Rusty_the_boy_robot
Unregistered
R
Stimpson J. Cat said:Rusty,
That's fine, because that is a requirement for the scientific definition to be valid. Basically, science just rules out the possibility of physical stuff that cannot be observed or analyzed with the scientific method. This is not pertinent to the discussion, though, because what is in question here is not whether there are physical things that cannot be observed, but rather whether there could be non-physical things that can be observed.
I understand that. My point is that if A is defined to be physical, using that definition, then A must be causally closed. Win's assertion that A is not causally closed with respect to Ur is not compatible with the assertion that A is, in fact, the set of everything that is physical.
I'm not following this. It seems you are saying that the definition of physical is:
1) A cause
2) An effect
3) only interacts with other things that are both a cause and an effect.
If I have something that is a cause but not an effect then it has to cause something. So unless it is causing an effect that will have no cause then it must cause something physical.
What I mean is:
Assume that X occurs. X was not an effect (it was not caused) but it does cause Y to occur. Now if Y is an effect but if it does not cause something to occur then it is not physical. But if Y does cause Z then Y is physical, X is not, and Z is undecided at this time.
If this is the case then we can rule out the third clause above.
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We can theorize about anything. That is beside the point. In order for those theories to provide any actual knowledge, they must be testable. And that means that what is being theorized about must have some effect on stuff that can be observed. It must be physical.
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We can observe something that is an effect with no cause by observing an effect and seeing that there is no cause. I would assert that this is proven by Libertarian free will, but we would disagree.
We can observe something that is a cause but not an effect by demonstrating something occuring without any prior cause. I don't assert this, but that is what I demonstrated with my Rock theory. I theorized about a set B occurance, someone proved me wrong.
But these are not physical because they are not both a cause and an effect.
I don't see your point. If B is not also a cause, then no information about B can be inferred from observations in A. If B is truly just effect, and no cause, then we have no way of knowing it is there at all, much less anything about it.
Well in the smallest slice of time possible it would be there as an effect. But yeah, it doesn't seem like we will be 'discovering' any of these set B's any time soon. That isn't to say they can't exist though.
The only other possibility would be if the properties of B could be logically deduced from A. But this is exactly what is meant by "reducible to the physical". Furthermore, this possibility is rejected by property dualism.
I'm not sure what property dualism is. If we "reduce" the properties of B from A and somehow reach the conclusion that B will have no effect then we have somehow proven that B is not physical by definition. We have also proven that we need to rewrite physics. I'm not saying we need to though! I'm not asserting that set B exists. All I'm doing is presenting an argument that set B 'could' exist. So 'could' set A. If they did, then we certainly would need to change physics. This, ultimately, is why I would love to learn about QP. Maybe if I ate your brains...
I don't follow this reasoning at all. How can there be cause without effect, or effect without cause? What does that even mean?
You can assert that C causes both physical and phenomenal effects, but any causes in C that cause physical effects are, by definition, physical causes.
What do you mean phenomenal effects? I never claimed such things existed, that was Win.
I don't know how there could be effect without cause. I can assume that there must be something non-physical that can introduce new causal chains into the physical world (the "agent") but I don't know how that would happen. I'm hoping that I'll live long enough for someone to figure it out. Not likely.
Sure you are. The second definition above is just more restrictive than the first. If everything physical can be observed, directly or indirectly, then it must have an effect on things which can be observed.
Agreed. That is one reason why it is a pointless endeavor.
You can observe the effect but not the cause. Therefore the occurance is observable but it is not physical because it had no cause.
I would assert that everytime you make a decision you (in the "agent" sense) are ultimately introducing new uncaused-causal chains into the world. So I would assert that every decision is an observable occurance of set C.
I don't know how to set up an experiment to prove this true or false. Hopefully one day a man of science will come up with such an experiment. Until that time I have my reasons for believing that men have free will which leads directly to the valid conclusion that set C must exist.
