This has lead to central governments being intrinsically weak and has made it possible for armed bands simply moving from one country to another. Military coups have been frequent and now you could talk about a Coup-bloc forming in the Sahel as the armed forces have been in the end the only working (and financed) part of the government. — ssu
A sadist, or a fiction…or an impartial force of nature, or is aware of and protecting us from a much wider range of horror and misery than we can comprehend or is part of a pantheon…hardly just the two possibilities you mention.
I mean, its all made up so a decent exercise of ones imagination is all thats needed to show its not just sadist or bust. — DingoJones
From an old thread "The Problem of Evil"...
The only deity consistent with a world (it purportedly created and sustains) ravaged by natural afflictions (e.g. living creatures inexorably devour living creatures; congenital birth defects; etc), man-made catastrophes and self-inflicted interpersonal miseries is either a Sadist or a fiction – neither of which are worthy of worship.
— 180 Proof — 180 Proof
But what do you think? — ssu
There are two sides and one of them doesn't make sense. — FrancisRay
The OPs position is more open minded so needs less wriggling on the hook. — FrancisRay
there's two sides to the debate. — FrancisRay

I share the view of you and Chalmers as to the amount of sleight of hand that goes on in consciousness studies. It's an epidemic. . . — FrancisRay
Gathering Evidence by Martin MacInnes — Manuel
a great New Yorker article on contemporary philosophy of mind. — Quixodian
By the way, is my understanding of the meaning of that phrase, which I discussed in my previous post, correct? — T Clark
You misinterpret how “physical” is being used in its juxtaposition to mental. It doesn’t mean “physics” as you seem to be using it. There is a way in which atomic, chemical, biological are physical events that are different in kind than qualia, ideas, what-it’s-likeness and so on. This is what I mean by taking this distinction seriously. — schopenhauer1
Why is that?... So why would we not think what is already known to us, all of which is based on consistent characteristics, could’ve been predicted in principle? — Patterner
predictions of the background microwave radiation — Patterner
It's nature is consistent. Not random or chaotic. The strength of gravity and the strong nuclear force, the speed of light, etc., are what they are. They are aspects of its nature that we have noticed, and we call them laws. — Patterner
It's true that we likely could not have predicted many of these things. There's way too much we don't know or haven't figured out. — Patterner
But us not being able to predict liquidity from three properties of H2O molecules doesn't mean those properties are not directly responsible for liquidity. — Patterner
It seems to me that despite the novelty of biological systems, that they are not different in kind, then their chemical substrates. That is to say, they are still not anything like the loose definition I gave of mental events. They are still physical events, — schopenhauer1
it may be the case that "emergence" needs "something" for which to "emerge within" (i.e. a point of view). That is to say, assuming there are these "jumps" (which we call "emergent properties"), whence are these properties taking place? We, as the already-observing observer, have the vantage point of "seeing the emergence" but "where" do these "jumps" take place without a point of view? I guess, as another poster used to say, Where is the epistemic cut?. And also, how would that cut take place without an already-existing observer? What does that new enclosure (of the new emergent property) even look like without a vantage point, or point of view already in the equation?. — schopenhauer1
Basically I am saying, we must keep in mind the incredible difference and distinction between mental and physical versus physical and other physical events. — schopenhauer1
On a more general level, it is an instance of the principle that information-based systems, which includes organisms, embody a level of organisation which defies reduction to physics and chemistry. — Quixodian
But it grew up from itself within the framework of laws. — Patterner
Physics expresses itself as chemistry. But the new laws of chemistry are not unrelated to the laws of physics. If the laws of physics were not what they are, the laws of chemistry could not be what they are. The laws of chemistry emerged from, and are dependent upon, the laws of physics.
