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#181 (permalink) | ||
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Boult ![]() I am a CI Borg, Proud to be and loving it!MYTHS AND LIES ABOUT CI / New Chat Rooms Social / Paleo and Primal Lifestyle / Get a Mac Quote:
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#182 (permalink) | |||||||||||||||
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Since there is no evidence for Satan out there in the physical world, the only place we know where Satan is is in the realm of what's stored in the neural networks in people who say they believe in Satan. Quote:
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#183 (permalink) | ||||||||||||||
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You take an argument that reminds me of the philosopher Hume, assuming that the material is all that you can prove exists...however, I take an approach that is more like Déscartes: the one certainty I start with is the existence of my soul--my emotions, the "subjective" experiences, and I work out from there. For me the subjective--what cannot be proven through material, scientific processes, is the one thing I CAN be certain of. On a very simple matter, how do I know that what I think of as the color red is the same thing that you think of as red? You can measure the frequency of red light--but how do I know that the way you experience it as the same? It was Déscartes who started from this point and also attempted a proof of God's existence. There's debate over how well HIS proof is done, but it gets closer to the way I approach it than St. Anselm's proof. To compare and contrast if you're curious: Descartes Hume This is one of the most fundamental divisions in philosophy and I suspect it's one that lies at the root of our differences with each other. I should note that while to me it is unprovable, I have faith in the existence of the material world and that's why I act in a way that avoids denying it. ![]() I believe there is a spirit that interacts with the body and causes the neural firings that you can measure. I do not see the brain as the repository of self, but rather acting as a transceiver or transformer (like the kind for electricity) between the physical and spiritual. It is the place where the physical and spiritual meet. We are not aware of this divide under normal circumstances because of the immersive nature of sensory input. You could also see it this way: that I (spirit) am like the user of a computer (brain/body). You're sitting there and typing, and in the same way, the spirit is manipulating the physical body. But it works like this: I wish to do something, and it's like typing a command into a computer, which responds to the command. The computer (body) may also be receiving inputs from outside (think of an Internet cable, for instance)...these would be our senses. The computer must filter the input it receives and display it to the user (spirit) in a form he or she can handle. In this way the brain both organizes and filters what one perceives in order to prevent overload to the finite (and as I see it, flawed) spirit. Physical damage to the brain has effects like damage to a computer--imagine a computer with a short circuit. In the case of the brain, this could be something like Alzheimer's, or schizophrenia. The spirit is fully, completely intact, as I see it--but receiving faulty input from the outside world, which leads to inappropriate responses (or inability to respond entirely, depending on how bad the damage is). This conception of the body and spirit thus allows for BOTH what a doctor would say about a psychological problem and what a minister would say. It also provides a simple solution (the drawn-out explanation is my fault!) to issues like near-death experience that I think fits Occam's Razor; it allows both elements (physical and spiritual) to fit simply and neatly together. Quote:
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But...leave it to me, I made a typo! I should have said, St. Anselm's ONTOLOGICAL Argument. My bad!!! This page will give you a look at the various ontological arguments out there: http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/on...cal-arguments/ Be forewarned, it's a LOT of reading! It doesn't do a good job on St. Anselm's argument, though. This one is interesting, though, and also shows you some of the criticisms of the argument (in interest of fairness): http://www.iep.utm.edu/o/ont-arg.htm There's one thing about St. Anselm's argument that intrigues me, in spite of my doubts that it's the best one. I'm not sure how to articulate it, but there is something in it that reminds me of calculus every time I read it, and of trying to understand the concept of limits. And for me, any mirroring of a spiritual argument in the physical world gets my attention and makes me look again (considering that I treat both places as valid sources of information). The general type belonging to St. Anselm's argument is a reductio ad absurdum--basically, negative reasoning: it attempts to show that the alternative (that there is no God) is logically unacceptable. Parts of my own argument (WHY do I post so late at night to where I'm too tired to type it out?) are negative reasoning, as well. Quote:
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It raises another interesting question, about the meaning of God's name according to the Old Testament: "I AM". Just sit there and think about that one for a minute...pretty deep for something set in writing that long ago, for people who did not understand the concept of either zero OR of infinity. Quote:
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#184 (permalink) | |||||||||||
