Stimpson J. Cat
Graduate Poster
- Joined
- Sep 20, 2001
- Messages
- 1,949
Q-Source,
Sorry, I missed it. Do you mean this one?
I would say it is a misrepresentation of QM. It is simply not true. That is one possible interpretation of QM, but it is by no means a statement of Quantum Theory, nor is there any evidence that it is true, nor could there ever be, since it is unfalsifiable.
I didn't comment on this before, because UCE has been presenting the "consciousness causes the wave-collapse" idea as evidence for his beliefs as long as I have been here, and continues to do so no matter how many times it is pointed out to him that Quantum Theory does not actually say that at all.
UCE,
I have made no such statement about Idealism in general. I have merely pointed out that if you hold that all consciousnesses are one, then the belief that everything is a dream in the mind of that one consciousness, is logically equivalent to Solipsism.
No, instead you are proposing that we are all, in fact, the same person, and that reality is our dream, and that our belief that we are different people is an illusion. The effect is the same, though. Instead of saying "those other people are figments of my imagination", you are saying "we are all figments of God's imagination". Either way, my above comment holds. If you hold that there is nothing more to reality than our experiences, then there is no way to construct a reliable method for understanding reality.
No, you can't. This is something I have been trying to get you to understand for a long time now.
If you assume that there are influences on the Physical World that cannot be described by science, then how do you decide which observations are describable by science, and which are not? You want to arbitrarily designate some aspect of the World as being beyond science, but how do you respond to somebody else, who wants to designate some other aspect of the World to be beyond science?
You cannot use science to determine which phenomena are subject to science, because to do so would be to assume a-priori that science can be applied to them. But if science is your only tool for getting reliable information about the World, then you have no other way of deciding either. ultimately it comes to exactly what you, and every other supernaturalist, does. You arbitrarily designate some aspect of the World to be "off limits" scientifically, based entirely on your unjustified beliefs.
What is changed is that you completely undermine any validity science could possibly have. If you do not assume that the axioms of the scientific method are true, then you cannot draw any logical conclusions from scientific evidence!
They do not make such a claim.
To say that a TOE may be forever unachievable is nothing extraordinary. If the nature of reality is at least as complicated as arithmetic, then Godel's incompleteness theorem guarantees this. but this says absolutely nothing about the viability of materialism. Nor does it in any way imply that philosophy or religion could possibly fill in the missing parts.
You are reading your own confused beliefs into what he said. Infinity is not a thing that exists. It is a cardinality. If reality is sufficiently complex, then the number of logical statements whose truth value can be derived from any finite set of axioms and observations, is necessarily a countable infinity, whereas the number of statements that can be made is an uncountable infinity.
That is because you too, are grossly misinterpreting what it is.
Saying that it exists as matter is an empty statement, since matter is just defined to be what exists. If it exists as information in the realm of Mind, then matter just means information in the realm of mind. The point at which your philosophy becomes inconsistent with materialism, and the scientific method, is when you assert that Mind is simply your consciousness, which you have done. If all minds are one, and the information exists only in that mind, then in what sense is it objective or shared?
This amounts to nothing more than the Solipsistic argument that reality is all a figment of your imagination, and that it just behaves as though it were an independently existing objective reality. The only difference is that rather than claiming that other people are thing you are imagining, your are claiming that we are all part of one mind, which is doing the imagining. The difference is only a semantic one.
Dr. Stupid
Stimpson,
Do you mind answering my question to you (see post above)?
Thanks
Sorry, I missed it. Do you mean this one?
Could you give your opinion about this quote?:
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Quantum theory states that any physical system remains in a superposed state of all possibilities until it interacts with the mind of an observer. From the participatory anthropic principle
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Is it true?
Or is it just a vulgar misinterpretation of the Many Worlds interpretation?
I would say it is a misrepresentation of QM. It is simply not true. That is one possible interpretation of QM, but it is by no means a statement of Quantum Theory, nor is there any evidence that it is true, nor could there ever be, since it is unfalsifiable.
I didn't comment on this before, because UCE has been presenting the "consciousness causes the wave-collapse" idea as evidence for his beliefs as long as I have been here, and continues to do so no matter how many times it is pointed out to him that Quantum Theory does not actually say that at all.
UCE,
Yes, I already acknowledged that. Unfortunately, such a solipsistic philosophy is completely useless. If there is nothing more to reality than our experiences, then there is no way to construct a reliable method for understanding reality.
