Opposite of epiphenomenon, experience is the necessary and sufficient condition for all phenomena. To know that is true, apply the method of doubt.Harry Baird wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 10:47 amYou're not happy with the proof that seems to have been intended in the final two sentences?
I understand the proof to be something like this:
1 (Premise). Meat machines do not experience.
2 (Premise). We experience.
3 (Conclusion from 1 and 2). We are not meat machines.
It's fine as far as it goes, but given Belinda's additional premise that we lack free will, it implies an epiphenomenal view of consciousness ("experiencing"), which is provably false - see the 2011 Exit Epiphenomenalism: The Demolition of a Refuge article by Titus Rivas and Hein van Dongen.
Christianity
Re: Christianity
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Harry Baird
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Re: Christianity
Immanuel Can wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 1:11 pmThat’s kind of proof positive that ol’ BM doesn’t know anything about Christians…or Taliban, possibly. There’s certainly a whole lot of facts missing from that kind of an assessment. Like, all of them.
It seems that, like Big Kev, BigMike is EXCITED.
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Harry Baird
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Re: Christianity
You believe we lack free will. How, then, can consciousness be anything other than epiphenomenal?Belinda wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 1:40 pmOpposite of epiphenomenon, experience is the necessary and sufficient condition for all phenomena. To know that is true, apply the method of doubt.Harry Baird wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 10:47 am It's fine as far as it goes, but given Belinda's additional premise that we lack free will, it implies an epiphenomenal view of consciousness ("experiencing"), which is provably false - see the 2011 Exit Epiphenomenalism: The Demolition of a Refuge article by Titus Rivas and Hein van Dongen.
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Re: Christianity
I'm only the messenger, but I'll take that medal (cuz I have so few)...Hq, it's my turn to award you first prize, but, alas, I don't have access to the medal icon, so you're going to have to imagine it right HERE => [super-duper first place medal icon awarded to hq]
Well, it's a little bit more than the whole hard determinism / free will denial gig. We pretend to be more than meat machines while bein' nuthin' more than meat machines, that's the claim. We yearn to be more. But, if we're meat machines, how can we pretend and yearn and love and hate and understand and imagine and...?Indeed, the whole hard determinism / free will denial gig is an unmitigated debacle, as your transcript aptly reveals.
I posted the whole piece several times in different threads. Haven't had any real disputin' of it. Folks just ignore it or dismiss it. I'm not expectin' a different response here.
Last edited by henry quirk on Tue Aug 23, 2022 1:53 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Christianity
'Consciousness' is not a good substitute for 'experience'. 'Consciousness' implies a conscious subject a self, whereas experience does not imply self. The experience of self is a phenomemon among other phenomena. Since there are no selves there can't be selves that have Free Will, as Free Will pertains to selves.Harry Baird wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 1:45 pmYou believe we lack free will. How, then, can consciousness be anything other than epiphenomenal?Belinda wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 1:40 pmOpposite of epiphenomenon, experience is the necessary and sufficient condition for all phenomena. To know that is true, apply the method of doubt.Harry Baird wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 10:47 am It's fine as far as it goes, but given Belinda's additional premise that we lack free will, it implies an epiphenomenal view of consciousness ("experiencing"), which is provably false - see the 2011 Exit Epiphenomenalism: The Demolition of a Refuge article by Titus Rivas and Hein van Dongen.
Re: Christianity
That's your claim.We pretend to be more than meat machines while bein' nuthin' more than meat machines, that's the claim.
It's not even worth disputing.I posted the whole piece several times in different threads. Haven't had any real disputin' of it. Folks just ignore it or dismiss it. I'm not expectin' a different response here.
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Harry Baird
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Re: Christianity
That's it!henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 1:52 pmI'm only the messenger, but I'll take that medal (cuz I have so few)...Hq, it's my turn to award you first prize, but, alas, I don't have access to the medal icon, so you're going to have to imagine it right HERE => [super-duper first place medal icon awarded to hq]![]()
Right, right. A machine doesn't experience, and thus cannot yearn (etc), nor even imagine experiencing, since imagining is a type of experience in the first place, which it (by definition) lacks access to.henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 1:52 pmWell, it's a little bit more than the whole hard determinism / free will denial gig. We pretend to be more than meat machines while bein' nuthin' more than meat machines, that's the claim. We yearn to be more. But, if we're meat machines, how can we pretend and yearn and love and hate and understand and imagine and...?Indeed, the whole hard determinism / free will denial gig is an unmitigated debacle, as your transcript aptly reveals.
I get it. Some dogmas are too hard for folk to confront, even when it's for their ultimate benefit.henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 1:52 pm I posted the whole piece several times in different threads. Haven't had any real disputin' of it. Folks just ignore it or dismiss it. I'm not expectin' a different response here.
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Harry Baird
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Re: Christianity
Oh, good Lord, let's not get into the "no self" nonsense, but feel free to substitute "experience" back in for "consciousness", and then answer the question.Belinda wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 1:52 pm'Consciousness' is not a good substitute for 'experience'. 'Consciousness' implies a conscious subject a self, whereas experience does not imply self. The experience of self is a phenomemon among other phenomena. Since there are no selves there can't be selves that have Free Will, as Free Will pertains to selves.Harry Baird wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 1:45 pmYou believe we lack free will. How, then, can consciousness be anything other than epiphenomenal?