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He hates gay people and does things like protest at every performence of the play inspired by Matthew Stepherd's death. He also protested at Ground Zero after 9/11 and tried to stop the rescue of people because he believed that it was their fault that America was attacked because they were supportive of gay people. ![]() Here's a page about him. Quote:
We could also measure the firings of the neurons that are invovled with seeing color. Doing such measurements would bring what only philosophy covered into the realm of science. Quote:
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With this kind of arugment, anything could be imagined into existence. I define the most perfect monster as a monster that exists and that we can fully imagine, without being able to imagine anything more perfect. Therefore that monster exists. We'll hope that the monster I imagined into existence is a good monster if it exists on this planet. The most perfect anvil is an anvil that exists above somebody's head and can be imagined and has nothing more perfect than it that can be imagined. So that anvil exists somewhere. Let's hope it's not over our heads. Quote:
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Things encoded in a neural network are another matter. It doesn't have to correspond to reality. It's called imagining things or making up things. If it is said that the spiritual realm can tinker with the neural network to create ideas, then what are the mechanisms of such interactions. Since the brain is a physical thing, we could figure out what bumps into what when the spiritual realm does its thing with brains. Nobody had found anything out of the ordinary in brains yet, so what is being done is figuring out how things are encoded in the neural network, because we know the network exists. Quote:
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#185 (permalink) | |||||||||||||
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Like I said, I didn't think it was the BEST argument out there--the reason I posed it was because of the "God in one's head" comment you made...it just reminded me of this. Quote:
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I actually wrote a sci-fi fanfiction once where there was a weapon based on that premise, and the effect of that weapon's discharge was something like an EMP for the brain (for lack of better words), and resulted in death to any living thing exposed and disrupted long enough...not a pleasant weapon to contemplate, that's for sure. Quote:
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#186 (permalink) | ||||||||||
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It's interesting how Kant said that existence shouldn't be considered a great-making property. Before other great-making properties can be assigned to something, existence must be presupposed. So it's not proper to consider existence a great-making property because existence isn't really a property. Here's what one of the sites says about it: Quote:
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#187 (permalink) | ||||||||
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![]() In physical science we have to stick to the physical world--but, it doesn't mean other things can't be there. That's the main point I'm trying to make. Quote:
), how am I to know that if I were to process input through your brain rather than mine (and somehow be able to compare the two experiences), that you experience "red" in the same way that I do? For all I know, you could experience "red" as what I would call blue...but since all you would've ever heard it called is "red", you would've learned that word for the concept.Quote:
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#188 (permalink) | |||||||
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We enjoy helping our families even if our family would one day no longer exist. We also enjoy helping our communities even when they one day will be in ruins. There's no reason not to enjoy life and help others now and in the near future, even when none of that will be around in the far future. |
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#189 (permalink) | ||||||
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![]() I do notice a neat statement in here that lines up with the point I was making: ""St. Irenaeus of Lyons was the final major theologian of the second century. He writes "the Father is God, and the Son is God, for whatever is begotten of God is God." [emphasis added]" This is what I was trying to get at, put more elegantly than I did. Quote:
But if one does take that path, is enjoyment or satisfaction the end to which one should strive in life? If so, then what if one determines that their satisfaction comes through something that is hurtful to others? |
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#190 (permalink) | |
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David Hume never said that "the material is all that you can prove exists." Given that he was a mitigated skeptic, even "materialism" or matter was not free from his skepticism. As for Anselm's specious argument, the best counter argument is Kant's insight that existence is not a predicate, not a property. An example might do Kant's dense philosophy justice: let's say I get a bonus from my boss, plenty enough to spring for a sparkling new 2007 Lamborghini Gallardo. My nosy neighbor wanders over and admires my new toy. I start bragging to him about all the equipping: 520bhp V10 manual engine, the Lamborghini multimedia system, the Callisto steering wheel, rack and pinion power assisted steering, ABS power brakes, fog assistance driving lamps, touring suspension, and one final, most important thing. Of course, the neighbor couldn't hold back his curiosity and inquired about the mysterious final thing. I replied, "Well, that cost me extra, but what the heck. It ....EXISTS!!!!"
