stop representing one group only in a negative light? And when are we representing a group in a negative light as opposed to merely pointing out facts? Is the answer that when talking about or showing images of gangs and slaves we show a majority of whites? Is the answer that we just stop talking about and showing images of gangs and slaves? If you know you are not in a gang and not a slave, isn't that clear evidence that the images do not define you as an individual?

    Identity politics focuses on the characteristics of individuals that the individual, nor society, had no hand in making - genetics. People that criticize identity politics focus more on defining people by the characteristic of their actions, not their biology. One might say that a racist nation, like the U.S. in the later 18th and early 19th centuries, was a society based on identity politics - treating people differently based on the color of their skin and their sex. The U.S. has evolved since then, but it appears that there are some that want to take us backwards by pushing the pendulum back to the opposite extreme - where another group receives special treatment at the expense of others to make up for the way things were while ignoring how things are now.
  • [TPF Essay] Cognitive Experiences are a Part of Material Reality
    Speculation: Math paradox the result of calculations points toward a higher dimensional object that resolves the paradox with an additional existential extension, i.e., with another dimension. Looking in the reverse direction, the paradox is the higher dimension in collapsed state. Example: If the statement, "If the set of all sets not containing themselves doesn't contain itself and thus does contain itself and thus..." oscillates between two contradictory states made equivalent, then this undecidable state of the system is hunting for a higher dimensional matrix in which to unfold itself.ucarr
    In other words, it is only a paradox from a certain constrained view of ignorance.


    The pertinent question pertains to the existence of mitigation strategies for quantum error correction. Yes, (QECC) is employed with quantum computing; also, quantum processors are kept in vacuum chambers and shielded from electromagnetic interference.ucarr
    How does information get out if it is shielded? How are the states of the processors known if not by some interaction? What about:
    Nothing exists in pure solitude—reality resists isolation. It is a web, not a wall (shield).Alonsoaceves
    ?


    There has been no first decoherence event because QM laws underlie the natural world. QM systems and Newtonian systems aren't isolated from each other. A quantum system loses its quantum phase relations (decoherence) through entanglement with it's surrounding environment. Isolation of a quantum system enables quantum coherence. Although quantum system phase relations have always been possible, only recently has humanity been able to perceive and then detect QM systems in isolation through math and super-colliders.ucarr
    In other words, an environment (space-time) has to exist for decoherence to occur. One might say it is the medium in which decoherence occurs. QM systems in isolation only exist on paper (math) or in extreme environments that only last a tiny fraction of a second (super-colliders and the Big Bang) - going back to what Alonsoaceves said - nature abhors solitude. The fact that we are even able to get information about sub-atomic particles being in a state of superposition means that information went in and came out in some way, and that superposition is simply one kind of state and "off" and "on" are other states. It seems to me that while nature abhors solitude, it also abhors being put into our mental categorical boxes.

    So, the particle/wave duality is more effect of the processing limitations of human cognition than ontic state of physical systems? And yet, nevertheless, discrete objects are more at realism than at solipsism?ucarr
    Haven't scientists also said that we don't see the world as it is? How do they square that with their claims about how the brain works and how quantum systems work? Scientists have ignored consciousness as an integral part of how we do science in the first place. Are we talking about the world, or our view of the world? Are we confusing the map with the territory?

    Since you seem unable to locate the whole university beyond the vaguely axiomatic language you've been using, you attack the messenger instead of the message by implying math is a human invention containing fabrications and distortions?ucarr
    So you don't agree that there is a distinction between the clear boundaries invented by humans and their language as opposed to "boundaries" that preceded human's and their languages existence? Crossing the border illegally is only a problem when borders are clearly defined. A human crossing that same piece of land 100,000 years ago would not have this to worry about. One might even say that the overlay of political maps on top of physical maps is another dimension itself - the dimension of the mind.

