MRC_Hans
Penultimate Amazing
- Joined
- Aug 28, 2002
- Messages
- 24,961
This has clearly turned into the poetry thread.
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A distinct improvement....
Hans
This has clearly turned into the poetry thread.
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The claim by the Physicalist "I am my physical brain/body" is strenuous.
First one has to abstract a physical reality outside experience, a reality devoid of any mental precepts.
Then, claim that I am an emergent property of this abstraction.
I am an emergent property of a physical world I can only imagine.
I disagree that it's strenuous at all. In fact, it's a fairly obvious statement.
That would be like an asteroid floating alone in space. Ok, done. It wasn't strenuous.
Ok, done. You are an emergent property of our physical universe. Again, not really strenuous.
I take exception to the word "only" in there. Instead, all you have done is show that "you are an emergent property of a physical world that I can imagine". Not that you can ONLY imagine, as it's entirely possible that I can both imagine a physical world which can give rise to consciousness while simultaneously living in a physical world which can give rise to consciousness.
Which means that all your 2 steps have accomplished is for you to demonstrate that materialism is possible, which is sort of the opposite of showing it to be fake, right?
Has it been established that homeopathy is what devhdb is actually arguing towards? Or is it just a placeholder for whatever his actual unscientific idea turns out to be?
For me, that's the only real interest in these threads: What woo idea is devhdb trying to make room for, here?
No. The fact that to you it is obvious that the red is red does not mean that it explains materialism: it is actually the other way around. You have to explain how is it posible that from something as “concrete “ as a brain (matter) can arise something as “abstract” as a feeling or the experience of the redness of red.
No. The fact that to you it is obvious that the red is red does not mean that it explains materialism: it is actually the other way around. You have to explain how is it posible that from something as “concrete “ as a brain (matter) can arise something as “abstract” as a feeling or the experience of the redness of red.
I do not know why you recommend things to us that not only you have not read but you are unable to quote correctly.
It's because he does keyword searches and quote mines. Had he actually read anything from either Sagan or Hawking, he'd have kept well clear of both.
Science is not a mythI love lots of things by the way. I love art, the outdoors, literature, science, golf, sports in general and people. What I don't love are backwards superstitions.
Red is merely the label we use to describe light between 625–740 nanometres.
Why is this so difficult?
Because the light that impacts on a wall does not produce a subjective feeling of red on the wall.
This is a "small" difference that implies that the sensation of red is not just the wavelength of the light.
You do realize that people also made all those things, right?Dr. Strangelove or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb.
Science also makes bombs and gas chambers.
Don't substitute one myth for another.
Love people, not things.
EspeciallyWalls do not feel anything.

You do realize that people also made all those things, right?
If you can't love anything that's bad, even in part, then you can't love people as EVERYONE has some degree of bad in them.
Somehow I don't feel like you've really thought this philosophy of yours out.
You can love the sea, the hillsides. You can love music and other arts (although they also have inspired people to horrific acts at times) and that is not fetishism.
So I don't see why love of science should be considered fetishism.
Love is a very special and intense emotion.
I love my wife and children, my parents, my aunt and cousins, my friends, my dog and my cat. Maybe I've forgotten someone else.
Therefore no actual distinction.I suppose you're talking about two kinds of love. English language probably doesn't distinguish them like Spanish. A limitation, then.
In Spanish "amo al mar" is fetishism or poetry. "I love the sea" is usually translated by "me encanta" or "me gusta".
I suppose you're talking about two kinds of love. English language probably doesn't distinguish them like Spanish. A limitation, then.
In Spanish "amo al mar" is fetishism or poetry. "I love the sea" is usually translated by "me encanta" or "me gusta".