You really have to learn (a) what a strawman is
Yes. You do. Because you have yet to correctly identify a single straw man in this thread.
You really have to learn (a) what a strawman is
Or we could just get back on topic.Perhaps the moderators could transfer the gay ants to a different thread?
Fair enough. I do think QM should not be considered when forming a theory of consciousness, because the collection of properties that we call consciousness does not emerge at the level where QM is even close to being a valid model of reality.I don't think anyone, anywhere, discussing this subject, has suggested abandoning neuroscience. What has been suggested is that QM should not be considered when forming a theory of consciousness.
No, it is not. I can make a very long list of things that are not the subject of physics, but here are just a few that we've touched on already:Everything is the subject of physics.
"There are several key defining characteristics of living things, the most important of which is the ability to reproduce."
We are indeed, yes. And you've still not come up with a counter to Orgel's rule.
BTW: You are moving the goalposts."There are several key defining characteristics of living things, the most important of which is the ability to reproduce."
No "ability".They taught us how to define "living thing"...the most important of which was SOMETHING WHICH REPRODUCES ITSELF.
Yes. You do. Because you have yet to correctly identify a single straw man in this thread.
UE said:What I actually said: "There is no evidence to support the claim that homosexuals spend any more time raising their relatives' children than anybody-else does"
What you quoted me as saying, and then attacked: "homosexual relatives cannot and will not help raise their relatives' children. "
The ability to fly is most definitely NOT a key characteristic of birds. It might be a key characteristic of most birds but not all birds."There are several key defining characteristics of birds, the most important of which are that it has feathers and can fly" means "anything which can't fly or has no feathers is not a bird".
If the definition of a living this is something which is capable of reproduction then it logically follows that if a thing is not capable of reproduction then it is not alive.
Why are you even disputing this?
The argument fails. Beneficial traits aren't always beneficial. The tend to be beneficial. You are making an unscientific argument. Evolution doesn't make the prediction that beneficial features must always be beneficial. Further, behaviors are often bi-products of features. Evolutionary biologists don't claim to be able to explain each and every behavior in terms of benefit or non-benefit in ever instance.The counter is that suicide, as it exists in humans, breaks Orgel's rule. We know for a fact that it breaks Orgel's rule because we know that in many cases of suicide, the reason for the suicide is temporary and/or has treatable physical causes. If it's not beneficial to commit suicide when the temporary or treatable problem has passed or been treated, then it wasn't beneficial when it occured.
BTW: You are moving the goalposts.
"Something which reproduces itself". Those are your words. Not mine.
What you are not getting is that it's your words that sink you. If you don't like your words then alter them. It's up to you.Because it DOESN'T LOGICALLY FOLLOW, Randfan.
Look, add the word "ability". Add the words "tends to". Add the word organism. Anything you like.They taught us how to define "living thing". Wanna know how they defined "living thing?" Well, there were about four or five general characteristics, the most important of which was SOMETHING WHICH REPRODUCES ITSELF.
No. See my last post.No, I'm not. I'm trying to get you to FINALLY understand where the goalposts have been all along, and it is quite some way from where you have been kicking the ball.
The strawman was what you did with them, Randfan. What you did was apply a "logical argument" to them to turn them into something else, and the logical argument in question only works for the hardest of the hard sciences, not biology.
It is actually a derail of the derail.Or we could just get back on topic.
I can make a very long list of things that are not the subject of physics, but here are just a few that we've touched on already:
building a house
diagnosing and repairing car troubles
human behavior
human anatomy and physiology
All of these are legitimate areas of study in their own right. They are also quite legitimate areas for Physics to investigate.
Oh well. . .if you can't beat 'em, join 'em. . . .It is actually a derail of the derail.
Because it DOESN'T LOGICALLY FOLLOW, Randfan.
Key defining characteristics of birds is that they have feather and can fly. These really are key defining characteristics of birds. It does not logically follow that anything without feathers or unable to fly is not a bird.
Now, what does this have to do with the study of consciousness?![]()