P.s Iain McGilchrist makes a good case how we came to this point in his book Master and Emissary. — TheMadMan
The law of identity, number and "other such principles of logic" are axioms of human reason, and as such say nothing about what exists independently of human reason. — Janus
Aren't you assuming that 7=7 is independent of any brain that can think or process that symbology? — Philosophim
how could it not exist as matter and energy? — Philosophim
Show me knowledge today of something that exists that is not matter and energy. If you do that, then I will concede. If you cannot, then my point stands. — Philosophim
If one takes Kant very seriously, by my lights, then there is no knowledge of things-in-themselves, — Bob Ross
In philosophy, energy cannot be the fundamental existent as it is not a thing. — L'éléphant
Yes, he has a deep understanding of the workings of biological organisms, and many clear thoughts. However, his speculative theory of biosemiotics is deficient for the reasons I described — Metaphysician Undercover
Trump took classified documents, either out of spite or looking to make a buck somehow (as always), — Mikie
He thrill-seeks. He breaks the law for entertainment. He thinks the rules apply to other people, not him. Brawling with societal norms, he must believe, raises his status in the pecking order. Normally, teenagers grow out of this behavior and stop joy-riding in stolen cars, bullying the weak and generally acting like a juvenile delinquent. But the latest indictment shows, as if we needed convincing, that Grandpa Trump has only grown into the behavior. — Politico

Apokrisis has directed me to enough material for me to see that Pattee's theory is hugely deficient. — Metaphysician Undercover
Markoš underlined that in human affairs we do observe real change, because our history is ruled by contingency, and entities like literature and poetry show that creativity does exist in the world. He maintained that this creative view of human history can be extended to all living creatures, and argued that this is precisely what Darwin’s revolution was about. It was the introduction of contingency in the history of life, the idea that all living organisms, and not just humans, are subjects, individual agents which act on the world and which take care of themselves. ...According to Markoš, the present version of Darwinism that we call the Modern Synthesis, or Neo-Darwinism, is a substantial manipulation of the original view of Darwin, because it is an attempt to explain the irrationality of history with the rational combination and recombination of chemical entities. Cultural terms like information and meaning have been extended to the whole living world, but have suffered a drastic degradation in the process. Information has become an expression of statistical probability, and meaning has been excluded tout court from science.
The vast flow of perceptions, ideas, and emotions that arise in each human mind is something that, in his view, actually exists (I would say: is real) as something other than merely the electrical firings in the brain that gives rise to them—and exists as surely as a brain, a chair, an atom, or a gamma ray.
In other words, even if it were possible to map out the exact pattern of brain waves that give rise to a person’s momentary complex of awareness, that mapping would only explain the physical correlate of these experiences, but it wouldn’t be them. A person doesn’t experience patterns, and her experiences are as irreducibly real as her brain waves are, and different from them. — Thomas Nagel - Thoughts are Real
My point is that our subjective reality of whether we treat the electron as a wave or a particle does not alter reality, it just alters are mathematical predictive or post assessment models — Philosophim
Those interpretations (i.e. Copenhagen, Many Worlds) all have something in common: They treat the wave function as a description of an objective reality shared by multiple observers. QBism, on the other hand, treats the wave function as a description of a single observer’s subjective knowledge.
I believe his [i.e. Norbert Wiener's] assertion that information is more than matter and energy is wrong. DNA is made up of matter and energy. All life is made up of matter and energy and stores information. — Philosophim
I finally have had a chance to read this book — Richard B
In order to always have a secure compass in hand so as to find one's way in life, and to see life always in the correct light without going astray, nothing is more suitable than getting used to seeing the world as something like a penal colony. This view finds its...justification not only in my philosophy, but also in the wisdom of all times, namely, in Brahmanism, Buddhism, Empedocles, Pythagoras [...] Even in genuine and correctly understood Christianity, our existence is regarded as the result of a liability or a misstep. ... We will thus always keep our position in mind and regard every human, first and foremost, as a being that exists only on account of sinfulness, and who is life is an expiation of the offence committed through birth. Exactly this constitutes what Christianity calls the sinful nature of man. — Schopenhauer's Compass, Urs App

I hold you in higher regard than snippy insults and then leaving. — Philosophim
Many living things have consciousness at a basic level. Therefore matter and energy can be conscious. — Philosophim
There's not question being begged here. Doubt or skepticism alone does not refute what is known. — Philosophim
Provide me evidence of something that exists that is not matter and energy, and we have a discussion. — Philosophim
Subjective reality does not alter objective reality. — Philosophim
Educate me... — Philosophim
Wayfarer, matter and energy is the only true existent that we know of. — Philosophim
the fact that we do not know what tomorrow will bring does not negate what we know now. — Philosophim