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#191 (permalink) |
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The Heretic--
I see what you're saying about Hume. However, would you say that in the vast preponderence of cases, Hume would have gone with the material over the spiritual/emotional/theological? Or would he have suggested the idea that perhaps nothing exists at all? I'm not trying to pick at you, I just want to dig further with this. Oh, and just so you don't misunderstand, I didn't think Anselm's argument was a flawless thing at all--I've just been trying to figure out exactly where the breakdown is. That's included a certain amount of devil's advocacy in this thread. |
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#192 (permalink) | ||
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Hume was a thorough-going empiricist who claimed that all we can every have direct access is to our own experience, but this remains permanently inside of us, and that there is no way to demonstrate the validity of inferences from it to the existence of a world separate from us and outside of us in space. IOW, we can never prove the existence of the external world. The arguments of the skeptic, according to Hume, are valid, that we cannot validate the existence of the external world by experience or by logic. Quote:
Perish the thought! ![]() Hume knew that even though we can never prove that there is an external world, we cannot prevent ourselves from believing in the existence of an external and material world. Even though Hume claims that the skeptic is right, he also pointed out that the skeptic is correct only theoretically - his arguments are valid, but it is impossible to live as an skeptic, and carry on life without doing things that involve making choices and decisions, and they are based on the beliefs about our situation. Where Hume is at his best is his relentless demolition of things we have taken for granted - his sophisticated and powerful arguments demonstrate that, besides the inability to prove the external world, neither can we validate the existence of causality, inductive logic is impossible, our existence as continuous selves a mere figment of our intellect, and the existence of God is doubted. His witty, stylish, yet modest writings, totally serious yet unpretentious and deeper than almost all other philosophers, penetrate uncannily into the nooks and crannies of our beliefs and pries them apart. He does in fact, succeed in showing that almost everything we believe or take for granted is not know and cannot be known. Ever since Hume, we can never use the word "proof" in human life outside of mathematics. But remember this - Hume never said that the common sense world we take for granted does not exist, but that we cannot validate the existence of the world by rational demonstration or argument.
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As we learned about the world, we've found that the end is likely to lie in the far future. We're not ignoring it because we know that our genes and memes would get diluted or changed. That is beyond our control. The drive to help others is primary for the people living now and in the near future, when things would still be familiar to us. The world of the far future would seem different enough so there is less feeling of connection. We would still have a low-level connection to the people of the far future, because they'd still be people even if their cultures and gene pools would be different. So, we'd still help them in a basic, but important way, by doing things like reducing pollution to leave them a cleaner planet. That world would belong to the people of that time, not us or descendants we would recognize as members of our families and cultures. If they face the end of humanity, it'd not be a problem for our family lines and cultures because those things would be greatly changed or gone by then. There doesn't have to be an end-purpose for humanity, except to survive for as long as possible. It may be sad that humanity will end, but not too sad because, here, it says that over 99 percent of species that ever existed on Earth are already gone. Extinction isn't really unusual in geological time. We'd just be joining the ranks of the 99 percent already extinct. We can create our own purposes for humanity through things like culture, which includes religion, althrough some religions could make their followers think that the religion dictates the only true purposes of life to hold onto followers to aid its survivial as a memeplex. If we feel good about doing things hurtful to others, of course, the others would want to stop us and would try if they could. |
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#194 (permalink) | ||||
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Yet often I see atheists (maybe not you in particular, but I've seen this in other forums) make the accusation that those of us who believe are essentially deceiving ourselves in suggesting that there is a higher purpose to things. This is sometimes used as the launching pad for an attack on the intellect of believers (that we must be inferior somehow). What I am trying to say is that if the atheist believes it necessary to create a purpose that is not real--that is to say, not an inherent property of the universe--then one cannot distinguish oneself from believers in that one is somehow more grounded in reality than the other. I know I'm not going point-by-point with each paragraph you wrote, but I think this will suffice. |
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#195 (permalink) | ||||
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This is probably the clearest explanation I've ever seen of Hume, if that last question proves I've followed you correctly. |
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#196 (permalink) | |||||
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I did some thinking on creating purposes. What sorts of purposes are these? A lot of purposes seem to be aids to survival of the indivdual or to the culture. Quote:
As an example, art allows the expression of emotions. Depending on the artwork, it could express emotions and values that are basic to a culture and therefore to the survivial of that culture. Good examples of this would be Christian artwork and Communist artwork. Such artwork were sponsored by institutional powers. Art made by indivduals expressing their emotions and values seem to come from times when society went through changes, like with Dada art after World War I. This helped people to cope with the changes that were happening at the time. Being more grounded in reality would mean not assigning a purpose as a fundamental property to the universe. Admitting that one's purposes in life is not tied to the nature of the universe to such a high degree, like physics is, is being more realistic. If there are any created purposes of life that are not based in some way on surviving, then such things may be self-deception, but at least they won't be tied tightly to the universe or seen to be more important than they really are to the universe at large. |
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#197 (permalink) | ||||
