Say, where is Lifegazer, anyway?
He appears to have left the building. Should we count this as a loss?
Say, where is Lifegazer, anyway?

Then don't.People love to argue on this forum, and I must admit that I do like to myself.
Your first paragraph of your first post states thusly:
"For those of you of a level to understand this..."
Ad hom's within first assertions negate debate.
Then don't.
So naive.And unfortunatel, I am - or at least someone got in trouble for it - not allowed to suggest the simple test for reality : if what you perceive to be reality really isn't, it is perfectly safe to strp in front of a speeding truck as it is not there and, of course, neither are you (this is all a figment of my imagination or my reality - either is fine). So I wont suggest it.
Like I said, I'm looking for more in-depth discussion here.
Disjunctive Accounts of Perception
Lastly we have a rather different approach. Disjunctivism denies the key assumption that there must be something in common between veridical and non-veridical cases of perception, an assumption that is accepted by all the positions above, and an assumption that drives the argument from illusion. For the disjunctivist, these cases certainly seem to be the same, but they are, however, distinct. This is because in veridical perception the world is presented to us. The world is not just represented as being a certain way, as for the intentionalist; but rather, the world partly constitutes one’s perceptual state. Thus, one’s perceptual state when hallucinating is entirely distinct from one’s perceptual state when actually attending to the world. To be in the state that I am in when I veridically perceive a green tin, there really has to be something there that is green. This, remember, is also one of the commitments of the sense datum theorist; but for the disjunctivist, the green item is in the world, it is not an internal mental object.
This position is called “disjunctivism” because when I seem to see a green tin, I am either perceiving a green tin or it is as if there is a green tin in front of me (a disjunction of perceptual states). I am not in a perceptual state that is common to both types of experience.
........if what you perceive to be reality really isn't, it is perfectly safe to strp in front of a speeding truck as it is not there and, of course, neither are you (this is all a figment of my imagination or my reality - either is fine). So I wont suggest it.
'Humanity' (which is the label we identify with after experiencing ourselves... and therefore a subjective/unreal observation & label of the self), experiences a world/universe (including other separate entities) solely and directly through ordered sensations.
*** In other words, the self and the sensations that It has, are the only reality which rationale (philosophy/logic) can identify as being real. ***
It proves that it doesn't matter whether the truck is real or whether it is not. The outcome is the same. The outcome can't be altered by experience, knowledge, belief, superstition, religious or spiritual ritual including prayer, fasting, meditating, etc. Quite simply it proves that scientific inquiry via the scientific method (empiricism) must not reform because reformation can't, by your admission, have any different outcome to its study than it has now.When my experienced body (experienced-self) steps out in front of an experienced truck, the experienced truck wins the day and my experienced self ceases to participate in the experienced world.
And you think that this proves what??
We're here for you gazer, give us something to discuss.Like I said, I'm looking for more in-depth discussion here.
huh?I don't believe you. Consider me skeptical.
Therefore, many years ago, I might have been tempted to strip my clothes off and stand in the fast lane of I-395.
The problem is that I see skepticism for what it is.
Therefore, not only did I not stand naked before the eventual semi, I avoided all such.
Lets see if you report this post.
Sorry for the 2nd post but this is just driving me nuts. Dude, who exactly don't you believe? Lifegazer or Belz? If you don't believe Belz (who you are in fact replying to) then your post is incohrent because you are, IIUC, making his argument.I don't believe you. Consider me skeptical.
Therefore, many years ago, I might have been tempted to strip my clothes off and stand in the fast lane of I-395.
The problem is that I see skepticism for what it is.
Therefore, not only did I not stand naked before the eventual semi, I avoided all such.
Lets see if you report this post.
It's so simple. Let's see...
'Humanity' (which is the label we identify with after experiencing ourselves... and therefore a subjective/unreal observation & label of the self), experiences a world/universe (including other separate entities) solely and directly through ordered sensations.
*** In other words, the self and the sensations that It has, are the only reality which rationale (philosophy/logic) can identify as being real. ***
... Or, the world which we sense, is not a world in and of itself.
This is basic philosophy and I want to progress beyond debating this. A sensory representation of a world/universe is clearly not a world/universe in and of itself.
If you cannot accept this, at this stage, then you have no business involving yourself in this discussion except to purposely disrupt it for reasons that cannot be equated to 'sincerity'.
... Given that we can only confirm the existence of 'The Self' (whose nature has yet to be determined - let's not assume what It is... logic should assume nothing!) and the 'experiences' that 'It' has (thoughts; feelings; sensations; etc.), then ONLY these conclusions follow:
A) The study of the order within experience should always seek to attribute the origin of that order to 'It' which experiences that sensed-order - since there is no logical basis for attributing it to anything else.
