A More Localized Version of the Argument From Morality

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The following might be clearer to you than what I already posted.
Oh, buddy, you seriously overcomplicated.

“X” is an absolute, or non-conditional proposition. It means that X is true, always and under any condition. (Therefore when you wrote “If X then X” is simply a meaningless tautology.)

Of the other hand

“If Y then X” is a conditional proposition where “Y” is just a shorthand for “Y is true”. We are not interested in building some “truth table”, we deal with simple “implication”. “Y → X”
 
“X” is an absolute, or non-conditional proposition.
Is “the empty set is a subset of {1,2,3}” an example of an absolute, or non-conditional proposition?

Alternatively, is it unacceptable for “X” to have internal structure other than pixels that give the graphic image of a character?

The sentence that I gave is very simple. There is one binary relation: “is a subset of” and there are two constants: the empty set, and the set {1,2,3}.
when you wrote “If X then X”
Please quote from an actual message that I posted.
 
“X” is an absolute, or non-conditional proposition.
Suppose that “X” is the following sentence: “the empty set is a subset of {1,2,3}.”
In that case, is “X” an absolute, or non-conditional proposition? That is not a rhetorical question. Please answer it.

Notice that, by definition, “X” implies the following: “if 2 is an element of the empty set, then 2 is an element of {1,2,3}.” That is only one part of what “X” implies. “X” is equivalent to a conjunction of such conditionals.

However, as “X” is written, it has a very simple structure: there is a binary relation “is a subset of”, and there are two constants: the empty set, and the set {1,2,3}. We see the more complicated structure only if we eliminate the defined relation “is a subset of.”
when you wrote “If X then X”
Please quote a message that I posted, and bold the part where you see “If X then X.”

A reminder of the question:

Suppose that “X” is the following sentence: “the empty set is a subset of {1,2,3}.”
In that case, is “X” an absolute, or non-conditional proposition?

I presume that “X” isn’t merely a single graphic symbol consisting of pixels, but is a label that you are using for a meaningful statement.
 
More then morality, I think that human consciousness, as we experience it, is indicative that a higher intelligence/mind/personality created us. Non-rational matter by itself, no matter how it is combined, cannot produce a “me” that is self-aware.
That might be more accurately stated as: ‘I do not understand how non rarional matter etc’.

I would then agree with you. Because I don’t understand it either. Nobody does yet.

But then does that lead to a belief in God? Well, there is no connection at all unless you already have a belief in God in which case your bemusement at how non-rational matter can produce a self is not bemusement at all. You had the answer before the question was asked.

This is one of the benefits of atheism which I might note in a concurrent thread: We don’t start with the answer and then discount all matters that do not support it.

I am assuming, Mort, that you had a belief in God before you ever considered consciousness and the self. Maybe you could confirm that and tell me if you think it plays anynpart in your opinions on the matter.
 
Suppose that “X” is the following sentence: “the empty set is a subset of {1,2,3}.”
In that case, is “X” an absolute, or non-conditional proposition? That is not a rhetorical question. Please answer it.
Since by definition the empty set is the subset of ANY set, it is an absolute proposition. ANY definition is an absolute proposition.

Why should we waste any more time on such trivialities?

An absolute proposition: “Masturbation is immoral under circumstances”. (“X” is true under any and all conditions.)
A conditional proposition: “Taking contraceptive medication is permissible IF it is taken for an unrelated medical reason”. (“X” is true under certain conditions, and false in others.)
when you wrote
Sorry, I wanted to say: “if you WRITE” and not “if you WROTE”, The letters “I” and “O” are next to each other.
 
Our actions have meaning. We do what we do for a purpose. A reflex, tic or seizure has no purpose. Although complex activity such as that in which we are currently engaged has to equally do with neurological processes, reading, writing and thinking are organized around meaning.

Taking a specific hormone on a daily basis Is a physical activity done for various reasons. Those reasons define what the action is.

Most of humanity believes in a Creator. That Creator would have a purpose for creating us. Given that we were made for a specific purpose and with certain qualities, it is best for us to follow that intent. Christians believe that the Source of our being is Existence itself, which was revealed in Jesus Christ to be an eternal, Divine act of love, that brings us into being and cares for who we are as eternal beings, given a second chance to live with God. Ultimately morality rests on God’s will that we come to know and become love.

Sexuality exists to bring people together and into existence, to create families and guide us from selfishness and self absorbtion to love. Taking a specific hormone has physical consequences. These may be beneficial or detrimental to the well being of the person. To take them for the sole purpose of preventing a pregnancy, is to physically interfere with God’s plan in having creating sexuality. It exists for His purpose and when we usurp its power to suit our wants, we repeat the primal scene in the Garden, placing ourselves at the centre of our being in the world, rather than God, as has always been intended.

Such activity is sinful, primarily because it damages our relationship with God. It also causes harm to one’s relationships with others and within ourselves.

In another case of a sin against chastity, masturbation, we short-circuit our connection with others, favouring fantasy rather that facing reality. Masturbation is a complex activity which offers not only imaginary relationships to supplant the harshness that comes with real human interactions, it may be a form of self-soothing, a way to manage anxiety and pain, cope with insomnia, and discharge the tensions of desire. It is not a matter of relative morality but rather the true nature of what the person is doing that determines the degree to which it is right or wrong. Like substance abuse, the activity can be addictive and very difficult to control. For some people it is possibly the way they find God, seeking a power greater than their own, to free themselves from the downward spiral into the slavery of the soul. Sin arises where autoeroticism promotes a pulling away from God, projecting the guilt and shame onto His church as if it were the cause of the dirt rather than the natural outcome of such behaviour.