Same with chemistry expressing itself as biology. — Patterner
I think in principle, even if the level of mechanisms are different, there is at essence, a reducibility by way of organic chemistry from biological formations to chemical ones. This cannot be said of mental states to its physical components. — schopenhauer1
2) Point of view. That is to say, emergence itself has in the background, the fact that there is already an observer of the "emerging". This does get into ideas of "does a tree make a sound if there is no observer", but there is a reason that trope is so well-known. We always take for granted that we have a certain point of view already whereby events are integrated and known. — schopenhauer1
As it says, that mental events are such a different type of phenomenon, that it would be an abuse of the concept to equate it with the physical correlates without explanation other than "other things in nature work thusly". — schopenhauer1
Is that not exactly how the universe was constructed? — Patterner
you do acknowledge the difficulties of reductionism — Quixodian
Have you read "More is Different" by P.W. Anderson? — T Clark
I have no problem saying chemistry "manifests" as biology. But it is still reducible to the chemistry. — Patterner
…the reductionist hypothesis does not by any means imply a constructionist one: The ability to reduce everything to simple fundamental laws does not imply the ability to start from those laws and reconstruct the universe. In fact, the more the elementary particle physicists tell us about the nature of the fundamental laws, the less relevance they seem to have to the very real problems of the rest of science, much less to those of society.
The constructionist hypothesis breaks down when confronted with the twin difficulties of scale and complexity. The behavior of large and complex aggregates of elementary particles, it turns out, is not to be understood in terms of a simple extrapolation of the properties of a few particles. Instead, at each level of complexity entirely new properties appear, and the understanding of the new behaviors requires research which I think is as fundamental in its nature as any other. That is, it seems to me that one may array the sciences roughly linearly in a hierarchy, according to the idea: The elementary entities of science X obey the laws of science Y… — More is Different - P.W. Anderson
I wonder if we could have anything we would call a city without buildings. — Patterner
But can biology be reduced to chemistry, or is there an attribute that biological organisms possess that non-organic chemistry does not? — Quixodian
Isn't every biological process a chemical process? — RogueAI
It's more that I don't understand where you are coming from because it seems incredulous to me that you don't recognize the difference in kind and not just degree between the sensation of red, or seeing an apple, versus the physiological correlates such as electromagnetic frequencies, optic anatomy, neural anatomy, and the like. — schopenhauer1
mental states are identical to brain states — RogueAI
I look at it this way... If we saw a skyscraper made entirely of liquid water, we would be stunned. To put it mildly. The properties of water and/or H2O molecules do not allow for such a thing. — Patterner
The case of consciousness seems even more unfathomable. — Patterner
But, while everything about the brain and body are physical, consciousness does not seem to be. — Patterner
How is it that those same physical things and processes are making something very different at the same time? That seems to be asking quite a lot. — Patterner
But in your case, the first step is recognizing the distinction, even if for semantic or historical reason, if not substantial ones of ontology. — schopenhauer1
But what physical properties, at any level, explain the various aspects of consciousness - such as my experience of blueness, or my awareness at different levels - that exist on top of the physical properties that explain vision and behavior? — Patterner
It is superficially so, but not actually, no. — schopenhauer1
Just saying, "that's the way hierarchies and emergence work" doesn't explain how mental comes from physical processes. — schopenhauer1
Do you see a distinction between something that is mental versus a physical process? What you did was just go from process to process and not process to X (mental). — schopenhauer1
The neuron fires (process/behavioral). The neurons fire (process/behavioral). The networks form (process/behavioral). The sensory tissues/organs are acted upon (process/behavioral). A line or shape is processed in a visual cortex (mental). An object is perceived (mental). An object is recognized (mental). A long-term potentiation (process/behavioral). A memory is accessed (process/behavioral). "Fires together, wires together" (process/behavioral), associating one thing with another (mental). — schopenhauer1
The human condition is our self-awareness. We must deal with our Zapffean programming. Science is a pursuit. The human condition is our very being. The human condition is primary to scientific artifices. — schopenhauer1
Does anyone still believe a “method” of science really exists, and that it essentially defines and differentiates science as a sui generis human endeavor? — Mikie
This is all in my head but I began to wander whether anyone else can really contemplate without a discussion - not even an internal one. — believenothing
Thinking need not be worded thought. — I like sushi
the back and forth of internal dialogue — Paine
ideas generated without words and then modified and justified consciously. — T Clark
We can think in images, but that is not abstract thinking. — Janus
Yes, you can. Thinking need not be worded thought. — I like sushi
Contemplation need not be worded? That had occured to me, but how are we supposed to discuss a lack of discussion? — believenothing
If you try to sacrifice yourself, the secret service knocks you unconscious and drags you to the shelter. — NotAristotle