A wave function is formed as a mathematical concept to deal with our inability to get a fine tune. — Philosophim
Obviously DNA is matter and energy, and honestly it is a storage of information. So is the brain. So is your hard drive. Do we think that a fly or a roach is something magical because it can retain information? Even plants do. Viruses. There are tons of example of matter and energy that store information. — Philosophim
Doubt or skepticism alone does not refute what is known. — Philosophim
it does not negate that life is still just matter and energy. — Philosophim
in the cases like the quantum realm, its like slinging a que ball at an eight ball. — Philosophim
The explanation of uncertainty as arising through the unavoidable disturbance caused by the measurement process has provided physicists with a useful intuitive guide as well as a powerful explanatory framework in certain specific situations. However, it can also be misleading. It may give the impressions that uncertainty arises when we lumbering experimenters meddle with things. This is not true. Uncertainty is built into the wave structure of quantum mechanics and exists whether or not we carry out some clumsy measurement — Brian Greene, The Fabric of the Cosmos
one expression of matter and energy — Philosophim
it seems obvious that matter and energy are conscious. — Patterner
Many living things have consciousness at a basic level. Therefore matter and energy can be conscious. — Philosophim
The idea that life evolved naturally on the primitive Earth suggests that the first cells came into being by spontaneous chemical reactions, and this is equivalent to saying that there is no fundamental divide between life and matter. This is the chemical paradigm, a view that is very popular today and that is often considered in agreement with the Darwinian paradigm, but this is not the case. The reason is that natural selection, the cornerstone of Darwinian evolution, does not exist in inanimate matter. In the 1950s and 1960s, furthermore, molecular biology uncovered two fundamental components of life—biological information and the genetic code—that are totally absent in the inorganic world, which means that information is present only in living systems, that chemistry alone is not enough and that a deep divide does exist between life and matter. This is the information paradigm, the idea that ‘life is chemistry plus information’.
Ernst Mayr, one of the architects of the modern synthesis, has been one of the most outspoken supporters of the view that life is fundamentally different from inanimate matter. In The growth of Biological Thought, p. 124, he made this point in no uncertain terms: ‘… The discovery of the genetic code was a breakthrough of the first order. It showed why organisms are fundamentally different from any kind of nonliving material. There is nothing in the inanimate world that has a genetic program which stores information with a history of three thousand million years!’ — What is Information?
I feel this also fixes ideas that observation or subjective consciousness creates all of reality. Subjective consciousness creates a subjective reality. Subjective reality does not alter objective reality. Whether you define that material in front of you as a rock or not, that material is still there. They each have their uses, but one does not affect the other. — Philosophim
I am not aware of any events taking place in the realms of organic chemistry or evolutionary biology that are not reducible to fundamental particles. — Patterner
Isn't climate change ultimately coming to liberate us from the cycle of death and rebrith? Why act to prevent it? — Tom Storm
Out of interest - let's assume we do accept analytic idealism as our ontological situation - what practical changes would this initiate in terms of human behavior? How much changes in terms of morality, human rights, climate change, political discourse, in short, how we live? — Tom Storm
In order to always have a secure compass in hand so as to find one's way in life, and to see life always in the correct light without going astray, nothing is more suitable than getting used to seeing the world as something like a penal colony. This view finds its...justification not only in my philosophy, but also in the wisdom of all times, namely, in Brahmanism, Buddhism, Empedocles, Pythagoras [...] Even in genuine and correctly understood Christianity, our existence is regarded as the result of a liability or a misstep. ... We will thus always keep our position in mind and regard every human, first and foremost, as a being that exists only on account of sinfulness, and who is life is an expiation of the offence committed through birth. Exactly this constitutes what Christianity calls the sinful nature of man. — Schopenhauer's Compass, Urs App
The claim that consciousness is an illusion of any sort, in any sense of the word "illusion", is absurd. — RogueAI
All universal common denominators are only ideas? — creativesoul
I hadn't meant "material constitution" in a substantial sense. Just something the thing does. Like walking. — fdrake
the properties of subatomic particles that give rise to flight in birds are present in the subatomic particles that make up rocks — Patterner
What are we going to look for as evidence of consciousness in (a) a rock, and (b) a human? — bert1
there needs to be some part of its material constitution that has representational capacity. — fdrake
The most fundamental unit of consciousness is a reflection of the outside from on the inside, and vice versa. There is an " in here" and an "out there". — Watchmaker
Have you checked out any of Thomas Metzinger's work on classifying awarenesses (also Wayfarer , you'd probably get something out of his "neuro-Buddhism") — fdrake
Peirce fleshed that out as methodological practice. — apokrisis
If the atoms in the brain continue to exhibit the exact behavior you would predict via physics — Francis
That's why all that remains in the realm of groundless speculation and faith. — Janus
