influence of thought
influence of thought
Think about not thinking about something. Is it still there?
Re: influence of thought
If the 'it' is in relation to the 'thing', which is being thought about not thinking about, then 'it' is still there.
For example, if I were to think about not thinking about 'an elephant', then, as long as 'that elephant' is one that exists somewhere, then 'it' is still 'there'.
But, maybe if you have 'another example', which I have not yet thought about, that shows and/or proves otherwise, or 'it' is not there, and you provide 'that example', then 'we' will have some thing to 'look at', and to 'discuss'.
For example, if I were to think about not thinking about 'an elephant', then, as long as 'that elephant' is one that exists somewhere, then 'it' is still 'there'.
But, maybe if you have 'another example', which I have not yet thought about, that shows and/or proves otherwise, or 'it' is not there, and you provide 'that example', then 'we' will have some thing to 'look at', and to 'discuss'.
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Impenitent
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commonsense
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Re: influence of thought
I guess I got confused between an objects referencing and the referenced…
If you have id(x) it represents what points to x
x is simply x itself
There should be a third “x.rep()” for what x represents
To compare and contrast a thought with thinking it
Because it’s not saying it that makes it true or false is the actual thing that it represents being true or false that matters
every algorithm is representative of some kind of entity
What are the similarities and differences between Boolean true and thought itself?
If you have id(x) it represents what points to x
x is simply x itself
There should be a third “x.rep()” for what x represents
To compare and contrast a thought with thinking it
Because it’s not saying it that makes it true or false is the actual thing that it represents being true or false that matters
every algorithm is representative of some kind of entity
What are the similarities and differences between Boolean true and thought itself?
Re: influence of thought
I mean if you keep adding more and more code until it reaches specified dimensions you’ve achieved the calculation of wonder, but the wonder itself is not calculating
You’d have to calculate calculation to extract it from what you are thinking of…
You’d have to calculate calculation to extract it from what you are thinking of…
Re: influence of thought
Yes, in what way dies it become “larger”Impenitent wrote: ↑Sat Sep 20, 2025 11:51 amcan you think of nothing? when you think of nothing once more, is it larger?
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Impenitent
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Re: influence of thought
I suppose that it is like infinityOllie.ha wrote: ↑Wed Sep 24, 2025 4:25 pmYes, in what way dies it become “larger”Impenitent wrote: ↑Sat Sep 20, 2025 11:51 amcan you think of nothing? when you think of nothing once more, is it larger?
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infinity = infinity + 1
nothing = nothing +1
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commonsense
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Re: influence of thought
On another thread a Forum member stated that infants have no thoughts. But maybe they do. Maybe they just don’t have the capacity to remember their thoughts. If an infant has no memory of a thought, there could not be an awareness that the thought had occurred. Fleeting awareness of a thought that occurs during the instant it occurs but disappears during the same instant, leaves no trace of occurring.
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Impenitent
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Re: influence of thought
I think memory is too large a claim... articulation sure, but I think the same memories of pain or discomfort exist in the same portions of the brain, it's just that the infant cannot articulate the thoughts (and through articulation, further categorization...)commonsense wrote: ↑Thu Sep 25, 2025 6:31 pm On another thread a Forum member stated that infants have no thoughts. But maybe they do. Maybe they just don’t have the capacity to remember their thoughts. If an infant has no memory of a thought, there could not be an awareness that the thought had occurred. Fleeting awareness of a thought that occurs during the instant it occurs but disappears during the same instant, leaves no trace of occurring.
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commonsense
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Re: influence of thought
Yes, but I think that articulation is hindered by lack of memory and lack of language, which depends in part on memory.Impenitent wrote: ↑Thu Sep 25, 2025 7:39 pmI think memory is too large a claim... articulation sure, but I think the same memories of pain or discomfort exist in the same portions of the brain, it's just that the infant cannot articulate the thoughts (and through articulation, further categorization...)commonsense wrote: ↑Thu Sep 25, 2025 6:31 pm On another thread a Forum member stated that infants have no thoughts. But maybe they do. Maybe they just don’t have the capacity to remember their thoughts. If an infant has no memory of a thought, there could not be an awareness that the thought had occurred. Fleeting awareness of a thought that occurs during the instant it occurs but disappears during the same instant, leaves no trace of occurring.
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Edit: actually I think I may be quibbling over semantics, and as such, I must agree with your comment.
Re: influence of thought
The brain degrades through lack of proper communication. Memory is all we have.