AlBell
Philosopher
- Joined
- Mar 28, 2009
- Messages
- 6,360
Now if I just wasn't an idealist, philosophically speaking. But you 100% materialists go right on pretending your thoughts are Trvth.Glad you understood it then.
Now if I just wasn't an idealist, philosophically speaking. But you 100% materialists go right on pretending your thoughts are Trvth.Glad you understood it then.
Now if I just wasn't an idealist, philosophically speaking. But you 100% materialists go right on pretending your thoughts are Trvth.
Now if I just wasn't an idealist, philosophically speaking. But you 100% materialists go right on pretending your thoughts are Trvth.
You only think (so to speak) it's a strawman.I'd watch that strawman you're fighting there, I think he's rabbit punching and butting in the clinches.
Are you referring to a simulated/brain in a vat solipsism or an external real-world solipsism?
If you're assuming, it's guesswork.
And the claim that everything we know is a physical entity when that is precisely the point in question
It's permissible to make working assumptions in science, but not to assume that said assumptions are necessarily true.
Relevant portion highlighted.
You can't determine the nature of observation based on the results of observation.
It's true that 100% materialists must defend SRIP! Church-Turing! Read GEB! as all that needs to be said. Buy that and the answer must be obvious to the meanest intelligence.![]()
How often do I have to repeat it? Until we understand how consciousness is produced, there is no particular reason to suppose we can produce it by running programs on a computer. If consciousness is real, and physical, then it can't be produced by a computer simulation any more than any other physical process can be produced by a computer simulation.
Belz... said:Are you referring to a simulated/brain in a vat solipsism or an external real-world solipsism?
Both.
This:
contradicts this:
Consciousness is produced by physical processes.
Physical processes can produce consciousness.
We can in principle discover the physical processes that produce consciousness.
We can in principle reproduce the physical processes that produce consciousness.
Reproducing the physical processes that produce consciousness would produce consciousness.
Disagree with any of this?
That's is false. We simulate tons of stuff in order to understand them better.
Perhaps the only way to understand consciousness fully will be through computer simulations, or at least computerization. Your claim above is unwarranted.
Is a game of chess real?
Is a game of chess physical?
Some people are apparently able to play chess without boards or pieces. The 'game' is in the thinking. The physicalness of thought is probable (and assumed at 100% certainty by materialists) but as yet undemonstrated on substrates other than brains.
It's clear that a game of chess cannot take place without some physical activity happening.
I can't accept that chess is a physical activity.
It is clear that Dinner is always composed of some kind of food. But since there is not any essential kind of food for it to be called dinner, I can't accept that dinner is food.
You may find the comparision persuasive. I do not, because it's relatively easy to figure out what the physical requirements of "dinner" are.