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Define Consiousness

Originally posted by BillHoyt

I'm not saying we know we can know everything.

My point was that we can't make claims due to our ignorance. You began to step onto those shifting sands when you wrote: "How many currently widely held conclusions were without evidence fifty or a hundred years ago?"
Without a doubt, your fallacy detector is calibrated to a very high degree of sensitivity, and having my thoughts tested by such an instrument is one reason I come here (I'd like to claim that it is the only reason, or at least the main reason, but it may be a bit more complicated than that). With such a sensitive instrument, however, the occasional false positive would not be unexpected, and I think that is the case here (...of course, I would).
...I am very comfortable in refuting your image of science not being a crystal chandelier hanging in the hall of truth. It most assuredly is.
I'd be more inclined to go with Sagan's candle metaphor myself, but your points are well taken. I don't see enough difference in our respective positions to justify arguing it any further here.
I think you misunderstood my comment about shooting fish in a barrel;
You're right. I did.
The price of the ruthlessness only seems high because you have not examined the price of wasting our time with stuff for which we have no evidence.
I have, though. I find it high as well -- higher, in fact, than being ruthless. I think we're pretty much in agreement on this.
 
BillHoyt said:
Goodbye, T'ai Chi. Even in a different guise, you're easy to spot as the a** you are. Welcome to my ignore list.

This is the Critical Thinking forum Bill. Tough questions get asked. People are requested to back up their claims when they make them. Therefore I'll repeat what you avoided answering:

You said: "I can probe your memory."

I said: "Could you explain how you plan on doing that?"

You: posted a link to that site

I: looked at that site, which cleary says the data for claims of probing memory is of poor quality

From the page:
(underline mine)


Firstly, the numbers are not impressive: in only 40 out of 1,132 cases did he find any memory recovery; excluding patients who heard only music or voices and those whose responses were too vague to classify, less than 3% of the patients experienced the "lifelike memories" for which Penfield's work is so famous.


and


Secondly, there was no attempt to check the veracity of the memories, and the patient protocols read like reconstructions, heavily based on inferences.


So, again, how does this back up your claim of being able to probe memory?

Just provide your explanation please, or provide additional data, without name calling, if you are able.

(also PM'd to Bill)
 
Originally posted by Dymanic re BillHoyt
Without a doubt, your fallacy detector is calibrated to a very high degree of sensitivity, and having my thoughts tested by such an instrument is one reason I come here (I'd like to claim that it is the only reason, or at least the main reason, but it may be a bit more complicated than that). With such a sensitive instrument, however, the occasional false positive would not be unexpected, and I think that is the case here (...of course, I would).
That was, um, polite, I guess. I know this "I" was amused to read it and then decided it warranted framing.

ME
 
T'ai Chi/Whodini/Sherlock Holmes/jzs -

You've been put on ignore. Any other of your sock puppets I identify will also be put on ignore.
 
BillHoyt said:
T'ai Chi/Whodini/Sherlock Holmes/jzs -

You've been put on ignore. Any other of your sock puppets I identify will also be put on ignore.

Sock puppets are against the rules:
7. You may only have one membership account. Multiple accounts (sock puppets) are not permitted.
Source

jzs,

Are you T'ai Chi/Whodini? Yes or no, please.
 
CFLarsen said:
Sock puppets are against the rules:
jzs,
Are you T'ai Chi/Whodini? Yes or no, please.
Why is that post appearing in this thread? Is there some evidence of sock-puppet behavior in the past few pages besides an apparently baseless accusation?


ME
 
BillHoyt said:
T'ai Chi/Whodini/Sherlock Holmes/jzs -

You've been put on ignore. Any other of your sock puppets I identify will also be put on ignore.

You are attempting to shift the focus, which will not be honored.

This is the Critical Thinking forum and the issue is you made a claim. Basically you have not addressed the question regarding the poor data your presented for evidence of your claim. If you cannot, or don't want to, then that's fine. If you actually have evidence for being able to probe memory, then please present it.

