JayUtah
Penultimate Amazing
That depends on, what something actually exists, is?
No, it doesn't. Actually exists. I phrased my question specifically to avoid your typical evasion.
Now please answer the question.
That depends on, what something actually exists, is?
All other world-views than yours are magic to you.
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I'm afraid this doesn't follow. Can you clearly explain how this distinction is "silly"?
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No, it doesn't. Actually exists. I phrased my question specifically to avoid your typical evasion.
Now please answer the question.
Actually exists, is context dependent.
Take a hallucination
Your problem is that you are aiming for a form of positivism(philosophy).
Only that which is independent of the mind is actual.
Here's how this rhetoric is disingenuous: The dragon is a wholly pointless and ridiculous idea that no one takes seriously
Thus with God ideas. Some God ideas we can indeed disprove (in as much science can actually prove or disprove anything, that goes without saying). However, generally simply showing a lack of evidence is the best we can do, so generally soft atheism is what is reasonable.
Yes, because this is a dragon that no one believes in anyway, and because its existence is basically inconsequential (relative, that is, to the colossal consequences of the actual existence of God).
And we're back to basic object permanence. We're one step away from playing Peek-a-boo with Tommy.
Actually exists, is context dependent.
Take a hallucination: The content of it both actually exists and doesn't.
Only that which is independent of the mind is actual. The problem is that this claim is only actual in the mind.
I.e. the rule of independent of the mind is not independent of the mind. It doesn't work, because it leads to a false dichotomy.
No.
No.
You are attempting to conflate between two definitions of "exists", without actually understanding either one.
I'm new here, but wondering exactly what you mean by this? Have you completely rejected Kant? On Hegelian grounds or some other?
Kant probably knew full well that the noumena were subject to his categories. They are a projection based on the fact that we experience only phenomena, but there was some clear relation to the world.
Darwin had much to say about this. As do the Darwin awards every year.
Now you've done it. Now the Ying to his Yang is going to come back and say nothing but "This philosphiphizer says...." over and over.
What about you, kellyb, and Darat? I realize this is open to subjective interpretation, there can be no set-in-stone guidelines that either you or I can lay down: but what would your personal interpretation be? How would you define the terms of discussion, given what I’ve said here, and how would you state your views on soft and hard atheism in light of this?
It isn't a mere assertion. It is his conclusion based on his and others theories of how the universe came about and how it "is". His theories are mathematical theories, if you wish to claim his conclusions are wrong you'll need to show where and how his theories are wrong. Now there are only two ways of doing that, one is to show that they do not fit the evidence we have or that there is a mathematical mistake in the formulation. Either method requires you to present the maths to support your claim.
QM is a model, but it's the best model that we have, and when it comes to any of it's implications, I'll trust the model more than your intuitions. Yes, it might turn out to be wrong in some aspect, but it's right almost all the time.Yes, quantum entanglement makes the model a lot more complicated. Yet it is still just a model and not the real thing. A model might include randomness to help figure out the outcomes but that doesn't mean that randomness actually exists. It just means that we need a better model.
The problem isn't only at atomic dimensions and smaller. Entanglement can remain over macroscopic distances, and experiments have already been done which show that any signal would have to propagate at faster than the speed of light. That's the problem with hidden variables, and it is a problem that's present over macroscopic distance scales.Relativity doesn't really apply at atomic dimensions and smaller. In fact, for this reason, it was Hawking himself who wrote in "A Brief History of Time" that General Relativity predicts its own downfall. (The idea that the universe originated as a singularity comes from the general theory of relativity).
I have no "intuitions" about QM. I know that both QM and Relativity will have to yield to a superior model once one comes along since both are incomplete.QM is a model, but it's the best model that we have, and when it comes to any of it's implications, I'll trust the model more than your intuitions. Yes, it might turn out to be wrong in some aspect, but it's right almost all the time.
I'm not sure that Everett's "many worlds" interpretation does away with random forces but you seem to know what you are talking about so I won't argue the point.The problem isn't only at atomic dimensions and smaller. Entanglement can remain over macroscopic distances, and experiments have already been done which show that any signal would have to propagate at faster than the speed of light. That's the problem with hidden variables, and it is a problem that's present over macroscopic distance scales.
All of this actually makes sense under the Everett Interpretation, which is entirely deterministic and the probabilities in the theory can actually be derived from it rather that tacked on as a separate rule.