Ian,
Don't be such a complete t*thead. Which is more likely to provide a correct definition of philosophical terms? Encyclopedias of philosophy, or some stupid a*seholes on the James Randi board such as you and Stimp. I think the answer is rather obvious
Such a pathetic strawman...
It is, stupid. It's so biased it looks like Pepsi vs Coke propaganda.
Take a look at this at the end of you little treasure:
"In this mood, materialists are prepared to deny what seem to be the most obvious facts of mental life if their theory requires it".
Yeah, that's a really good dictionary, really unbiased: "And now we finish our report about materialism. As you can see materialism is totally flawed and crazy. BTW, hello ma, hello dad! I'm on TV!".
you can't compare because the article I referenced scarcely said anything about eliminitivism at all. People would have to be literally insane to subscribe to elimintivism. There's a simple refutation - "I think therefore I am"
It's an incomplete and misleading definition. And your refutation only adresses a false idea of eliminativism. Cheers!
I said it, and you have read it. Eliminativism discards "folk psychology". They declare our ideas about our mental life invalid and primitive, and vindicate neuroscience as the correct aproach to study it.
They DENY our prejudices. The DO NOT DENY the phenomena that gave origin to folk psychology. Will you accept it, or you will tell everybody again what's their position?
I do not understand, however, how the second definition differs from reductive materialism. I was thinking that on reading it, and lo and behold, it mentioned that very fact in the next paragraph! So it seems to me that eliminitivism generally refers to the first definition.
Great. You read two definitions and just accept the one you feel you can attack easier, discarding the other. Don Interesting Quixote.
About William Lycan and George Pappas article; so what? Some philosophers also consider that reductionism, functionalism, and eliminativism are equivalent positions expressed in different language games, and I tend to accept their arguments.
Yes that's right. Materialists have to reject the existence of the abstract concept of a number. More generally mathematics is something which is invented rather than discovered. How many mathematicians agree with this? About 1% of them?? LOL
Oh, you are too good with evil materialist...Materialists even reject any transcendental difference between "discover" and "invent". At information level, the correspondence of a set of symbols with an hypothetical reality does not afect the process of information creation.
What??? How the f*ck does all this sh!t establish numbers are information?? You've just rejected their existence, so how the f*ck can they possibly be information??
As usual, you confuse a disagreement in a definition with a rejection of existence.