If B is causally necessitated by A, then B is reducible to A.
If B does not causally necessitate anything, then it is meaningless to say it exists. What is the difference between something that exists, but has no effect on anything, and something that doesn't exist at all?
It exists but only for the smallest slice of time possible. After that time it ceases existing, hence it violates the laws of thermodynamics. I don't necessarily agree that set B exists, I'm just saying that it can. I don't know what consequences it would have. It certainly follows that things in set B (other then causing us to rewrite the laws of thermodynamics) would have no effect at all. That is not to say that they cannot happen, just that they would cease existing.
I'm not sure what Win would assert happens after that smallest slice of time where a set B occurance would exist.
A more accurate statement would be to say that it does not exist at all. You have just described B to literally be something that does not exist!
This is not true. There are all sorts of acausal events in the physical world. Thermodynamics says nothing about this. You have misunderstood thermodynamics.
One could say that all quantum events are set C. So what? This has no relevance to consciousness or free-will.
Really?!! That is what I am trying to understand! Because if set C can exist and the "agent" must be set C then the "agent" could, possibly, maybe exist! Too bad I can't just grok the essence of your brain. Perhaps I ought to just get some calculus and physics books and start learning. They do say that it's never too late!
But if set C exists then materialism is rendered false.
Our brains are physical things. The only source of information our brains have is our observations. Win has already stated that the information processing takes place in the brain, so the only information that "we" can process comes from our observations.
Please note that if you are endorsing a different type of dualism than Win, then responding to my comments to Win are just going to confuse the issue.
My apologies, I should have made it clear. I *believe* that I am endorsing a different type of dualism then Win.
This does not logically follow. On the contrary, even if physicalism is true, it is always possible to construct theories which cannot, even in principle, ever be falsified.
If it is possible to render everything to a state where it can be understood in principle then it logically follows that in principle it is possible to understand everything. It may not be possible, but in principle it is.
What would be an example of something you think we coudl not prove false even if we have rendered everything to a state where it can be understood then proceeded to understand it?
If set B has no effect on set A, then any theory about set B that makes predictions about set A can necessarily be split into two parts.
1) A theory which only makes reference to set A, and makes all the predictions about set A that the theory originally made.
and
2) A theory which makes no predictions about set A, but makes reference to set B.
The first part is falsifiable, but says noting about set B. The second part is unfalsifiable. Furthermore, since this split can be made, falsifying the first part does not falsify the second part.
In other words, if we had such a theory, and it was falsified, we could construct a new theory which makes exactly the same claims about the phenomenal world, but is consistent with our observations in set A.
If a set B item did occur, then in that smallest slice of time possible it occured. There it is, but in the next smallest slice of time possible it would not be there and would not have changed anything.
So if I assert that X occurs causing Y causing nothing you simply have to prove that Y did cause something, thereby making Y a physical thing.
Win seems to be asserting that X occurs causing Y AND Z. Y then causes A. So anything that you show occuring from Y/Z, Win will say that it was caused by Y not Z.
This is what the whole KA is about. We put everything A into a book, teach it to Mary, then do X to her and somehow she 'gains' Z.
This is what I am talking about. Even today you could claim that some sort of set B effect is present. There is just no longer any reason to think so.
I can never prove that there isn't something more to any given phenomenon than the physical. The thing is that once we get to the point of being able to completely describe everything about the phenomenon that we think there is, we no longer see any reason to imagine nonphysical stuff is present as well.
It is the classic argument from ignorance. As long as there is any aspect of consciousness that we don't completely understand in terms of physical descriptions, people will argue that there is something non-physical going on. But such a claim is pointless. If there is, we can never hope to explain it, and if there is not, we can never prove that there is not.
Dr. Stupid
I would agree that the set B things certainly appear pointless. But it is the set C things I am truly interested in.
Again I apologize for not making this clear at the onset and possibly just confusing the issue.
-Rusty