Wow, that was so brilliantly put that I now have no choice but to acquiesce to your rarefied penchant for abrasive, but nonetheless meaningless, locution. Is that you, Christopher Hitchens? But seriously, you'll have to do better than that tripe to make your point.Read it. The man is a complete fool. If his arguments have a bearing on what you believe, you're also a complete fool.
No, "existence" is what is being discussed; you previously stated that "interaction" is the prerequisite for "existence." I provided an example whereby an inability to observe an entity didn't preclude that entity's "existence"; in a desperate attempt to save your corrupt ideas, you added another qualifier to the state of "being," namely that things don't "exist" in a relative manner to certain things. Unless you believe idealism is the only way and that it is incontrovertible that observation creates reality, this position is untenable. By the definition of materialism, things act on and produce observation, not the other way around. In light of that, your musings on "relative existences" are in blatant contradiction with a materialistic philosophical outlook. Given that materialism may represent what reality actually is and has not been ruled out of the field of competing theories of ontology, your idealistic analyses carry little weight. It also still stands that you create a straw man in your arguments in that you replace "existence" with "implications," words which obviously represent entirely different concepts.Who said anything about awareness or materialism? Interaction is the concept being discussed.
I thought your overly simplistic ideas were quite easy to follow; I don't know how you got that impression of my comprehension.You can't even seem to understand basic English, and you expect us to accept that you can make pronouncements about philosophy?
Conceptually, we distinguish between the expression of love and the feeling of love. Neural correlates will obviously be found for the expression of love, but since the concept of the feeling of love is not required to explain the objective behavior of love, it cannot fit into a legitimate scientific theory of the mind. Therefore, it cannot be measured. It cannot be said to be real or fictitious and, if real, cannot be elaborated upon in terms of its phenomenological qualities.It can't be measured with our current technology, but as it's another emotion, thus made of brain impulses, it's definitely measurable.
I'm not sure if there are sides here. Maybe the sides don't exist. Har har har. Sorta. Har.This is a very interesting back and forth we have going here. It's hard to pick a side here...
I don't think you are stupid. I'm not trying to be glib. I'm not being very rigorous either.What the fucl<
The idea is that you can weigh the box, but not the contents of he box (the coin).I would contradict myself majorly by being able to weight something and then stating that it cannot be measured.
The premise is that you cannot open the box. Also that you do not know the original weight of the box (or that the box weighs the same no matter what is put in it). The idea is that you have no way of measuring the contents of the box. You have no access to the 'coin in the box' and cannot measure, in any way, its properties.If you mean that I wouldn't know there was an object in the box, well, I would think simply opening it would provide the answer - or knowing the original weight of the box. But either way this has no bearing on the fact that I CAN indeed measure the object, and that therefore it exists, regardless of whether I know it's a coin or not.
I think I said that that was what you were saying. Sorta. That is, something that is 'unmeasurable', is not "meaningful". To any observer. It could exist, but it wouldn't matter. So why not just say it doesn't exist. I thought that was your whole point. And a relevant one.Even if a "magic" box existed which would be unopenable or unmeasurable in any way (which is impossible), it would not prove that a meaningless concept could magically be made meaningful.
I don't agree that a that a whatchmawizit, or a magic box, cannot be said to NOT contain god, or a zorglub, or anything else. My point was that theorerically it can. But I used your point to say that it does not, and could not in any way matter.Whatever you present us cannot contain a "god" any more than it can contain a "zorglub".
All observation is interaction, but not all interaction is observation.No, "existence" is what is being discussed; you previously stated that "interaction" is the prerequisite for "existence." I provided an example whereby an inability to observe an entity didn't preclude that entity's "existence"
No. I'm saying that a thing can be said to exist only relative to something else. Things in a hypothetical "other universe" might exist relative to each other, but they wouldn't exist relative to us, and vice versa.Actually Melendwyr and Batman Jr. seem to be saying the same thing in different ways, which is that a thing either exists or does not, but there is a difference to the observer whether the thing is observed or not.
If interaction is not in our observation, then it is not interaction in relation to us. Therefore, in accordance with your logic, interaction which is not accompanied by our observation is "nonexistent," and all real interaction must have an observational component. This is idealism.All observation is interaction, but not all interaction is observation.
Two words, Batman Jr.: learn English.
No. I'm saying that a thing can be said to exist only relative to something else.
Y'know, all you'd have to do is present a simple explanation (or an example) of how existence can be meaningfully defined as an absolute, and how we might differentiate between a thing that does not exist and a thing that does not interact. With that relatively simple task completed, you'd have destroyed my argument utterly.Well, against you are amassed all the physicists, philosophers, logicians, lexicographers, and linguists that the human race has produced since the invention of writing.
If I creep up behind you unawares and hit you over the head with a rock, did you observe me? If not, how did I interact with you?If interaction is not in our observation, then it is not interaction in relation to us.
Love?
Y'know, all you'd have to do is present a simple explanation (or an example) of how existence can be meaningfully defined as an absolute, and how we might differentiate between a thing that does not exist and a thing that does not interact. With that relatively simple task completed, you'd have destroyed my argument utterly.
The feathers interacted with things that we interact with. Their color, while unlikely to be determined by current science, is not beyond the scope of science.Already done. Is your claim that we can interact with the colour of an Archeopteryx's feathers, or is your claim that the Archeopteryx's feathers were colourless?
I'd address your comments, but since they were made in the past, I cannot possibly interact with them, and therefore I cannot know what they were or deduce anything about them.My claim -- and example -- is "neither." The colour of the feathers existed (and continues to exist in the timeless present that all 'facts' exist in), but cannot be interacted with.