    Should there be ambiguity of causation, would you understand it as another instance of contrived uncertainty rooted in the misuse of language?ucarr
    No because language depends on causation and realism. The fact that we have language at all is evidence that causation and realism are the case. There is a cause that preceded my observation of your scribbles on this screen. You had to have the intent to convey information and a computer and internet access as a means to relay the message. It took time for you to convert your visual constructs of the world to scribbles and then type them out and submit your post. If you had no visual construct that you converted to scribbles, and/or your visual construct is not representative of some aspect of reality, then what are the scribbles about? What are you referring to when using scribbles - more scribbles (a solipsist answer) or something in the world that is not more scribbles, and might not even be visible from your perspective - hence the use of language to inform others of things that they were not already aware of (mind-independent) (a realist answer)?
  • [TPF Essay] Cognitive Experiences are a Part of Material Reality
    I am talking about the Mind, not God. There is a beginning for time. Either the stuff (the physical, for example) existed at the beginning of time and evolved to form life, or there was a God who created what was necessary. What was necessary is the subject of discussion. I have an argument about "Physical cannot be the cause of its own change" (which can be found here), so the first case is discarded; therefore, there is a God.MoK
    I thought you were talking about the Mind, not God. What is the difference anyway? What is the nature of God, or Mind, if not physical themselves? How does something non-physical interact with the physical?
  • The Analogy of the Painter’s Palette
    Yes, mixing, as it relates to blue paint and yellow paint, is an important part of the analogy. But like we aren’t really talking about paint, or blue, or yellow, when we use them to analogize something else, we aren’t really talking about mixing necessarily either.Fire Ologist
    But we are. We are talking about mixing causes to produce a new effect. An effect only occurs as an integration of prior events. An apple only rots when it interacts with bacteria. An apple cannot rot on its own, and bacteria need attach themselves to something for it to rot. An apple does not rot in the vacuum of space.


    I still think it is interesting how such a simple analogy can help us see som many different ideas.Fire Ologist
    I think that information is a fundamental part of reality and is the relationship between causes and their effects. The analogy can describe evidence, or reasons (the blue and yellow paint), reasoning (the mixing), and a conclusion (the green paint).
  • Nonbinary
    No. A person who invests themselves fully in the identity of Democrat or MAGA probably didn't experience neglect, whether they accept that categorization enlarges the pixels is a different matter.frank
    I don't see it that way at all. There is a difference between being raised to think independently (either by accident or on purpose, depending on the type of parenting) and being neglected.

    I think that those that either received too much attention as a child and those that received very little are the same ones that invest their time on social media for the sole purpose of receiving likes - confirmation of their beliefs, because they expect it (because they've always received it), or they need it (because they never had it).

    Those that fully invest themselves into a political party have given up their freedom to think for themselves, probably because they haven't had to think for themselves most of their life.
  • [TPF Essay] Cognitive Experiences are a Part of Material Reality
    You say paradox = misuse of language. If I understand misuse in our context here as some type of violation, then I can ask, "What is being violated by language that expresses paradox?" For example, "Does paradoxical language violate the rules of inference?" If so, how so?ucarr
    It appears to violate the rules of semantics - what in the world is the paradox about? Using your example of inference, what observable evidence proves the paradox points to any real aspect of reality? Einstein's theories had to be proven by observation. Where do we observe the paradox in nature independent of the relationship between some scribbles on a computer screen or sheet of paper? You've mentioned QM...

    It is said that the qubits of quantum computing possess categorically higher computing capacity vis-à-vis the bits of classical computing. The basic explanation for the quantum leap upward in computing power is the superposition of one qubit in two positions simultaneously. These qubits are physical entities, not abstractions resulting from twisting verbiage into language games resulting in paradoxes. How do you reconcile your denial of the reality of quantum physics with quantum computers?ucarr
    I don't deny that we have descriptions of nature that work. In what state is the quantum computer when not looking at it? The issue with QM does not seem to explain decoherence in a sensible way. If decoherence requires interaction with other decohered (classical) systems, how did the first decoherence event happen? What started the chain? Didn't space-time have to exist prior to allow decoherence?

    There exists a Mind that is omnipresent in space and time, responsible for change in matter everywhere.MoK
    This seems to be part of the same problem. If minds are needed to change matter, what got the first mind going? It's a infinite regress of minds, just as we have an infinite regress of decoherence.


    Do you think the principle of non-contradiction is the security checkpoint blocking the entry of paradoxes into the realm of mind-independent reality?ucarr
    Yes, but this does not deny that the extremes are the only kind of existence. In fact, I think it is the extremes that are mental constructs. We tend to perceive the world in discrete states, even black and white sometimes, when the world is a process, and it is the relative frequency of change of the external world processes relative to the processing speed of our sensory-brain system that seems to have an effect on which processes we perceive as discrete, stable, solid objects as opposed to other processes with no discrete boundaries. To say that something is neither this or that seems to mean that it is something else, which is logically possible and empirically provable.