As far as "ignoring", one can track to see if PM's are read by the recipient..
 
Dymanic said:
Without a doubt, your fallacy detector is calibrated to a very high degree of sensitivity, and having my thoughts tested by such an instrument is one reason I come here (I'd like to claim that it is the only reason, or at least the main reason, but it may be a bit more complicated than that). With such a sensitive instrument, however, the occasional false positive would not be unexpected, and I think that is the case here (...of course, I would).
If you wish to claim a false positive, then please provide us more details on where you think you were going with your comments on science, errors and the incompleteness of science's knowledge.
I'd be more inclined to go with Sagan's candle metaphor myself, but your points are well taken. I don't see enough difference in our respective positions to justify arguing it any further here.
The point I'm making, and that was made by Sagan, is that the way to correct errors or to gain more knowledge of the universe is not to assume it or baldly assert it, but to run it through the same processes that have gotten us thus far. The processes of scientific inquiry, falsification, and intersubjective validation continue to prove themselves.
 
Reductionism 1 Life 0

~Life seems to stop studies of human consciousness, too! Ain't Science grand?

Any volunteers (as guinea pigs) to assist reductionists in their study of "consciousness"?
 
Originally posted by BillHoyt

If you wish to claim a false positive, then please provide us more details on where you think you were going with your comments on science, errors and the incompleteness of science's knowledge.
Guilty until proven innocent, eh?

"If you ain't a burglar, then where you goin' with that crowbar, boy?"
 
Dymanic said:
Guilty until proven innocent, eh?

"If you ain't a burglar, then where you goin' with that crowbar, boy?"

Uh, no, Dynamic. The question was rhetorical. The answer is: there is no place to go with it except to the ad ignorantium fallacy.
 
Originally posted by ByllHoit


Uh, no, Dynamic. The question was rhetorical. The answer is: there is no place to go with it except to the ad ignorantium fallacy.
You may be able to persuade me that this is the case. Here is my present position:

Where fundamental limits to knowledge exist, we stand to gain, not lose, from identifying them. Heisenberg uncertainty and Gödelian incompleteness are two examples of specific descriptions of such limits. There may be others yet unidentified. The proper application of these tools is something which must be evaluated on a case-by-case basis; their mere possession does not constitute prima facie evidence of intent to use them to argue from ignorance.
 
Dymanic said:
You may be able to persuade me that this is the case. Here is my present position:

Where fundamental limits to knowledge exist, we stand to gain, not lose, from identifying them. Heisenberg uncertainty and Gödelian incompleteness are two examples of specific descriptions of such limits. There may be others yet unidentified. The proper application of these tools is something which must be evaluated on a case-by-case basis; their mere possession does not constitute prima facie evidence of intent to use them to argue from ignorance.
The last sentence is the one where I see the problem again. First of all, I diid not assert anything about the "mere possession ot the 'tools.' The set up certainly is not the knowledge that there are things we don't yet know or even that there are things that we think we cannot know. The set up is to begin to argue for just about anything as a conclusion of that ignorance.ample:

If you were to say "we don't know whether we descended from Neanderthals or not, therefore we should invest more research funds on the issue," you would be making a reasonable and rational case.

Likewise, if you were to say "we don't know whether we descended from Neanderthals or not, and we have already spent $27m trying to find out, therefore we should not throw any more research funds down this black hole," you might also be making a reasonable and rational case.

If, on the other hand, you were to say "we don't know whether we descended from Neanderthals or not, therefore we must teach our children that the Old Testament's explanation is a viable, scientific one," you're engaging in the "Goddidit" thinking so often seen in Creationists. ("Goddidit" is nothing but the argument from ignorance.)