B) Given that 'science' is the label which we attribute to the study of the order within experience, then ~science~ then has a responsibility to equate 'It' with the ultimate causality of ALL that is experienced. I.e., 'It', for example, is the cause of the universe that is being experienced.
... Consequently, scientific theories which deal with the origin of the experienced-world whilst disregarding 'It', are worthless and void of all logic.
For example, theories which disregard 'It' and which consequently treat the universe as an entity in and of itself, have completely missed the point of this logic.
Unfortunately, all scientific theories regarding the origin of this [experienced] universe, do both!
C) Scientific theories which seek to attribute the origin of human experience (thoughts; sensations; feelings; etc.) to something which we observe 'in the real world' (namely: "the brain"), are completely bogus and void of all recognition of the logic that I am explaining to the readers here. Why? Because "the brain" is something which we observe within experience itself, through the sensations!
It is illogical to attribute causality of experience to something that exists within experience itself.
D) Given that science is the study of the order which exists within experience - as opposed to the study of real objects existing within real space & time - it can be proclaimed that all known scientific laws/facts relate to the experienced-world itself.
... This now simplifies Einstein's laws of relativity. In other words, we can now understand why Newtonian laws regarding real objects interacting amongst real space & time, are not [essentially] correct. Indeed, I will be so bold as to say that if what we observed was real, then Newton couldn't possibly have been proved wrong. Why not? Because if there is only ONE reality "out there", then either we all experience it, or nobody does.
E) Quantum physics. Don't want to go into the details here, yet. Just want to say a few things:-
(i) Whatever we observe, does not emerge from 'nothing', but from 'It'!!!!!!!!!! (exclamations deserving of emphasis until science proves that whatever it is that we are, is 'nothing').
Anyone who says that they've never heard of the scientific community speaking of particles emerging from 'nothing', is either a liar, or haven't payed enough attention.
(ii) String theories, etc., are borne of a bias already discussed.
What happens when you look beyond 'It' to find the ultimate causality of it all, using mathematics? ...
Answer: You end up talking nonsense, trying to attribute the cause of the experienced-world to a piece of string (or membrane) that exists amongst 10+ dimensions.
... Please look where science is going. It's a path that nobody can observe, based upon a reality that nobody ever did observe!!!!
And yet, such people mock the religious amongst us!
... So do I, by the way. I refuse to be religious. But do not think that believing in God requires 'faith'. It's a myth.
Science has to deal with the factual world that we know. That world, hombres, is the world of experience.
Anything else is "pseudo science".
Science is in dire need of reform because it has been corrupted by the concept that what can be observed is real in and of itself.
That's the bottom line.
Reform is required and will eventually occur.
And I do not require the acceptance of this biased forum for that event to take place.
Goodnight.
That is very good advice. There is one flaw to your reasoning though. Lifegazer refuses to educate himself. Many of us have given him many sources including books and websites. He refuses and is somewhat contemptuous of any philosophy that doesn't come directly from him. I assume that is still his position.Your presentation here reads like a strange and tortuous re-hash of Descartes: "I think, therefore (after a long chain of reasoning, that contains some very weak links) God is". Or in your case 'It' is. As noted previously, I would strongly recommend that you read some Popper. Or at least get Bryan Magee's excellent little book on Popper, 'Philosophy and the Real World', which can be read in a couple of hours. I think you'll find that the reform that you are asking for from science has pretty much already taken place. It is certainly no longer making your suggested 'real in and of itself' mistake. David Hume put that one to rest in 1735. Popper's presentation was simply a new answer to 'what science is', in the light of Hume's presentation of 'what it cannot be'.
BR,
Keith
I'm quite familiar with Popper but not Magee. Thanks, I'll get the book. I choose not to be willfully ignorant.
Sorry Geoff mate, but...OK, then. I'd like to defend disjunctivism.
http://www.iep.utm.edu/p/perc-obj.htm
So how does the great mind of lifegazer respond to the claims of a disjunctivist? Does he even understand why its relevant? Will he even be able to figure out what disjunctivism is and whether he should be agreeing or disagreeing with it? Or will his brain derail if he tries?
Oh....and you might actually have to read the whole article if you want to be able to provide a sensible response.![]()
The simple fact is, that the ONLY conclusion which logic can glean from the information at-hand, is that The Self (whatever that may be), appears to be able to have several different types of experience of 'things' - none of which are real in and of themselves.