    Above you describe some details of the part/whole relationship. I take from it your belief the whole self is a gestalt emergence from its parts and, as such, it’s partially distinct from the parts and thus not completely local to said parts. This, again, is a non-local but attached whole that is a part and yet not entirely a part of itself. Note how you say, “Your whole self is not part of itself.” in a context wherein the reader notices the repetition of “self.” If my whole self is not part of itself, how is it a self?ucarr
    I think that the emergence you speak of is really a particular view, not something mind-dependent. We use particular views of nature for certain purposes, whether it be at the atomic, molecular, genetic, organism, species, etc. level. The discrete gestalts are mental constructs used to solve problems at that level (like how to treat organisms at the molecular level for diseases or how to treat organisms at a cultural/moral level). I think that it is goal-oriented, executive cognitive functions that form these discrete objects to solve problems - almost like a quantum computer.


    As you add up the parts of the university towards a sum of the whole of the university, is there a discrete boundary line marking a division between the region housing an accumulating sum to a whole and the region where the whole resides?

    If we suppose there's no such boundary line, must we admit there's no verifiably whole university, but instead only a forever-accumulating collection of parts?
    ucarr
    Sure, call a surveyor and they will tell you what the boundary is. There seems to be a distinction between artificial/arbitrary boundaries defined by human beings as opposed to natural boundaries where they seem more vague.

    Have you seen the world "as it is" in distinction from having seen the world?ucarr
    My mind is part of the world. I experience it as it is. I am a realist (not a direct or indirect realist, as I see them as a false dichotomy) so I believe that my mind informs me of the way the world is via causation. Effects inform us of the causes and allow use to make accurate predictions of future effects.


    I think you internalize external world within isolated mind in order to give it the power of reasoning to conclusions. How could such internalization occur if world and mind have no connection? Also, you seem to be assuming both mind and external world, with both independent. Isn't this how you've been defining mind-independent reality?ucarr
    One might ask how logic/reasoning comes about without an external world as input to work with. What happens when we put someone in a sensory deprivation chamber for an extended period? They tend to go insane and hallucinate (one might start thinking in paradoxes), but they don't cease to exist.

    I do not mean that mind and world are separate, only that there are processes that are not mind-processes and processes that are. An apple is a process (it ripens and rots), but not a mental one. Mental processes are complex interaction of new sensory information, stored sensory information and a goal-directed central executive. Natural selection is not just a purposeless process as natural selection is not just how the climate and geology steer evolution but other organisms (other minds) play a role on the evolution of other organisms. Humans are the ones that have made the leap of shaping the world and other organisms more than any other lifeform before. Nature is being shaped purposefully for human needs and wants. Technology appears to blur the lines of a mind-independent world as technology are effects of purposeful, goal-directed behavior - minds, or mental processes.
  • Nonbinary
    Consider the phrase, "I am politically nonbinary.". Do you discern the speaker's intent differently if they are liberal or conservative?David Hubbs
    Which version of "liberal" are you using here - The leftists/socialists version that uses the term in a manipulative way as cover for their authoritarian ideals, or the classic liberal (libertarian)?

    As others have said, it's a strange way of saying you have no party affiliation or are apolitical. The use of "binary" seems to indicate that it would only be meaningful in a two-party system - that their political views lie outside of the two primary parties, or that a number of ideas from each side are shared almost equally.

    Today, the "nonbinary" term carries an extra connotation for many people implying some aspect of gender within it. Does this mean that they are politically fluid as well? If the person calling themselves "politically nonbinary" also believes they can tell others what kinds of words they can or can't use within and outside their presence, then they would be definitely be sharing the authoritarian ideals of both extremes equally, and not be liberal, by definition.

    If the person simply means that they are moderate/independent/apolitical, that would indicate to me that they would anti-authoritarian - libertarian (liberal). If that is what they meant without any extra connotations, then there are better ways to say it.
  • Free Speech - Absolutist VS Restrictive? (Poll included)

    But I showed you that you did:
    But it is still the case that A caused CMichael
    What you should have said is, "it is the case that A is a cause of C" because it appears that you were walking back your statement that there are other causes with the statement you actually used.

