lupus_in_fabula
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Nov 10, 2006
- Messages
- 1,631
Navigator said:I agree “it seems” is an honest way to describe a creatures death. The ability of that creature to be able to acknowledge anything seems to end.
Likewise with the born.
That acknowledging ends with a creature’s death is by far the more likely scenario; evidence supporting such a conclusion are plentiful whereas there’s no evidence to support the hypothesis that acknowledging continues after death, or that there has ever been any kind of acknowledging before sufficient conditions for life had manifested.
Navigator said:When you say to me ‘like yourself’ what do you mean? What is The Self?
(Can we agree that the Self may be used to describe “that which is able to acknowledge”)? Self is less the mouthful.
My (self) has a brain
With “yourself” I mean you, including self-awareness. Self-awareness or the “phenomenal self” does not necessarily mean that it’s something special; something necessarily other than a linguistic abstraction; a persistent sensation or though; a self-referential quality of the neural system that makes it possible for a particular corporeal creature to claim identity, or to even fantasise about that sensation being able to survive death (perhaps as a soul).
Our brains are capable of phantasmagoria: Self is one of those persistent effects that appear to be static, although constantly changing, disappearing and reappearing when closely examined.
Brain has (the ability to create) self… which then makes it possible to say: my brain has self… which then makes it possible to say: my self has brain. Hence a virtual reality about identity is created that can be so convincing that it claims ownership of it’s creator, and other more or less whacky ideas like acknowledging (or consciousness) being eternal or a fundamental property of the universe etc.
Navigator said:I am not talking about individual ability. I am asserting that if there was NO thing which was able to acknowledge the existence of its self and everything else – then the universe would not exist.
Because there is nothing to acknowledge that it exists.
I know you’re not talking about individual ability. But if you’re not talking about individual ability, then how and where does acknowledging take place? What I’m suggesting is that there’s no acknowledging without sentient boundaries (which makes distinguishing possible), and consequently no sentient boundaries without the physical universe in the first place. That’s why I think you’re putting the cart before the horse when you say that acknowledging determines existence. Something makes acknowledging possible so that we can speak about it as ability distinct from other abilities. There cannot be acknowledging without ability, and no ability without something.
[FONT="]If NO thing lacked the ability for acknowledging… then that wouldn’t necessarily mean that the universe wouldn’t exist, it would simply mean that there wouldn’t be acknowledging (plain and simple). There’s simply no need to make that extra leap you’re taking and assert that the universe wouldn’t therefore exist – there’s no necessary connection there, that connection exists only in your head. As far as I know, the only think you can say is that: Without acknowledging, the universe wouldn’t exist in the same way as it exists now. Perhaps that’s what you mean?
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