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Although with the Trinity I'd suggest you have more of a synergistic effect rather than checks and balances with the government where the purpose is limitation of power rather than the multiplication of it--after all, you know what they say about absolute power, when it comes to human beings... ![]() Quote:
(Apologies to anybody upset by the mention of this. I do not advocate suicide in the least!) |
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#198 (permalink) | ||||
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I think that what everybody should do is enjoy our lives and not let the nature of the universe get them down. Most likely, everybody alive now will die before humanity becomes extinct, so it's not a immediate worry. It's not wasted energy to stay alive if it is done to enjoy life and to learn about all of those layers from you up to the universe and make what you would of it while you're still around. It is focusing on the part of time where you can do things within the systems you have access to, like your family or culture, instead of worrying about what would happen long after you are gone. Life is played out within those levels, not on the scale of the entire universe. It is not irrational to keep surviving within the contexts of those lower levels. Committing suicide would be a waste because it would stop you from doing those things. Dividing things in different levels doesn't mean that the higher levels like the universe are ignored all the time. We can still learn about them, as part of our enjoyment of life. We don't think about the higher levels sometimes because some of the activities in the lower levels don't need direct references to the higher levels. Playing a board game is enjoyable within the context of gaming and having fun with others and doesn't need a direct reference to how the Earth will end up getting fried by the dying sun. I think that maybe people get upset if they think that the universe might have no inherit purpose for people because they haven't thought of thinking about things as being in different levels and contexts. |
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#199 (permalink) | |||
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The trouble with your statement is, how do you account for those things corroborated by others who were not in the dead/out-of-body state, that the person knew about? Corroboration by others puts a clear time reference to an event, which can then be checked against medical records to see what the state of the body and brain was at the time. Quote:
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#200 (permalink) | ||||
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Thinking that this reality is ugly and without much meaning for humanity reminds me of Lovecraft stories, which I like to read. I don't think that humanity is trying to be stupid by ignoring its environoment. For thousands of years, people had been looking at what's in the sky and what's on Earth. We have missions in space just to find out about what's out there. Looking at what's up there makes me think of the many stars and galaxies out there and imagine what life is like on some of the planets out there. Humanity may disappear someday, but there'll be other planets and other civilizations. The universe is big enough to have plenty over the many trillions of years there will be stars to warm planets. Thinking about the vastness of the universe doesn't scare or horrify me. Instead, I find wonder in it. A nice way to experience this wonder is to look at sites like this one that shows things at different powers of ten for the spatial scales. The series of images covers 42 orders of magnitude. Life is found over 11 orders of magnitude and is closer to the smaller orders than the larger ones. I think that maybe there are different sorts of people, people who get scared by things from unfamilar scales like the vastness of the universe or the nondeterminate nature of quantum mechanics, and those who find wonder in those. |
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#201 (permalink) | ||||||
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![]() One interesting thing to detect would be some kind of physics-defying growth of new neural patterns. Not sure how you'd draw the line on what's so abnormal that it would have to be outside interference...plus I bet you'd only see that in the cases of the most extreme circumstances, but still, that may be one place to look. Quote:
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![]() Surely you have opinions about things that science can't back up? Quote:
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BTW, I've also tried to read Lovecraft. I wasn't really all that pleased with it, but he had an interesting mind, for sure. I think I prefer Poe when it comes to that kind of story. Quote:
However, to live in such a way where I thought that WAS all there was, nothing but the cold and the vacuum to look forward to in the end, and total nothingness--that is a very bleak look on life, and yet the only one available to a true realist (under an atheistic perspective) who strips away all of the mind games and compartmentalization. All other civilizations even past ours will inevitably come to an end and then the physical universe, leaving nothing. The end state of the universe is supremely relevant to what goes on before that time--it is what determines whether there is purpose or not. Whatever its sum total is in the end is paramount--if the universe is infinitely vast (or multiverse, even if this particular one is not), then there are only two ends...a positive or negative infinity. The negative one is quite simply intolerable and reduces everything to an exercise in futility. |
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The physics they are studying now may allow for more big bangs, so maybe when the universe is empty in the far future, there would be another big bang. How would the purpose of the universe be determined by what happens and how it ends? It doesn't have to have a purpose. What are the positive and negative sums for the end, do you mean infinite time? What's so intolerable about this negative infinity? A negative infinity of what? |
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#203 (permalink) | ||||||
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![]() I had always been used to living in city/suburban areas before I moved out to where I am now, and I am still amazed by the fact that even with the lights of my apartment complex, I can see the sword of Orion clearly on any cloudless night. You can't see that if you're near a large city or in a large town. It's amazing to me. Quote:
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Sorry for the delay...workweek from hell. |
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#205 (permalink) | |
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here my questions for you. Cheri!
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Therefore, Here I really hate to say that you don't know what heck God nor satan mean to you, Because you did not read scripture deeply. And you dont know me very well.... I aint blame you did not read scripture everyday and dont accurse you fingerpoint at me wrong person whom your being judge to...
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