What do you think science says is the answer to #2?
What do you think this "philosophy thing" says is the answer to #2?
What do you think science says is the answer to #2?
Oh, sure, I agree with that bit.
But I can't figure out what a falsifiable scientific answer to my question #2 would even look like. A lot of history is, after all, one-off judgement calls based on ever-changing value systems/rankings.
What do you think science says is the answer to #2?
And it's always the same song and dance. It's always someone with some pet Woo they are mad science told them wasn't true, some wise old man on the mountain lookit how deep and enlightened I am routine, or someone oddly pissed about the fact that someone claimed to actually know something and is just going to firebomb the entire concept of acquiring knowledge and leave everything in a "You can't know anything" limbo.
That's kind of a meta-method there. "Don't ask questions that my preferred method of inquiry is unlikely to find answers to."
The rest is a bit of strawmanning. Philosophy has its nutters and stumbling amateurs - most definitely. But then again, so does science.
You don't have to look far to find gobs of pseudo-physics that "isn't even wrong." We accept it for the nonsense it is and realize it doesn't taint the root discipline. It's the same way in philosophy, with perhaps one distinct difference: we are generally less familiar with "good" philosophy and hence less likely to detect the difference between woo and worthwhile.
The ironic bit is that we (and I mean we) so often use the tools of philosophy on this forum to make our arguments stronger. Citing fallacies is common, insistence on coherence, appeals to reason and morality, and so on. Even insisting on empiricism is a choice of philosophical schools.
So seeing something can be nicely explained in physical terms, but then what about the feeling of seeing something. That is something we are currently not quite sure how happens, so that is the magic qualia.
What do you think this "philosophy thing" says is the answer to #2?
Even a blind squirrel finds a nut once in awhile.![]()
False category error and over generalization
This is silly, the fact that I can read about preforming ballet does not mean that I can dance in a ballet like a trained dancer.
A 'brain state' is a large set of categories, 'knowledge' of something is a smaller subset.
So you seem to have made an analogy of over generalization.
You avoided the question, so I will put it even more plainly.
Where can you evidence a mental state absent a brain?
Probably because certain blind squirrels have somehow achieved 20/20 vision.
It’s not a category error. It’s quite accurate. A brain state is simply whatever it is. Knowledge of it can occur in different ways. Lots of folks are insisting that the brain state and the ‘mental’ state are one and the same. If that were the case then, first of all...we would all have some manner of intimate acquaintance with whatever it is that a brain state is from the point of view of a brain state...and secondly...mental states would simply not exist. IOW…one event cannot have two categories. For the irredeemably ignorant…there is a very simple reason that we have two words for what happens. It is because two very different things happen.
…otherwise why would we have two words to represent it?
A mental state is a state of meaning. Meaning exists. This is evidenced by every single moment of your existence. Only a complete idiot would argue that you are not something…not just more…but monumental orders of magnitude more…than mere brain states (one need look no further than the threads here at ISF to explore the all-but infinite range of activity that human nature involves). Even the simple act of describing something as a brain state or biochemical activity is itself evidence of of an entirely 'other' variety of thing.
Biochemical activity does not have the ability to describe itself as something.
Is this supposed to be profound or something????
That we cannot establish its existence independently of a brain state neither confirms that it does not exist independently of brain states nor does it confirm that it does not have a differentiated ontology. It simply means that we cannot yet establish its existence independently of brain states. These facts should come as no surprise given how blindingly rudimentary our understanding of these phenomena actually are. I think it is worth repeating that no one…absolutely no one…has a freakin clue how the physical activity of the brain generates consciousness. Nor does there exist anything remotely resembling an empirically definitive understanding of what consciousness (…’it’…) even is.
…and yet you continuously trot out these stawmen claiming that our inability to locate consciousness independently of brain activity closes the book on so many massive questions of cognitive neuroscience. Is it really necessary to point out how stupidly premature such conclusions are?
Why not?
there does not have to be a singular scientific answer - but 'risk' can always be expressed as cost and utility - so yes I can envision science deriving several answers to #2 - and this in part is accomplished by elevating values to something real
Here’s a thought tsig…the next time you pick up a handful of leaves, why don’t you ask them why they don’t have the ability to describe themselves as something. How long will it be before you have to accept that you will not be getting an answer from the pile of leaves. Why is it do you suppose you will not be getting an answer from the pile of leaves?
oh, oh ,oh. I know, I know..Here’s a thought tsig…the next time you pick up a handful of leaves, why don’t you ask them why they don’t have the ability to describe themselves as something. How long will it be before you have to accept that you will not be getting an answer from the pile of leaves. Why is it do you suppose you will not be getting an answer from the pile of leaves?
I know you cannot see it. One thing that is interesting about these "Mind States" is that not everyone has the same level of complexity of Mind States.I cannot see science coming up with ANY answers to #2.
er what?Not that science cannot provide information, some of which might be extremely relevant. But there are a vast range of variables (one of which is the very real limits of what science can evaluate) that can only be effectively adjudicated in reference to qualitative conditions that ONLY experienced human nature has the capacity navigate.
Oh, sure, I agree with that bit.
But I can't figure out what a falsifiable scientific answer to my question #2 would even look like. A lot of history is, after all, one-off judgement calls based on ever-changing value systems/rankings.
What do you think science says is the answer to #2?
Just a formality: #2 is a question. It does not have to and cannot be falsifiable. Any answer can, and that is not hard. One could weigh the chances of immigrants becoming terrorists against the risk of terrorism if refugees are not accomodated. Obviously such a prediction would be falsifiable. Or as to public sentiment, one could make a poll.
Not hard at all.
Hans
I'm sorry, I won't have time to participate further for the next several days. Travelling to visit family during Xmas.
Hans
So basically you're dropping all pretense that "skepticism" is actually a quality to strive for and are just gonna use it as an open ended backhanded insult.
Yes he spoke like a true skeptic. He didn't let you shift the burden of proof or special plead your argument.
But maybe you can explain Nick's argument to me. why is an 'I' or "mind" necessary for the scientific method?