You have missed the point. The boundaries you have just pointed out exist subjectively. The issue I am raising is the objective existence of such boundaries. As I have pointed out before, all these processes, a-d, mentioned above, do not exist as truly independent objective events. Their interactions will theoretically "leak" into adjacent matter thus obscuring the precise demarkation of where process X ends and process Y begins.
Wow, I do enjoy these chats but dude, either stop arguing from the materialist perspective or just say that you don't like it. The event of the photon reacting with the receptor does not leak anywhere.
I would be very grateful if you would explain that to me because I think that it shows your lack of belief in the material system. There is no theoretical leak into the interactions with the nearby receptors. the photon has a number of possibilities.
a. it interacts with space/time but not a receptor in the eye.
b.it interacts with the receptor in the eye, this bifurcates
i. it could be that it triggers a receptor response.
ii. it could be that it does not trigger a receptor response.
c. it interacts with the eye but not a receptor, say it strikes the sclera and raises its temperature.
In the case where the photon interacts with the recptor and triggers the receptor response, how does it leak? the photon does not cause other receptors to give a response. The photon briefly interacts with one receptor, please show me where there is leakage. Thanks, it sounds really cool.
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But all physical process are bound by the speed of light! There is still no justification for attributing an objective boundary between any two processes.
There certainly is, just because gravity is a pervasive force doesn't mean that there is a meaningful change when a reaction occurs in one beaker across the room from another beaker. Say i have some cations in solution in two seperate beakers. And I add some dogions to one of the beakers. While the dogs(anions) and cats react with each other to produce a more neutral state in the first beaker. How do they effect the second beaker? You saif earlier that they do, but how does that effect take place? Does it have a meaning, or is it just some abstract thingy ma bob?
How does this address the issue of objective boundaries ?
They exist, take planets there is a point in space where we can say that the atoms associated with Jupiter end, they do not flow over into the atoms of the asteroids. Some may be knocked out of Jupiters atmosphere but they are not like just hoppin over to the asteroids all the time. there has to be an influence that moves them.
indeed, I am saying there is a theorectical interaction between all matter across the universe. Is this not correct ?
Uh, dude you brought it up, why don't you explain it. As far as I understand it, no not all the particles in the universe are interacting with all the other particles in the universe. They can interact through forces and fiels which are commonly theorised to be further particles.
There is a gravitational interaction bounded by the speed of light, just as there is magnetic repulsion and elctro static forces.
Completely irrelavent to my point. The materialist posits that an experience has an objective reality in the form of a physical process. However, if there indeed is no such thing as two truly independent objective events and all matter is connected, then there seems no logical reason why experience should be attributable to a subset of physical processes occuring in the universe.
Could you show me where this majority of scientists say that physical boundaries don't exist. You are doing some sort of mish mash here, is this in the textbooks in the enginering labs? This is just
argument by assertion
and it earns you a Dull Dian point. This is
your assertion it is not a materialist assertion.
Indeed the materialistic interpretation gets more confused when we realise that it views the separation of physical processes as a subjective phenomena but then goes on to attribute this separation to an objective reality (experience) !
Nyet, that is just your idealist assertion about materialism, is is unfounded, undemostrated and unproved. I await the place where you show this to be a materialsit assumption. It is your assertion! Another Dull Dian point.
In a sense perhaps. There is already one physicist I know of who takes this notion seriously anyway.
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/tg/detail/-/0195145925/104-9664988-2675106?v=glance
I shall read and see, one you say?
Does the HIP impose an objective limitation on physical processes ? I don't think materialism would say yes to that.
Then you either don't talk to materialists or don't understand them. HIP sets a limit to the location of subatomic particle.
You don't think that materialism would say that? Then you aren't a materialist or you don't know what HIP really is as a construct. The fact that there is a negative reciprocal bewteen the certainty of vector and position does not give the particle free rein to roam the universe. It bounds the location of the particle.
(I shall answer these questions from the perspective of materialism)
no. But it will effect the objective nature of the interactions that are supposed to correspond to an experience. Hence, it is difficult to justify the objective separation between processes that are experiential and those that are not.
Only if you assert it, only the organic processes that lead to perception lead to an experience.
So are you saying that the photons that hit somebody else eye cause you to see?
snip
Of course materialsim posits an objective nature to experience ! That is the implicit subject of this thread ! There are problems with this view which I have tried to put across.
So far I would like to say that they are a misrepresentation of materialism. respectfully tendered.
I am in no way saying that a quasar should effect "your behaviour" because "your behaviour" is not a statement about the objective reality of the situation. "Your behaviour" imposes a subjective boundary which is not the issue. Unless I am mistaken, the quazar will effect the objective processes in your brain to a degree that is undetectable but theoretically should happen. The quazar will not effect "your behaviour" because this is an arbitrary subjective boundary.
No it will not effect my behavior because the weak gravitational, magnetic fields will not alter my brain chemistry.
Objective or subjective ? This is a very important distinction David.