I wonder how many lives have been destroyed by someone's "inner knowingness" about "divine truths"?
I wonder how many lives have been destroyed by someone's "inner knowingness" about "divine truths"?
Godel was omniscient? Well, just two letters out. Godel was talking about all finite systems having to rely upon assumptions external to the system itself. That would not apply to omniscience.
The point of describing a thing through behavior is that it avoids all the useless stupidity associated with arguments over substance.
[If you would just accept that modern materialists think in terms of properties (behaviors) rather than substance you would have nothing to argue about.
What exactly does "psi" mean?
If by "psi" you simply mean "unknown" then I agree, those experiments would be evidence of psi. But that would be a pretty weak definition.
Because as an A.I. programmer, I cannot for the life of me find a qualitative difference between what goes on in my mind and what I can make an A.I. do.
What is "reasoning" to a computer/machine exactly?
start here:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Artificial_intelligence
more specifically:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/First-order_logic
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Forward_chaining
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Backward_chaining
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bayesian_network
Your refusal to look up concepts you don't understand in no way drags them down to the level of your own dismissable question-begging.No, the point of materialists only discussing behaviour and then, post hoc, claiming that's just what consciousness is is that it serves to completely skirt the question of consciousness.
All so called (materialistic) research into consciousness is nothing more than, at the very best, cognitive modelling in terms of problem solving, ect.,. (snip)
For proving my point, you owe me a million dollars.In modern times it has come to mean more than just extra-sensory to include any conscious activity (input or output) that is not (fully) mediated by anything physical - or known to physics at this time.
The point is do they show or even hint at consciousness being distinct - or even partly distinct - from physiology? Since the positive hit rates were achieved by some seeming extra-sensory method that is the conclusion many draw. Whether or not it's all down to your EM fields or some kind of spirit is another question altogether.
What does theist materialism/physicalism entail?HypnoPsi said:But however you dress it up - as materialism or physicalism (by any definition you've offered so far) - it is still perfectly clear that atheist materilism or physicalism inherently entails the view that whatever "it" ultimately is it is self-perpetuating, self-generating and/or self-sustaining (i.e. uncreated).
How would we determine whether a robot has phenomenal experience?But do not imagine for one minute that you are in anyway proving even slightly that such things actually have any conscious subjective experience no matter how much you co-opt psychological language in your qualitative descriptions of Information Processing, etc.,.
We are supposed to believe that reality is made up of physical stuff that takes up space and can be observed/weighed/measured/felt, etc.
Ok, let's assume that's true. How is it then that a bunch of physical matter can be arranged in such a way as to create a completely non-physical phenemenon- consciousness?
Why should there be anything like consciousness in a purely physical universe?
Consciouesness is totally outside the realm of physicality, and when materialists claim that consciousness comes from matter, they are creating a fairy tale much more unparsimonious than anything a theist can come up with.
The theist at least knows the mind exists, and so their claim that God (as a sort of super-mind) exists at least rests on a foundation of mind, however shaky it may be.
The materialist is bereft of even the shakiest foundation. There is no evidence at all that physical matter exists,
It is a completely ad-hoc non-sensical theory that the materialist must believe in order to keep the whole house-of-cards that is materialism from collapsing.
No, the point of materialists only discussing behaviour and then, post hoc, claiming that's just what consciousness is is that it serves to completely skirt the question of consciousness.
All so called (materialistic) research into consciousness is nothing more than, at the very best, cognitive modelling in terms of problem solving, ect.,.
So called, "modern materialists" in academia very rarely refer to themselves as "materialists" (modern or otherwise). Instead, they usually refer to themselves as "physicalists".
Look, materialism as a defined term means "something that occupies space and time" - an idea very closely related to atomism (lit.tran. "un-cuttable").
Surely, you should see how the idea itself obviously becomes redundant when one begins to talk about sub-atomic particles themselves as being braids in spacetime (as in loop quantum gravity theory).
For talking sense, as a thought experiment only, if we imagine that LQG theory turns out to be "truth" that still leaves us to ponder: what the heck is spacetime?
I have no idea - and neither do you.
But however you dress it up - as materialism or physicalism (by any definition you've offered so far) - it is still perfectly clear that atheist materilism or physicalism inherently entails the view that whatever "it" ultimately is it is self-perpetuating, self-generating and/or self-sustaining (i.e. uncreated).