    All I am saying is that I can kill someone by pushing them off a cliff or by shooting them. This is irrefutable. And I can turn on the lights by saying "Siri, turn on the lights".Michael
    Exactly. You can kill someone by pushing them off, but not necessarily so. Other causes have to line up perfectly for someone to die from you pushing them off a cliff. The examples you have provided make it easy for these other causes (gravity and the level of certainty technology provides) to line up with your intent (hence the straw-man). Now if you want to make the examples applicable to the theme of the thread then you would replace gravity and technology in your examples with other humans.
  • [TPF Essay] Cognitive Experiences are a Part of Material Reality
    Your sentence in bold makes a declaration about a phenomenon pertaining to language usage: paradox. This usage happens, it's real, it exists. This fact gives us reason to believe paradoxical language exists and therefore should be included in a collection of everything.ucarr
    Here you seem to be making a distinction between what "everything" refers to and what "paradox" refers to. Yes, paradoxes exist. Paradoxes are a misuse of language. Misuses of language are real events. They are part of everything, but everything is not part of everything.

    QM has a high rate of verification in nature, so the question of paradoxical physics is unresolved.ucarr
    QM reveals paradoxes in our descriptions and understanding of the universe, and is not representative of a fundamental nature of reality, but is representative of our ignorance. QM does not fit into our everyday experience of the world. The paradox just means that we haven't been able to reconcile classical physics with QM, but I think we eventually will, and I believe it will come with a better description of consciousness than the ones we currently have. What does QM say about the existence of other people and their minds (observers/measurers)? Isn't Schrodinger's cat an observer?


    Logicians saw nothing wrong with unrestricted comprehension for set theory until Russell's Paradox. To me this indicates pre-Russell logicians believing a set containing itself permissible in nature at the level of abstract thought.ucarr
    Ok, at the level of abstract thought - yes, but not at the level of fundamental reality. If solipsism is the case then abstract thought is the fundamental reality. If solipsism is the case then paradoxes are an inherent part reality. Realism implies that we can be wrong about reality - that we can misunderstand and create conceptual paradoxes that are not representative of a mind-independent reality. These logicians appear to be too focused on syntax at the expense of semantics. Just because you followed the rules of some language does not necessarily mean you have actually said anything about the world. Just ask lawyers and computer programmers. They understand that words mean things and is why they try to be exact (non-paradoxical) in their use of language. Logic is only useful when it can be applied to the world and not merely a focus on the relationship between some scribbles.

    Our general question here pertains to how a thing is related to itself. This relationship is a fundamental part of consciousness because it's rooted in self-awareness. In my being aware of myself, am I not wholly aware of my whole self? If my whole self is not a part of myself, my thinking to the contrary seems to example Ryle's category error: I'm walking around on the university campus looking for the university which, wholly speaking, is not a part of the campus. I'm duped by my own fallacy of putting the university into the wrong category, itself. Let's see now, there's a physics building that's part of the university; to that I can add the biology building, and then the English department; when does the growing aggregate of parts reach the point where the calculus segregates the parts from the whole of the university? If my whole self is not part of itself, then that's a non-local distribution of the whole self beyond itself, and thus necessarily the self cannot be complete and self-contained, and thus we're back to the superposition of one thing two places at once. QM tantalizes us with the moot possibility of the reality of self-contradiction and thus identity fundamentally non-local.ucarr
    Reading this made me dizzy. I have no idea what it means for a thing to be related to itself. A thing is a relation between its parts, and the boundaries of the thing are defined by the present goal in the mind. Are we attending ourselves, or a particular organ of ourselves, or our relation with other humans, or our relation with nature, etc.,? The answer lies within the current goal. Your whole self is not part of your self. It IS your self - that is what "whole" means. Your whole self is not part of itself. It is part of a society and species.

    When you say you are self-aware, what are you attending - your mind, your body, etc.? What is the self that you are aware of, to even say you are aware of it? Their body is an "external" object to the mind, so we would be attending external processes. But we can turn our attention back upon itself - attending our attention, thinking about thinking, aware of awareness, kind of like how a feedback loop is created when we turn a camera-monitor system's view back upon itself, or a microphone-speaker's system back upon itself.

