Materialism and Logic, mtually exclusive?


I do not intend on doing your research for you. If you are interested in the topic, I suggest going to the library, getting books out on the subject, and educating yourself.

In brief, however, we understand many things about the brain. We can induce, for example, certain feelings by direct manipulation of the brain or by through chemical interactions. We understand these interactions. Thus, there is no reason why machines could not have the same interactions. In fact, there is no evidence of anything other then a purely mechanical cause of 'consciousness' and the sense of 'self' at all.
 
See above. On second thought ... what?
Possible and impossible are binary, they’re either or, they’re mutually excusive and exhaustive. It absolutely must be one, and it cannot be both. So, to claim that not knowing proves that it may not be possible, which means you’ve proven it impossible, is an argument from ignorance. This is what you tried to do. In a similar fashion, claiming that not knowing proves that it may not be impossible, which means that you’ve proven it is possible, is an argument from negative proof. Which is what I did in my reply to you. Both of these arguments are equal, fallacious, and wrong. So you must remove that not, our not knowing only shows that it may be possible or may be impossible.
 
Spontaneously visualize, independently problem solve, then invent... machinery.

What? The above quote is a comment you made in reply to the question "what can humans do that machines can't". This is your claim. Back it up.
 
In brief, however, we understand many things about the brain. We can induce, for example, certain feelings by direct manipulation of the brain or by through chemical interactions. We understand these interactions. Thus, there is no reason why machines could not have the same interactions. In fact, there is no evidence of anything other then a purely mechanical cause of 'consciousness' and the sense of 'self' at all.
Assertion. You made the claim:

We have scientific reasons to believe that machines are every bit as possible of everything a human can do (including thinking, feeling, etc).
Show me.
 
That was cool. I love high-speed internet.

What's the matter, Taffer? Can't you find the bottle-opener?
Another fallacy, argument from silence, his not responding to you (yet) proves nothing as well.

ETA - Might as well point out the ad hominem too, as I'm pretty sure the bottle-opener comment was meant as an insult.
 
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Possible and impossible are binary, they’re either or, they’re mutually excusive and exhaustive. It absolutely must be one, and it cannot be both. So, to claim that not knowing proves that it may not be possible, which means you’ve proven it impossible, is an argument from ignorance. This is what you tried to do. In a similar fashion, claiming that not knowing proves that it may not be impossible, which means that you’ve proven it is possible, is an argument from negative proof. Which is what I did in my reply to you. Both of these arguments are equal, fallacious, and wrong. So you must remove that not, our not knowing only shows that it may be possible or may be impossible.
Sorry, I'm not following you.
 

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