This is a problem with sophists: you're so used to using reasoning that leads nowhere that you can't fathom that people have successful methodologies that lead to the right conclusions.
ad hominem
This is a problem with sophists: you're so used to using reasoning that leads nowhere that you can't fathom that people have successful methodologies that lead to the right conclusions.
ad hominem
Not a metaphor; I'm saying this in the precise mathematical sense. The brain is Turing-equivalent (or at least Turing-equivalent) since it can demonstrably emulate the action of a Turing machine or other provably Turing-equivalent mechanism. (Every computer programmer in the world has done this at some point.)What do you mean by the brain is a 'computer'? Do you mean this as a metaphor, or in the sense that brain as computer answers the how of certain processes such as perception and reasoning, or perhaps as a generalized 'a machine that manipulates symbols'. Or do you mean as a general definition . . . as in the brain is a stand-alone machine - like a computer.
eiπI lost track. How many wrongs make a right again? Does it have to be a prime number?
Really ? In what way is this an ad hominem ?
because you are attending to the poster ("so used to using reasoning that leads nowhere") not his argument. And I reckon your use of 'Sophist' is meant as a dig.
because you are attending to the poster ("so used to using reasoning that leads nowhere") not his argument. And I reckon your use of 'Sophist' is meant as a dig.
That makes the brain a computer by definition, because our term for devices that are Turing-equivalent is "computer".
It's incredible that people could argue against that bit of unassailable logic.
Ad hominem <> insult. Just FYI.
Plenty of very smart people have gotten line to argue that the Turing Equivalent model is not sufficient to explain the capacities of the human mind
much less qualia.
granted it's not equivalent to an insult . . . but it was an irrelevant opinion re the poster and not his argument.
Despite certain conversationalist assertions it is much more complex, first off you have the actual sense organs, they interact and send signals along neuron channels down a chain, frequently involving cross matching and processing.If I wished to think of 'information' in layman's terms . . . as something my Grandmother could understand . . . . Is it something along these lines? If I pickup an object, like an apple, I can see the color, feel the mass, and shape, I can taste the tartness, and if I also remember past apples I have enjoyed . . . this experience can be described as a collection of data points, IE wavelengths, measurements like mass and etc.
these are further learned associations and complexes, yes.But the experience is not like a blank stare dispassionate recording as with a camera and mass spectrometer, there also is a sense of apprehension, or knowing . . . not knowing in the sense of right knowledge, or wrong knowledge, but knowing (because I don't know what other word to use) as in the binding of various data points into a useful collection, IE information.
An interpretative cognitive layer of memory , association and learning, yes.Computers can also be 'taught' to bind data points together into information . . . but 'knowing' is more than that, there is also a sense of 'I' . . . and ownership of the experience.
So, then I will use this as my definition of consciousness: the capacity of 'knowing'. This capacity of knowing is a precondition to all mental states such as perception, memory, and emotive states such as being happy or sad.
What do you mean by the brain is a 'computer'? Do you mean this as a metaphor, or in the sense that brain as computer answers the how of certain processes such as perception and reasoning, or perhaps as a generalized 'a machine that manipulates symbols'. Or do you mean as a general definition . . . as in the brain is a stand-alone machine - like a computer.
Assumption.
Take your blinkers off now. It is you're assertion that an idealist universe would not be identical to the universe we find ourselves in. Philosophically, ontologies all assume the phenomenal universe to be identical in all cases.
The reality out there is the way it is independent of our thoughts. Idealism and materialism are simply rational perspectives on this
Perhaps you will now tell me the origin of material and how it happens to exist rather than not existing?
You can only make this assertion by wearing your materialist blinkers, or asserting that idealism would somehow be different than what we observe.
This does not address the issue mind you, because our idealist mind (being) may be using physical matter as a vehicle and exploiting the apparatus of the body.
Plenty of very smart people have gotten line to argue that the Turing Equivalent model is not sufficient to explain the capacities of the human mind - even if we limit the human mind to mathematics .
much less qualia.
I lost track. How many wrongs make a right again? Does it have to be a prime number?
Plenty of very smart people have gotten line to argue that the Turing Equivalent model is not sufficient to explain the capacities of the human mind - even if we limit the human mind to mathematics . . . much less qualia.
Son, when you have two separate mutually-exclusive claims about one thing, at least one of them has to be wrong.
You aren't really doing yourself any favors by arguing this.
The issue is that, under idealism, there is no reason for the universe to look like it does. In fact, we would expect the universe to look like anything but what it does, so you have to keep adding special clauses saying "oh except here, because blah". And you have to keep doing that until the end result is indistinguishable in any meaningful way from materialism.
The brain is Turing-equivalent (or at least Turing-equivalent)