    What is a university if not the aggregation of buildings, professors and students? The university is not part of the university, unless you're saying the idea of the university in the mind of a professor or student is part of the university. The physical university is not part of the physical university just as the abstract idea of a university is not part of the abstract idea of a university. When talking about a university or ourselves we are talking about the unity of parts that constitute these things, or we could be talking about these things are parts of a larger whole - as in the university is part of the city or state that is part of the university's name, or you are part of a society or species.

    Regarding the possibility of mind-independence, picture yourself placing a phone call to a close friend. You hope the friend will answer, thus making a conversation you deem important immediately possible. If solipsism is real, and thus no mind-independence, then why doesn't your mind know whether or not your friend will answer at a given moment in time? If the phone conversation is but a product of your mind, shouldn't your mind know when to call for an answer? Beyond that, why doesn't your mind, all-powerful in creating what you perceive as real, create everything exactly as it wishes? Why should your mind ever tolerate any degree of uncertainty?ucarr
    Yes, I have thought of these same types of questions that if solipsism is the case then why can't I merely will myself to fly and be invisible to others? Why do I perceive myself always in the same position of being at the top of this same pedestal I call my body? Why do I wake up to the same world each morning that continues where I left off when I went to sleep? It seems that the will has no bearing on the rest of the current contents of my mind, and only makes sense if there is an external world that has a "will" (or wills as in other minds) separate from my own.

    If, by these arguments, we lean towards belief in mind-independent reality, then how does the mind of the observer of the what undermine the brute fact and independence of the what?ucarr
    To a certain degree, we can. We have the power to change the world but there are obvious limits to our power and current understanding and descriptions of the world - that our understanding of the world is not the same as the world as it is.

    On the flip side, if the self of the mind is one with its context of reality, and no subject/object separation is possible, how is consciousness possible?ucarr
    It wouldn't be. This is why solipsism ultimately resolves down to there being no mind - only a reality where "reasons" that lead to "conclusions" would be the only type of cause and effect. There would be no external causes that lead to the effect of the mind and the mind would not be a cause of changes in the external world.

    Suppose I argue that you know the what you perceive exists beyond your perception because you question whether or not it might exist in independence? Isn't your ability to question the what's independence contingent upon your general uncertainty about many things? If your mind projects all of reality, how could it ever want for anything it has capacity to conceive of?ucarr
    I often bring up the idea of object permanence as a cognitive milestone that develops naturally within humans and other large-brained organisms. I think that we are born solipsists and through experience and reasoning we naturally conclude that realism is the case.
  • The Analogy of the Painter’s Palette
    I think you are thinking about the terms of the analogy too literally. The blue paint would represent all kinds of different inputs. The yellow paint represents the processing of the imputs, and the green is the output. We aren’t mixing paint anymore; we are using the concept “mixing paint” as an analogy for generating output by data processing. But it was your idea, so maybe I just don’t follow how blue, yellow green will be enough to analogize data processing if you use up the blue and the yellow to both represent input data. If you want blue and yellow to both be different data inputs, it seems to me you need more elemental pieces be added to the analogy to take those inputs, process them and cause outputs, so my simpler analogy doesn’t actually work (unless maybe you use it as data input blue, processing yellow, data out green.)Fire Ologist
    Then I don't understand how you get green paint without mixing blue and yellow. Mixing seems to be a very important part. It seems to me that blue and yellow would represent multiple inputs (we could add more colors if we wanted and we'd get a different output). Maybe your thinking of yellow as the actual program, or algorithm, and the blue as the input. The program exists but it is inert until it receives input. Mixing here would be the action the program takes with the input.
  • [TPF Essay] Cognitive Experiences are a Part of Material Reality
    By saying this you imply everything is not part of itself and thus you imply everything is not everything; this is a replication of Russell's Paradox.ucarr
    This is not what I'm implying when I use those words, and I don't know anyone that does imply that when using the term, "everything". It is only a misuse of language that allows one to create the paradox. "Everything" is not a thing and therefore would not be included in "all things". A theory of everything would be able to predict why there is a theory of everything.

