UndercoverElephant
Pachyderm of a Thousand Faces
- Joined
- Jan 17, 2002
- Messages
- 9,058
Does anyone understand the point in this thread yet?
The materialists first, and greatest hurdle to jump, is the emergent property we call "life".Therefor, yes.
The materialists first, and greatest hurdle to jump, is the emergent property we call "life".Therefor, yes.
If you'd read even a quarter of my posts, you wouldn't need to ask the question. Either ask a sensible question or stop posting in this thread. If you don't know why it's a stupid question then read the last three pages again.
Does anyone understand the point in this thread yet?
But it is only now that I am seeing signs of it actually happening.
And I kept telling you I agreed, and that the problem was the claim of physicalism and the confusion about the status of "being".
Perhaps we are discussing the ontology of straw.Once again, this is your strawman, hamme.
Accepting that you are a "live, conscious, human" discussing HPC subtleties using emergent property HPC is a large part of the various disagreements and misunderstandings now in progress.What hurdle? Where's the problem?
BTW, if Tao is coherent, Atman=Brahman, neutral monism and objective idealism are saying most if not all of the same things.
So to go back to two weeks ago...
Why is Husserl's mathematisation of nature important?
Because Husserl is trying to get people to understand the ontological error which is made when you get the noumenal world mixed up with the physical world.
Correct. Brain processes are neccesary but insufficient conditions for minds.
Because... I think something is missing here.
It might be a mistake to call it a "chair" at all.
The whole of this thread has been an attempt to explain what is missing. Brain processes aren't are sufficient cause of anything existing because brain processes are an abstraction of something existing in the world of experience. Abstractions cannot be fundamental existents.
Ahhh, there is hope. Now you are getting my point, even if you are not aware of it. You introduce false problems talking about "two" things (P1 and P2) and then stating that they should be different. What if both P1 and P2 are the same thing?
This has been one of my points since the beginning. I chose to say that "chair" is the same as the noumena.
Ok, Im not following. So brain processes are abstractions of "something else"... implicit dualism?
Also, would you say that brain processes are physical (whatever that means) but the "something else" is not? Can you rephrase?
Now if you'll just agree 100% eliminative materialism floats your boat, kudos on your ability to take a logical position.I'm sorry. I must have missed the post where you actually identified an ontological error and provided evidence that it was, in fact, an error.
They can't be the same thing. The external-to-mind cause of your experiences of a chair cannot be the internal-to-mind experiences of a chair. Think about it.
Agreed!!! But it is JUST because you are still using a dualist language to express a monist intuition!
The secret lies in the "external-internal" words. I see a chair. Where is "outside" of this? Whats "internal" about it!?