To my mind that is very clearly as much a faith based position as theism.
The point is do they show or even hint at consciousness being distinct - or even partly distinct - from physiology? Since the positive hit rates were achieved by some seeming extra-sensory method that is the conclusion many draw. Whether or not it's all down to your EM fields or some kind of spirit is another question altogether.
Yet this is precisely where I see you as being confused. You are looking at cognitive activity and computational activity from the outside and after describing them both in the same qualitative terms (as functions and problem solving routines, etc.,.) assuming that means consciousness exists for the A.I., however rudimentary you may suppose A.I. consciousness to be.
For myself, I think that John Searl has come very close to pointing out the faults in this reasoning with his Chinese Room thought experiment.
But do not imagine for one minute that you are in anyway proving even slightly that such things actually have any conscious subjective experience no matter how much you co-opt psychological language in your qualitative descriptions of Information Processing, etc.,.
Experience by itself cannot be unconditionally trusted.
The house-of-cards that is materialism has never had any foundation to begin with!
Idealists, do you feel threatened by creeping materialism? Does it threaten to curtail your wilder theories about creation?
You could only have come to this conclusion via experience.
The hey day of this whole atheism/skepticism/materialism movement is well and truly over - as much due to its own flaws as anything else.
Computers - even very simple ones - have subjective experiences.
We completely understand every part of the process by which those experiences are formed, and there they are.
Translation: You can't explain everything about materialism therefore my magic thinking is the true one.You can't even prove to me that you have subjective experiences, so how can you prove this?
Really? Completely understand? As in to the level of getting Malerin's colour blind scientists to see red?
Okay then. If you completely understand how subjective experiences are formed in computers then why not completely explain it and/or completely demonstrate it to the rest of us?
~
HypnoPsi
You could only have come to this conclusion via experience.
The issue with your 'Overmind' postulate is that it assumes a fundamental entity which, itself, would need explaining.
The thing is we don't and, almost certainly, cannot know what the ultimate fundamental of reality is because there really isn't one.
The sense of an internal self or perceiver gives individuals a frame of reference to process the information they receive. There are obvious advantages to believing there to be an "I" that needs feeding, protecting, and to interact with other "I"s.This is something that Rupert Sheldrake asks very often. I saw him speak a few months ago and I thought he made a fabulous point about how materialistic models for consciousness drawn from A.I. never actually point out the purpose or requirement of consciousness (in evolutionary terms).
Consciousness, as in subjective experience, is surplus to requirements if you only need a physical device to solve problems as and when it interacts with its environment.
Ignoring refutations of your beliefs does not make you right.Again, yes, this is so clearly obvious to me that I am genuinely surprised anyone wastes their efforts on trying to refute it.
You're admitting it's a huge step away from the sole basis you have for asserting it. It was already shown that you're attributing abilities to the God-mind that no humans possess, and therefore your analogy fails.The God-Mind is obviously a huge step from our limited awareness. But, then, any theory that attempts to expain why there is a Universe is going to be pretty big by necessity.
Yes, meanwhile physical causes can alter or destroy consciousness. You can hardly claim that consciousness is "uncuttable." The fact that there are unknowns in physics does not prove an alternate woo-theory true.I would go much further than this. Whatever the Universe and all the objective phenomena within it are, modern physics has clearly shown them to be without any substance whatsoever in the traditional view of the term.
Atoms and particles are not "uncuttable". And even if their massless state is down to superstrings or loop quantum gravity they're still ultimately just information/laws.
This is very good for theistic theories and very bad for atheistic theories.
The argument from incredulity must truly be potent if it can sweep the field of all other contenders by default. Fortunately it can't.We can't even imagine a system in which information can store itself! At least materialism had this going for it until physics outgrew it.
God-Mind is the only real contender left.
No, you're equivocating the term. "Information," like the term "law," is a label we use for our understanding of what we observe. Your argument is no more coherent than the one creationists use in claiming that "laws" exist and laws require a lawgiver.The atheist faith in materialism/physicalism is wholly without logic, reason or rationality. Information needs a mind to exist and be information. Without a mind it wouldn't be information - it would be nothing. And the only way for it not to be nothing would be if it were some kind of permanent (i.e. "uncuttable") self-sustaining and self-perpetuating substance occupying spacetime - and there isn't any!