    "Everything" could be implying "infinity" and "eternity" here. Everything does not imply either a closed or open system. It merely refers to all things. By definition, "everything" does not include "everything", it is merely a scribble that refers to everything that exists - whether we are aware of it's existence or not is a different matter.
  • Free Speech - Absolutist VS Restrictive? (Poll included)
    It's not my problem because I didn’t claim that A alone can cause C. I only claimed that I can kill someone by pushing them off a cliff.Michael
    Sure you did:
    But it is still the case that A caused CMichael
    You have never said A and B caused C.

    But your urge to use an analogy of a device that is programmed and engineered to obey your commands is a tell, to me, because human beings don’t operate like that. Someone might come to agree with you or believe as you do, but it isn’t because your soundwaves hit their eardrums setting off a domino effect in their skull.NOS4A2
    Exactly. His use of gravity as another irresistible force in his other example is the same. People cannot generally resist gravity, but people can resist speech. My focus has always been on what makes some people resist speech and others not. It is also possible that a listener already agreed with what was said prior to it being said (the speech they hear reinforces their own beliefs), so their reaction may appear to be caused by speech when it wasn't. The listener is just blaming their actions on another's speech to absolve themselves of their own guilt.
  • Free Speech - Absolutist VS Restrictive? (Poll included)
    I can kill people by pushing them off a cliff or by shooting them. The fact that some people can survive being pushed off a cliff or shot does not refute this. Your reasoning is so bad that I think AmadeusD is right in accusing you of trolling.Michael
    You can only kill people by pushing them off a cliff or shooting them if other things happen besides you pushing them or shooting them. So A alone cannot be the cause of C. That is your problem.
  • Free Speech - Absolutist VS Restrictive? (Poll included)
    Yes, there are plenty of other causes in between.

    But it's still the case that I killed John by pushing him off a cliff.
    Michael
    Only because you are using the force of gravity as a metaphor for the force of speech. Gravity can't be resisted. Speech can. This is why your example is flawed.

    If one example shows that pushing someone off a cliff did not kill them then it stands that pushing someone off is not a guarantee that someone will die.

    Your apparent suggestion that if B is a "more immediate" cause than A then A isn't a cause is a non sequitur. A causes B causes C causes D ... causes X. Therefore, A causes X.Michael
    Which leads to a slippery slope. It isn't a non sequitur when I can show that there are instances where A did not cause D. A is only a cause of B, B is a cause of C and C is a cause of D. A cannot be the cause of D when B and C have the power to negate A as a cause. This is shown in your 2nd Scenario. Did you pushing Jane off cause Jane to not die? You're the one dealing in non sequiturs.
  • Free Speech - Absolutist VS Restrictive? (Poll included)
    what caused Jane to not die? Isn't doing the same thing and expecting the same result the definition of insanity? If a different result occurred then you obviously weren't doing the same thing. You're missing something in Scenario 2. And I'm also asking what happened to that thing in Scenario 1. In showing that there are different outcomes to A and B means that there is another cause between B and C. What is that cause?
  • Free Speech - Absolutist VS Restrictive? (Poll included)
    What are you talking about? Are you forgetting what the letters stand for?

    A = I push John off a cliff
    B = John hits the ground at high speed
    C = John dies

    There are just two people involved in this scenario; me and John.
    Michael
    Your example only shows when A causes C. By only providing an example of how A causes C you imply that you only believe that A causes C. How about an example of where A does not cause C? You agreed that we have free will, so how does free will play into your examples?

    I am trying to get at how we know when it is A that causes C as opposed to B causing C. You seem to be saying that A causes C when A causes C an B causes C when B causes C. How is that helpful?
  • Free Speech - Absolutist VS Restrictive? (Poll included)
    **You made a point earlier about doubting whether the threatner would make good(here, to torture your family - let's say to death, to make it juicy). That is not your decision; it is theirs and you must make a dice-roll with regard to that factor. However, if you doubt, resist, and you're wrong - your family are all tortured to death while you watch - I presume you will wish you made the other choice (i.e gave in to coercion).
    — AmadeusD
    In other words, we are all going to be tortured and die regardless of whether we do what the terrorist says or not, so why not put up a fight?
    Harry Hindu
    I wanted to add to this. Given the situation that you have laid out with terrorists threatening death and torture if you do not do as they demand, ANYONE would come to the same logical conclusion that the terrorists are not likely to keep their word and fight back. It seems to me that only those that have some kind of want to torture their family would do so rather than fight back.
  • Free Speech - Absolutist VS Restrictive? (Poll included)
    Yes, which is factually true. If I push John off a cliff and he falls to his death then I caused his death, but if I push Jane off a cliff and she doesn't fall to her death then I didn't cause her death. What is so difficult to understand or accept about this? It's common sense.Michael
    Exactly. But you fail to address where B is when A causes C. We know that B exists when A does not cause C, but where is B when A causes C? How do we know if B agreed with A and therefore caused C?
  • Free Speech - Absolutist VS Restrictive? (Poll included)
    You really need to read what I have been writing and not this imaginary argument you think I'm making.Michael
    I have been reading what you wrote: A causes C except when it doesn't.
  • [TPF Essay] Cognitive Experiences are a Part of Material Reality
    The "you" is a sentient being with an enduring point of view evolving as a personal history and a capacity for abstract thought preserved in memory.