Transfer this to consciousness now, and say "we don't know how it is we are conscious, therefore there must be something immaterial involved." Why? There is no logic here. There is no epistemology here. Have we really exhausted material possibilities? One can hardly make a case for that. Is there any other real evidence in any other field of inquiry that supports such a conclusion? No. None. In fact, every line of inquiry in science for hundreds of years has continued to support a material universe. But suddenly we are to take this bizarre leap of faith and return to an anima/animus type of explanation? There's no support for it other than the beginning assertion: we don't know.

I don't know that you aren't actually George Bush. Wouldn't you and every reader of this forum mock the conclusion that you are? Why? You could be. The problem is, we know from everything else that we know we know that this is a highly unlikely conclusion. If we were totally ignorant of George Bush, but somewhat informed about basic probility and the earth's population, we must also laugh at that conclusion. There's no basis for it; it simply tries to leverage off ignorance.

So back to your previous post:
How many currently widely held conclusions were without evidence fifty or a hundred years ago?
Regardless of how many there may be, there were far far more wrong hypotheses that had to be tested before we could reach those new conclusions. Nearly each one was proposed tentatively. Most, nearly privately. Each with basis in fact, combined with some creative insight.

Let's take the biphospholipid basis of the cell's membrane. It was a bold hypothesis that would explain much that was then unknown about how cell walls worked. Was the original hypothesis based on bizarre speculation? No, it was based on a careful piecing together of research over time. It began in the thirties, when phospholipid behavior on water was first tested. We knew then that phospholipids were in the membrane and it was a natural test to se whether or not they could hold together a membrane. It worked. One problem: the surface tension was way too high. In the 50s biphosopholipid model was proposed. The research supported the model except that electron micrographs showed spaces that the model wouldn't predict. Back to the grind, and that grinding revealed embedded proteins, which would explain the spaces that the simpler model wouldn't explain.

Each step was painstakingly slow, with years in between steps. Each step was built by a small "what if" based on solid knowledge and a small part of the question. Each "what if" was based on knowledge from another area and asking if that operated here.

Simply jumping from "we don't know" to "therefore" gets nowhere. This is the fallacy; there is no basis for the therefore. And this is distinctly different from what happens in science. In science, we look at the materials we know that are in the body and ask "what combination, what processes, what interconnections are we missing in our quest to uncover the secrets of consciousness." Not "well, we don't know, so its a hard problem, so its probably fallen angels."

What evidence do we have that there is nothing that is fundamentally beyond our grasp?
 
hammegk said:
Reductionism 1 Life 0
What is that supposed to mean?

~Life seems to stop studies of human consciousness, too! Ain't Science grand?
What are those supposed to mean?

Any volunteers (as guinea pigs) to assist reductionists in their study of "consciousness"?
Been there, done that.

Got warp speed?

ME
 
CFLarsen said:
jzs,

Are you T'ai Chi/Whodini? Yes or no, please.


10/21/2004


Dear Mr. Larsen,

I have reviewed your off-topic post and I regret to inform you that I will only focus on issues of science and data. Please accept my best wishes for success in your search.

Sincerely,

jzs
 
Bill,

I appreciate you taking the time. I do have more thoughts on this, but am having a hard time finding a graceful way to link them to this thread's (purported) topic, and I'm afraid we may start getting complaints about the derail. It might make a decent thread in itself, and I might be inclined to start one after I have given it more thought. For the present, please consider my position on 'the limits of science' to be 'under review'.
 
Mr. E said:
What is that supposed to mean?

What are those supposed to mean?

Got warp speed?

ME

Yeah, those are a bit on the obtuse side.

Such is life -- choices, choices -- although that's no problem for materialists; all processes (including consciousness) are just random and/or algorithymic.
 
hammegk said:
Such is life -- choices, choices -- although that's no problem for materialists; all processes (including consciousness) are just random and/or algorithymic.
Materialists, in your view, have (or expect to have) full explanations for process but not the states which give anything meaning, such as the state of being conscious. "algorithymic"? What dialect is that from? Looks like a jazz pun on something perhaps like an appendix.


ME
 

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