I just worked 52 hours in the last four days due to the little triple pandemic of COVID, flu, and RSV knocking out our department. What's your excuse, Skippy? — frank
Dennett gas a minority viewpoint. Don't sweat it. — frank
Dennett's claims were so preposterous as to verge on the deranged. — Wayfarer
Well, thanks! (although one of the reasons I had stopped posting for six months was because of this debate, I am continually mystified as to why people can't see through Dennett.) — Wayfarer
The argument is about the first-person nature of experience — Wayfarer
Chalmers is one of the most influential philosophers of our time. — frank
Providing a scientific explanation for the experience that accompanies function: that's the hard problem. — frank
Phenomenal consciousness and metacognition constitute the hard problem. There is something it is like to be you (or me) what is this? (And no, I'm not looking for an answer.) — Tom Storm
Isn't this what they call the hard problem - How does manipulating information turn into our experience of the world? The touch, taste, sight, sound, smell?
— T Clark
No. — frank
The really hard problem of consciousness is the problem of experience. When we think and perceive, there is a whir of information-processing, but there is also a subjective aspect. As Nagel (1974) has put it, there is something it is like to be a conscious organism. This subjective aspect is experience. When we see, for example, we experience visual sensations: the felt quality of redness, the experience of dark and light, the quality of depth in a visual field. Other experiences go along with perception in different modalities: the sound of a clarinet, the smell of mothballs. Then there are bodily sensations, from pains to orgasms; mental images that are conjured up internally; the felt quality of emotion, and the experience of a stream of conscious thought. that unites all of these states is that there is something it is like to be in them. All of them are states of experience. — David Chalmers
Has anyone considered that the ability to manipulate information (and information itself) and consciousness are one in the same. — Mark Nyquist
I don't know if I'm smarter, but I am more privy to actual reality...
...I have seen many things. Things "smart" people have never seen. — neonspectraltoast
But if you're really a good person, would you seek revenge on bad people for being bad? Or allow the judiciary system to do it for you either through monetary compensation or prison time etc. — Benj96
The principle is found in Babylonian Law.[6][7] If it is surmised that in societies not bound by the rule of law, if a person was hurt, then the injured person (or their relative) would take vengeful retribution on the person who caused the injury. The retribution might be worse than the crime, perhaps even death. Babylonian law put a limit on such actions, restricting the retribution to be no worse than the crime, as long as victim and offender occupied the same status in society. — Wikipedia
I think at this point in history there are a few key issues left to people who wish to find support for higher consciousness/idealism/theism worldviews - the nature of consciousness, and the mysteries of QM, being the most commonly referenced. — Tom Storm
I say that values can indeed be irrational. — hypericin
It assumes the separation of subject and object, and attempts to arrive at objective descriptions of measurable entities. And the mind is not among those entities. — Wayfarer
I can't imagine. — Constance
You seem certain of this. Is this an article of faith? Or do you have evidence for this? Is that evidence conclusive? — bert1
it is precisely this relation that science cannot explain. — Constance
This is debatable. — hypericin
By science I mean the instruments that detect physical matter....Not saying we can't go beyond that if we understand the problem. — Mark Nyquist
Our brains contain networks and catalogs and hierarchies of biologically contained non-physicals that will never be detected by any physical means, ever, regardless of the science. — Mark Nyquist
Thanks! Got it just now on Kindle. I'll give it a good read — Constance
To break with this requires an entirely different paradigm of knowledge relations; radically different. Can't imagine a neurological approach finding this. — Constance
I would be fascinated to read about this. — Constance
Doesn't that imply that you value truth in the expense of happiness? — TheMadMan
This is facile and untrue. It shows a lack of understanding of how the universe works at a fundamental level.
— T Clark
Are you saying atheists are making facile and untrue statements? Well, go on then, edify us/them as to the true state of affairs. — Agent Smith
This leads me to a further question: what if there are types of fields other than electromagnetic? — Wayfarer
Consider the case of Frank Brown, a US scientist who situated oysters in an isolated environment in Evanston Illinois, in the middle of the continental US, and was amazed to find that they gradually synchronised their opening and closing times with the high tides adjusted for their location, even though they were completely isolated from external world. — Wayfarer
Would you push the button? — TheMadMan
Which value would you attribute to each choice? — TheMadMan
I think this issue makes me wonder a lot of questions because my failure is see the Pope as someone different from God but probably a Catholic sees him as the pure representation of the idea of God. — javi2541997
I see it as you do. But this premise could end up in an argument where the Pope is above God. Catholics don't want to humanize the Pope but I understand that, at the same time, no one is divine as much as God.
So, they will always have this debate. Are the faculties of the Pope object of criticism? If we critize him, are we arguing against God's mercy? — javi2541997
To my mind "the hard problem of consciousness" is only "hard" for (Cartesian) philosophers because their aporia is actually still an underdetermined scientific problem. — 180 Proof

Your claim was not merely that it has not been, but that it could not be, explained (likened to trying to reach the earth from the moon by car). — Isaac

We seem to be in a similar situation: no understanding of physical processes, however complete, explains consciousness. — Art48
Another in a tiresome series of posts confusing the poster's personal inability to understand neuroscience with there being no facts of neuroscience to understand. — Isaac
Would you still chose to escape it?
If yes, would you say that is the rational choice? — TheMadMan
if you ask "how did the universe came to be?", atheists reply "it's just a fluke". — Agent Smith
Where is the rigidity? — TheMadMan
As I said before I'm not speaking of the ordinary man but beyond it. I pointed to the man of Chuang Tzu, Zarathustra's etc. — TheMadMan
The underlying premises of morality are based on social factors, such as the principle of the golden rule of treating others as one would wish to be treated, as well as morality existing socially as a form of social contract. — Jack Cummins
You'll have a hard time following it if you haven't read Plantinga. (I wouldn't blame you if you don't want to bother.) — SophistiCat
The best of them are those who defined the structure and obeyed their conscience but I believe that was uncommon. — TheMadMan
Plantinga argues that the person who accepts naturalism (N) the thesis that there is no God or anything at all like him and evolution (E) has a defeater for her belief that her cognitive faculties are reliable (R). — GodlessGirl
a belief on materialism(which he takes N to entail) — GodlessGirl