    The “you” and the “what” both occupy spacetime in a relationship allowing the “you” to have an empirical experience perceiving the “what.”
    ucarr
    But isn't all this a "how" of the "what"?

    By "realism" I understand you to refer to an aspect of empirical experience that I define thus: If you know what a thing is (you know the measurements of its dimensions) and where it is (you know where a thing is positioned by measuring the relationship of its spatial dimensions to the spatial dimensions of things around it), then you know the reality of the thing.ucarr
    By realism, I mean the idea that there is a mind-independent world - a "how" to the "what". In other words, "the what stands before the you" is a statement made only after one has provided a type of "how" to the "what". The "you" would also be a "how" in trying to make sense of the "what". Another type of "how" would be solipsism. If solipsism were the case, there would be no you with a what standing before it. You and the what would be one and the same if solipsism were the case.

    Since solipsism assumes sentience, and therefore self-awareness and its attendant self-objectification, then the sentient maintains a view of itself. I think your, "...reality itself with the only continuity being the loop of causation within itself." excludes sentience and therefore precludes solipsism. This state of reality reads like Kant's noumenal realm, a realm that strikes me as the set of axiomatically real things, i.e., brute existential facts.ucarr
    Exactly. Solipsism is a possible "how" to the "what". The way I interpreted your "what" is simply an acknowledgement that something exists (axiomatic), and the "how" is an explanation as to the nature of what and the why it exists in the first place (solipsism and realism are possible explanations of the "what" - the thing that exists). Whether the "what" is a mind (solipsism) or a world (realism) is all laid out by the "how". So talking about awareness and sentience already assumes that the "what" is a mind. What I meant by, "reality itself with the only continuity being the loop of causation within itself" was that if solipsism is the case, then the "what" is all that exists and all continuity would be contained within it. Realism is the notion that the "what" is not all that exists.

    Firstly, I respond by repeating my argument directly above. Secondly, I respond by invoking Russell's Paradox. The upshot of this paradox is seeing that for set theory, the scope of comprehension cannot logically support itself without restriction. There is no set that contains everything. There can be no unification of everything into oneness. Perhaps you say the universe is not a set. Well, I too say it's not a set. I justify my claim by saying existence is incomplete. Moreover, I say existence, by its nature, preserves its incompleteness strategically. For these reasons, I claim there is no complete continuity. Were that possible, there could be unification of everything into oneness.ucarr
    What does "everything" mean if not putting all things under one category - everything? And doesn't "everything" imply that there are no things external to it because it includes ALL things - everywhere and everywhen. If existence is eternal, "existence" would simply be synonymous with "everything". Doesn't solipsism imply that the "what" is all there is? Isn't this why the "you", and by extension "self-awareness" (awareness of "you") in solipsism is really just part of the "how"? Solipsism is simply trying to make sense of the "what" and uses terms like "you" and "self-awareness" as the "how" to explain the nature of "what". The issue is in the instinctive, axiomatic nature of explaining the "what" in the first place. Explanation appears to be an inherent part of the "what". Maybe I'm wrong and it is part of the "how".

