TLN said:
Ian, philosophy is worthless towards answering questions.
You agree.
Read some science. Maybe you'll actually answer some of the questions you're pondering instead of wasting your time on mental masturbation (read: philosophy).
TLN said:
Interesting Ian said:I assume you suppose the developing human foetus achieves sentience at some stage? How does this happen if it is not a matter of adding a few simple molecules to the foetus' brain?
TLN said:As expected, no answer.
Ian, the only people who believe that "behaviour is reduicble to micro-physics, and hence fundamental physical laws" exist only in your head. Who are you debating here, because it's not us. It some figment in your head.
Just go somewhere and talk to yourself. You'll make much more progress.
BillHoyt said:Robin,
May I introduce the King of the Strawmen? King, Robin?
Interesting Ian said:Anyone who is a materialist believes behaviour is reducible to micro-physics. If they do not believe this, then they incorrectly describe themselves as materialists as non-reductionist materialism cannot be distinguished from interactionist dualism.
And Paul Anagnostopoulos has confirmed that he believes it.
TLN said:
Ian, the only people who believe that "behaviour is reducible to micro-physics, and hence fundamental physical laws" exist only in your head.
At least his figments are capable of addressing his actual arguments. Few others show any capability to do so.
Who are you debating here, because it's not us. It some figment in your head.
hammegk said:As Ian has explained, if that stance is not that of many of the posters here, what is? Are you dualists? Or do you not know, or care?
hammegk said:At least his figments are capable of addressing his actual arguments. Few others show any capability to do so.
Robin said:I am not sure what this means - is there a misplaced comma here? Are you saying that I am presenting a strawman argument? The Michael Lockwood quote in II's sig might be considered straw man but I can't see that anything I have said qualifies.
Excuse me? First of all, science doesn't state that time is finite. Time had a beginning, having emerged from space in the Big Bang. Such an infinity doesn't require infinitesimal time differences. Look up "countably infinite," and then reconsider your specious claim.new drkitten said:Yes. I pointed that out, although not explicitly : "it's not that hard to refute Aquinas directly -- again, I refer you to the page cited above, which argues against him in a fairly strong and sophisticated fashion." As it happens, you didn't even pick up on the error in the refutation --- if time is finite, as modern science states, then it's an immediate consequence that an infinite chain of causes can only exist allowing infinitesimal time differences between causes and their effects.
How about you drop this line of crap and actually pay attention to what I and others are writing? You might manage to cease looking like a shill.I specifically enourage you to forumate an argument, instead of sophistry. Unfortunately, I don't think that will happen.
I said it just below the post where you asked the question.TLN said:
Where did Paul profess this? Can I see a quote please?
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:I said it just below the post where you asked the question.
I don't get it. Am I the only one who thinks that behavior is ultimately attributable to "micro-physics," along with everything else in the world? Is it some sort of loaded question that I don't get? Oh no! Don't tell me it's some whacky philosophical question whose meaning is so opaque that I misinterpreted it.
~~ Paul
Paul C. Anagnostopoulos said:I said it just below the post where you asked the question.
I don't get it. Am I the only one who thinks that behavior is ultimately attributable to "micro-physics," along with everything else in the world? Is it some sort of loaded question that I don't get? Oh no! Don't tell me it's some whacky philosophical question whose meaning is so opaque that I misinterpreted it.
~~ Paul
BillHoyt said:Paul,
"ultimately attributable to micro-physics" is different from the strawmanned phrase "adding a few simple molecules."
Interesting Ian said:It's a very common supposition amongst scientists that ultimately everything can be reduced to micro-physics.
new drkitten said:This, like the "very common" usage of the word "skeptic" that you claim dominates discourse today, but for which a single illustrative citation cannot be found?
If this is indeed a "very common supposition," then you should have no problem finding five quotations from scientists of stature that indicate that "everything can be reduced to micro-physics."
Who is an idiot, Ian, the person who posts falsehoods, or the person who doesn't believe them until they are backed up?
new drkitten said:If this is indeed a "very common supposition," then you should have no problem finding five quotations from scientists of stature that indicate that "everything can be reduced to micro-physics."
new drkitten said:
If this is indeed a "very common supposition," then you should have no problem finding five quotations from scientists of stature that indicate that "everything can be reduced to micro-physics."
Interesting Ian said:Could you name any phenomenon which physicists believe is not reducible?
Reductionism is a fundamental tenet of physics. Physicists constantly seek to show that apparent disparate phenomena have, at root, the same mathematical equation governing their behaviour.
Without the presumption of reductionism there could be no TOE. Supposing that reduction doesn't always work is, in a sense, giving up.