sentiententity wrote:
See previous posting Wed Feb 06, 2008 4:10 pm. The proper question is what evidence is there that there is something?
The point is that there is no evidence either way.
Therefore it could be regarded as both reasonable and unreasonable to believe or not believe in, for example the FSM.
Any position is valid, it just depends on your point of view.
sentiententity wrote:
No, it's an anecdote. If everyone perceives it, then it is an observation. You need to do an experiment for it to be an empirical finding, but even then you would not be entitled to call it a "truth".
Lets have a look at the dictionary definition of empirical:
empirical
1. derived from or guided by experience or experiment.
2. depending upon experience or observation alone, without using
scientific method or theory, esp. as in medicine.
3. provable or verifiable by experience or experiment.
So, if i experience or observe something then that is equally as true as something derived from an experiment, which could of course be on my own consciousness and it operation.
sentiententity wrote:
In science, we don't claim to discover truths (which I would have thought you would know if you had "studied and practiced it at length") - that is mathematicians. Science, strictly speaking, is always provisional.
I think some prominent scientists might disagree with you there, many have expressed the view that they simply discovered a pre-existing truth or law, which ties in nicely with the fact that science is based on mathematical principals.
sentiententity wrote:
I'm working from the reasonable assumption that I am not the centre of the universe.
Sorry, i should have been more clear there.
What i meant was that science needs to include an accurate description of the internal subjective realm that is consciousness or mind, unfortunately by its very mode of operation it is limited to external objective truths, it therefore rejects as an illusion the empirical existence of many aspect of the mind.
This may be surmountable with further developments in science and technology, specifically the ability to link to minds together so that they can experience each other.
sentiententity wrote:
Other good models may be conceivable, but I think that science is the best one by a comfortable margin. I am genuinely surprised that this seems to be contentious.
It is not contentious, science just needs to come to accept its limitations.
sentiententity wrote:
Or do you mean that the description of consciouness is rubbish? Certainly, hardly complete.
Its not that we even have any rubbish theories of how unconscious matter can become conscious and where the interface between the two is, we simply don't have any.
sentiententity wrote:
In this sentence, "matter" means "live neurons, their associated synapses and other, higher levels of organisation".
There you go, "higher levels of organisation" there is absolutely nothing physical about higher levels of organisation, organisation is complexity is information and as far as i know information is not physical.
sentiententity wrote:
This is really insulting.
Well, some of your jibes about hippies and woo (whatever that is) could be offensive, not to me though i've been called worse.
sentiententity wrote:
Oh, and science isn't a belief system.
This is a prime example of one of limitations of science, the inability to accept that it is fallible just like everything else, that it is somehow above everything else and sees how reality truly is.
Science makes models which it rigorously tests and then says that it believes that the thing being modelled happens in a particular way.
Take for example the atom, a scientist must test theories about atoms in a indirect way since it is not possible to view, smell, taste, hear or touch an atom directly, therefore there is an element of belief in science.
isnehand wrote:
To assert something as true you need to demonstrate it. This is where truth is defined as that which is in agreement with reality (that is in a scientific sense).
Yet i cannot prove to you in any objective scientific way that i possess consciousness, this is the problem.
isenhand wrote:
Reality is external observable and testable.
Surely that denies the existence of the internal subjective realm of direct experience. Sounds like Logical Positivism to me, a dehumanising philosophy.
sentiententity wrote:
A self-contained chemical system that uses energy available from it environment to locally and temporarily reverse entropy to self-organise, replicate and conserve the information required to do these things.
This conservation of information is quite an interesting idea, conservation suggests the inability to create or destroy something (in physics anyway), so if the information which is represented by a complex living process cannot be destroyed then where is it? what is it?
In my humble opinion, Quantum Mechanics has really taken science beyond the limits of its own nature, it puts the subjective consciousness of the observer back in the model as something important, certainly not an illusion and hints at information being something very elemental.
However that may be just hippy woo nonsense.
Humans always do the most intelligent thing after every stupid alternative has failed. - R. Buckminster Fuller
If you stare too long into the abyss, the abyss will stare back into you. - Friedrich Nietzche