    That's the heart of strategic incompletion. The world is a story always approaching The Now but never arriving, and that's a good thing.ucarr
    I don't really understand how it's a paradox. Everything is all things and would be illogical to include everything as part of itself. Everything, by definition, is all things so would be an improper use of language to then assert that everything is part of something rather than all things, or that everything should refer to itself. It seems to me that the paradox is really the result of a misuse of language.
  • Free Speech - Absolutist VS Restrictive? (Poll included)
    And as for the specific topic hand, it’s perfectly reasonable to be both a free will libertarian and accept that we can persuade, convince, provoke, incite, coerce, etc. with our words. There’s just nothing superstitious or magical about any of this.Michael
    Of course it is, but you've only focused on the "persuade, convince, provoke, incite, coerce" part and left out the "free will" part. Your argument that A causes C implies that B has no culpability in the crimes that were committed. B is the more immediate cause to C and is why B receives a more robust punishment than A.

    Aside from this, what you hypothetically think has zero bearing on the actual situation of coercion being real. If you could please quote where it was somehow requisite that coercion worked in every case, that would be helpful. But you wont, because I've already noted that some are resilient to coercion and would rather die than acquiesce. So much is true, and has nothing to say about the existence and reality of coercion.AmadeusD
    So your argument is just because you haven't been able to show an example of coercion (god) existing doesn't mean coercion (god) does not exist. Showing that someone would rather die that acquiesce is evidence, not proof, of coercion not existing. In this case, you would need to come up with another example, not make more assertions without providing evidence of your claims. It was your example of coercion that I shot down, and now you are saying that wasn't an example of coercion anyway. And you're calling me a troll? Give me a break.


    Earlier, we spoke about the level of punishment one receives compared to the person that was "coerced". It was the "how" people are coerced that I was focusing on, and how we determine if someone was coerced into doing something they would not have, or if they were merely using coercion as an excuse to do bad things.

    If someone makes a speech that misinforms me and manipulates me into thinking my rights are threatened when they actually aren't was I responsible at all for acting on this information? I was made to believe that my life was in danger or threatened. You said that I would not be held accountable for torturing my wife under duress. Would that not be the same in the example I just provided?

    It means it is effective, to a high degree. It can cause otherwise 'good' people to do extremely bad things, in order to avoid what they perceive to be worse outcomes threatened in lieu.AmadeusD
    Which seems to be equivalent to your example of good people acting under duress and should not be held accountable for their actions. But you then agreed that the people that performed the action under duress should receive the harshest punishment. So the question remains, how do we determine the level of culpability between the inciter and the incited?

    **You made a point earlier about doubting whether the threatner would make good(here, to torture your family - let's say to death, to make it juicy). That is not your decision; it is theirs and you must make a dice-roll with regard to that factor. However, if you doubt, resist, and you're wrong - your family are all tortured to death while you watch - I presume you will wish you made the other choice (i.e gave in to coercion).AmadeusD
    In other words, we are all going to be tortured and die regardless of whether we do what the terrorist says or not, so why not put up a fight? Not to mention that the terrorist could be getting orders from a superior, so is the terrorist now absolved of all guilt because they were just following orders and threatened to be beheaded and their families stoned to death, if they didn't? How far up the chain does it go, and how does one determine the level of culpability for each actor in the chain?

    You claim that coercion exists, but not always, yet you seem to be saying coercion exists when it exists, without providing a why it exists in some cases and not in others and how that might show that what you call coercive might not be because you have acknowledged that some people shouldn't be blamed for being coerced and some should when our laws are not hard-wired. It is the reason we not only have law-makers but law-interpreters (judges) that determine the applicability of the law to the current situation and who is more or less culpable for the crimes committed.
  • Free Speech - Absolutist VS Restrictive? (Poll included)
    It's not a strawmen because NOS4A2 is literally and explicitly saying that if I push someone off a cliff and they fall to their death then I didn't cause their death. He is wrong.Michael
    It is a strawman precisely because you have abandoned what it is we are actually talking about - speech and its impact on others behavior and the power a listener has, to find a more easily defensible position that does not include the power a listener has. Abandon talk about cliffs and being pushed off of them and answer this question:
    If you say something and I shoot you because I didn't like what you said, who is at fault for you being shot? Did you coerce me into shooting you?Harry Hindu
  • Free Speech - Absolutist VS Restrictive? (Poll included)
    I claim that both A and B caused C. NOS4A2 claims that only B caused C.Michael
    B is the more immediate cause of C precisely because B has power to override A. Your argument does not show that, so is a straw-man.