Z
Variable Constant
Seems to me this thread has gone a LONG way to say absolutely nothing of interest.
As the discussion is ontological, how can one deprecate that which does not exist?Sorry, it'll have to be you. I agree it follows that you never had an ontologically distinct mind, but I don't know why the linguistic trick of deprecating the word mind follows.
~~ Paul
Perhaps you should locate some religious people and chat with them about your concerns. There are damn few, if any, who post much here.Religious people are always trying to equate science with religion--so they can promote the two as being equal for finding "truth". ...
Look at t=0 big bang. If you accept a singularity, that I'd say is Geoff's zero. And sfaik, science today concludes that total energy content of 'what-is' is zero, gravity offsetting all other forces.
me said:The comparison of folk terms to phlogiston is misleading. Granted, there turned out to be no such thing as phlogiston. However, the problem that phlogiston was meant to solve was a real problem, and another solution was found. That solution happened not to be called phlogiston, whereas the solution to the sun appearing in the morning continued to be called the sunrise. There is no deep meaning to this difference. It is possibly due to phlogiston being a noun and sunrise being a verb.
An idealist would posit that awareness is all that is.The problem here comes from trying to put Awareness in the middle of the equation without probable cause.
I'd say "Thinking" appears to require idealism's awareness to provide some form of what is perceived as matter/energy, and some configurations that matter/energy can be arranged in provide awareness with more input/output (and, perhaps, processing) capabilities.Would you say that Awareness is all there is to idealism? Or is there more thinking involved in the process?
I find arguments that reductive materialism is just eliminative materialism in a different dress.
Hey, I just had a flash. Geoff has defined a sort of nonreductive neutral monism
, since Being doesn't reduce to Neutral or vice versa. So how is it different from nonreductive materialism? Just wondering.
~~ Paul
Interesting paper, Consciousness and the Limits of our Imaginations:
http://iteso.mx/~carlos/i m a g i n a/consciusnesslimitsofimaginations.pdf
~~ Paul
You reduce mind and matter to Being and Neutral, but Being and Neutral don't reduce to one another. So even if you claim you don't have dualism, you've got a nonreductive monism. Or doesn't Being count because it's nothing?Geoff said:I reduce mind and matter to neutral. I don't eliminate anything. The difference is my reduction works (logically) and the materialist's doesn't.
You reduce mind and matter to Being and Neutral, but Being and Neutral don't reduce to one another.
So even if you claim you don't have dualism, you've got a nonreductive monism. Or doesn't Being count because it's nothing?
~~Paul
The Behemoth still stirs....
Kevin,
I can't be bothered to have a p*ss*ng contest with you.
Does math exist if there is no awareness?Since when does zero in mathematics have the added property of awareness?