Re: Christianity
Your objection is a worthy objection. Please let me try again.henry quirk wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 1:52 pmI'm only the messenger, but I'll take that medal (cuz I have so few)...Hq, it's my turn to award you first prize, but, alas, I don't have access to the medal icon, so you're going to have to imagine it right HERE => [super-duper first place medal icon awarded to hq]
Well, it's a little bit more than the whole hard determinism / free will denial gig. We pretend to be more than meat machines while ben' nuthin' more than meat machines, that's the claim. We yearn to be more. But, if we're meat machines, how can we pretend and yearn and love and hate and understand and imagine and...?Indeed, the whole hard determinism / free will denial gig is an unmitigated debacle, as your transcript aptly reveals.
I posted the whole piece several times in different threads. Haven't had any real disputin' of it. Folks just ignore it or dismiss it. I'm not expectin' a different response here.
What happened in the past necessarily happened, same as for machines. What will happen in the future is potential only. Machines' potential is nothing more than what they have done in the past and they themselves can't change or adapt. But beings that are more than their histories can adapt and change.
How are humans more than their histories? One, humans have memories. Two, humans know they will die. This ability to look to a limited future plus memory is all that's needed for humans to have intentions towards their futures and there is no need for anything further named 'Free Will'.
Re: Christianity
If you don't understand the important theory of existence named Absolute Idealism, in its eastern or western tradition, then that's your loss.Harry Baird wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 2:02 pmOh, good Lord, let's not get into the "no self" nonsense, but feel free to substitute "experience" back in for "consciousness", and then answer the question.Belinda wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 1:52 pm'Consciousness' is not a good substitute for 'experience'. 'Consciousness' implies a conscious subject a self, whereas experience does not imply self. The experience of self is a phenomemon among other phenomena. Since there are no selves there can't be selves that have Free Will, as Free Will pertains to selves.Harry Baird wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 1:45 pm
You believe we lack free will. How, then, can consciousness be anything other than epiphenomenal?
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Harry Baird
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Re: Christianity
Understanding and agreement are two different matters, which you seem to be conflating. But if you're incapable of answering the question, then I guess that's... my loss too?Belinda wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 2:06 pmIf you don't understand the important theory of existence named Absolute Idealism, in its eastern or western tradition, then that's your loss.Harry Baird wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 2:02 pmOh, good Lord, let's not get into the "no self" nonsense, but feel free to substitute "experience" back in for "consciousness", and then answer the question.Belinda wrote: ↑Tue Aug 23, 2022 1:52 pm
'Consciousness' is not a good substitute for 'experience'. 'Consciousness' implies a conscious subject a self, whereas experience does not imply self. The experience of self is a phenomemon among other phenomena. Since there are no selves there can't be selves that have Free Will, as Free Will pertains to selves.
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Re: Christianity
Phyllo,
*
Nope. You need to review up-thread.That's your claim.
*
See, Harry? Dismissal.It's not even worth disputing.
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Harry Baird
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Re: Christianity
How odd. I think we need to inquire further. On what basis is it "not even worth disputing"? Apparently, not because it upends your interlocutor's worldview, so... does he already agree with it? Is it consistent with his worldview? If so, how and why? (You can probably think up even more probative questions...).
Re: Christianity
All 416 pages?Nope. You need to review up-thread.
You're the one who keeps using the phrase "meat machines".
You're then one who keeps saying that "meat machines" want more.
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Re: Christianity
B,
Your post is off target. You miss, by a mile, the point of my post.
Here's the juicy bit, again...
The universe is nothing but particles. All those particles follow laws of motion. They aren’t free. The brain is made up entirely of those same particles. Therefore, there is nothing in the brain that would give us freedom. These particles also don’t understand anything, they don’t make sense of anything, they don’t grasp the meaning of anything. Since the brain, again, is made up of those particles, it has no power to allow us to grasp meaning or understand anything. But we do understand. We do grasp meaning. Therefore, we are talking about qualities we possess which are not made out of energy. These qualities are entirely non-material.
You say...
Your post is off target. You miss, by a mile, the point of my post.
Here's the juicy bit, again...
The universe is nothing but particles. All those particles follow laws of motion. They aren’t free. The brain is made up entirely of those same particles. Therefore, there is nothing in the brain that would give us freedom. These particles also don’t understand anything, they don’t make sense of anything, they don’t grasp the meaning of anything. Since the brain, again, is made up of those particles, it has no power to allow us to grasp meaning or understand anything. But we do understand. We do grasp meaning. Therefore, we are talking about qualities we possess which are not made out of energy. These qualities are entirely non-material.
You say...
Again, I ask...One, humans have memories. Two, humans know they will die. This ability to look to a limited future plus memory is all that's needed for humans to have intentions towards their futures and there is no need for anything further named 'Free Will'.
*conglomerations of particles that don't, cannot, understand, make sense of, grasp meaning, etc.if we're *meat machines, how can we pretend and yearn and love and hate and understand and imagine and...?