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How long are you going to go on pushing the lie that idealism is the same thing as solipsism? You must have been told fifty times why it isn't.
I have made no such statement about Idealism in general. I have merely pointed out that if you hold that all consciousnesses are one, then the belief that everything is a dream in the mind of that one consciousness, is logically equivalent to Solipsism.
Solipsism involves the denial that other humans are conscious in the way you are. Nobody here is proposing that, and you know perfectly well that nobody here is proposing it.
No, instead you are proposing that we are all, in fact, the same person, and that reality is our dream, and that our belief that we are different people is an illusion. The effect is the same, though. Instead of saying "those other people are figments of my imagination", you are saying "we are all figments of God's imagination". Either way, my above comment holds. If you hold that there is nothing more to reality than our experiences, then there is no way to construct a reliable method for understanding reality.
As for 'a reliable method of understanding reality' - science is the reliable method for understanding reality. You can still posit materialism as a working tool in order to explain the behaviour of what we perceive as an external world.
No, you can't. This is something I have been trying to get you to understand for a long time now.
If you assume that there are influences on the Physical World that cannot be described by science, then how do you decide which observations are describable by science, and which are not? You want to arbitrarily designate some aspect of the World as being beyond science, but how do you respond to somebody else, who wants to designate some other aspect of the World to be beyond science?
You cannot use science to determine which phenomena are subject to science, because to do so would be to assume a-priori that science can be applied to them. But if science is your only tool for getting reliable information about the World, then you have no other way of deciding either. ultimately it comes to exactly what you, and every other supernaturalist, does. You arbitrarily designate some aspect of the World to be "off limits" scientifically, based entirely on your unjustified beliefs.
Nothing has changed except that you have to acknowledge that materialism is just a useful working assumption and not absolute truth.
What is changed is that you completely undermine any validity science could possibly have. If you do not assume that the axioms of the scientific method are true, then you cannot draw any logical conclusions from scientific evidence!
In other words, nothing has changed apart from materialism and science must relinquish their claims to be able to fully explain all of reality.
They do not make such a claim.
Interestingly enough, in an article in this weeks New Scientist entitled "The Mind of God - Hawkings Epiphany", Mr Hawking has explained precisely this - That a TOE may be forever unacheivable and that science must accept that religion and philosophy may have to take precedence over science in some areas of thought.
To say that a TOE may be forever unachievable is nothing extraordinary. If the nature of reality is at least as complicated as arithmetic, then Godel's incompleteness theorem guarantees this. but this says absolutely nothing about the viability of materialism. Nor does it in any way imply that philosophy or religion could possibly fill in the missing parts.
Even more interestingly it was the existence of Infinity, rather than the problem of consciousness, that led him to make this statement.
You are reading your own confused beliefs into what he said. Infinity is not a thing that exists. It is a cardinality. If reality is sufficiently complex, then the number of logical statements whose truth value can be derived from any finite set of axioms and observations, is necessarily a countable infinity, whereas the number of statements that can be made is an uncountable infinity.
It seems that materialism is in a state of denial.
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That is because you are grossly misinterpreting what materialism is.
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Is he?
Actually I see a man who has seen materialism for precisely what it is : institutionalised denial of truths which lead to conclusions considered unacceptable by the materialists.
That is because you too, are grossly misinterpreting what it is.
2) Science can only describe reality in terms of our experiences by extracting reliable information from those experiences, and this can only be done by assuming that the experience is an interaction with reality, and not the reality itself. Thus the above axiom is a necessary one for science to function.
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*****It makes no difference to science whether the physical Universe self-exists as matter or exists as information in the realm of Mind. All that matters is that it behaves in an objective manner and is shared.*****
Saying that it exists as matter is an empty statement, since matter is just defined to be what exists. If it exists as information in the realm of Mind, then matter just means information in the realm of mind. The point at which your philosophy becomes inconsistent with materialism, and the scientific method, is when you assert that Mind is simply your consciousness, which you have done. If all minds are one, and the information exists only in that mind, then in what sense is it objective or shared?
This amounts to nothing more than the Solipsistic argument that reality is all a figment of your imagination, and that it just behaves as though it were an independently existing objective reality. The only difference is that rather than claiming that other people are thing you are imagining, your are claiming that we are all part of one mind, which is doing the imagining. The difference is only a semantic one.
Dr. Stupid