I wonder how much of atheism is a reaction to guilt. As much as those who wish to argue will say they are atheist because there is no proof, the name and the activity exists to attack the proof, to destroy any sprouting of faith with skepticism, doubt and cynicism. Rather than entering into the depths of Christianity, they remain on the surface, attacking apparitions.

God does exist, and without Him we are lost. He is the absolute Reality and Source of morality.
 
There are many ways to construct a proposition. If the proposition can be transformed into an “IF x THEN y”, (while keeping its meaning intact) it is a conditional proposition.
Suppose that y is an assertion of the form “p isn’t a conditional proposition.”

If there is a finite list including all of your assumptions a#1, a#2, a#3, … , a#n that you invoke in your arguments designed to demonstrate that a given proposition isn’t conditional, then we could define x to be the conjunction: (a#1 and a#2 and a#3 and … and a#n).

Suppose you claim that a particular proposition p isn’t a conditional proposition. If you are right then the following isn’t a conditional proposition: p.

However, the following is a conditional proposition: “if (a#1 and a#2 and … and a#n) then (p isn’t a conditional proposition).”

It seems that what is conditional is your idea of a non-conditional proposition. You invoke your own personal opinions, such as your opinion that a proposition that expresses a moral judgment is a conditional proposition. Your arguments that you use in the hope of supporting your claims simply serve to reinforce the conclusion that your idea of what it means for a proposition to be “non-conditional” is a byproduct of your personal opinions.

A proof is never an absolute guarantee of the truth of the conclusion, but is relative to the assumptions invoked. If you feel very confident that the assumptions invoked are actually true, then you might observe yourself claiming that the conclusions are absolute truths. It would be more accurate to simply say that you are very confident that your assumptions are true.
 
Suppose that y is an assertion of the form “p isn’t a conditional proposition.”
I see no need to “suppose” that, it is obvious. If in the proposition “IF x THEN y” the “y” WOULD be a further conditional, we could simplify the expression by combining ALL the conditionals, something like “IF (x and z and q and p…) THEN y” where the “y” is not a conditional". What is your point?
 
That might be more accurately stated as: ‘I do not understand how non rarional matter etc’.
Not necessarily. I am not proposing a God of the gaps. Rather, I am saying we will never discover how non-rational matter can be arranged to create rational consciences by itself because it is a flat contradiction to say that it can. Just like we can never discover a two-dimensional round square. It is a flat contradiction and foolhardy to go on looking for it on that basis.

Actually, C. S. Lewis did a thorough job providing something like a mathematical proof for why non-rational nature cannot be exclusively responsible for rational consciousness in his book, “Miracles.”
I would then agree with you. Because I don’t understand it either. Nobody does yet.
Correct. Nobody understands how non-rational matter can be arranged to produce rational consciousness on it’s own. But, we CAN understand, and even prove that it can’t. With this established, it is not, then, a God of the gaps argument.
But then does that lead to a belief in God? Well, there is no connection at all unless you already have a belief in God in which case your bemusement at how non-rational matter can produce a self is not bemusement at all. You had the answer before the question was asked.
You are getting ahead of me. The most I think our consciousness can prove is that there is reality which is entirely outside of the physical universe, but capable of interacting with it similar to how a novel writer is not inside the universe he writes, but, nevertheless, has a direct influence on it. It also proves that there is at least one thing in this extra-physical reality that is something more like a mind than not. This can be called “God,” but it doesn’t have to be. There is no reason to suppose it is a Trinity, or even that it conforms to the deity of any established religion.
This is one of the benefits of atheism which I might note in a concurrent thread: We don’t start with the answer and then discount all matters that do not support it.
I don’t think religion or belief necessarily behaves this way, either. Not in the way you’re thinking. It IS a benefit to atheism in that atheism tends not to, but it is not exclusive to atheism. However, it’s not entirely accurate to say that any knowledge system doesn’t do this at least a little bit. Most of our knowledge is actually taken on authority, the least reliable source of knowledge. Have you been to Australia? If not, you take it on authority that such a place exists. You have never actually seen it. You don’t even know really if it is shaped the way you think it is, even if you have been there, because you have never seen it from a far enough distance to know for sure. Most of our knowledge works this way. It is therefore not unreasonable for one to believe something with evidence, but no proof, since most of our knowledge is assumed without proof.

Heck, even our scientific laws aren’t really proven. All we REALLY know for sure is that everything we have observed has behaved according to them so far. We don’t really know for sure that they will continue to.

(Of course, there are some which CAN be proven because it would be logically impossible for them to be anything but what they are, sort of like mathematical truths.)
I am assuming, Mort, that you had a belief in God before you ever considered consciousness and the self. Maybe you could confirm that and tell me if you think it plays anynpart in your opinions on the matter.
I did, but my belief in God has certainly undergone some drastic changes since my childhood. In fact, my parents hardly recognize my faith anymore because it is so different from what they raised me with. To them, I might as well be an atheist.

But, if you are interested in my own personal reasoning for my specific beliefs, you are welcome to message me and you can decide for yourself if you think my reasons are valid. In fact, I would welcome it if you did, because these conversations usually come to a disappointing end here. Once it is demonstrated that it can be reasonable to believe in God, further discourse is abandoned because it is then assumed that there can’t be any good reasons for believing in the truth of one religion over many other competing ones as if a multiplicity of contradictory religions necessarily excludes them all from being right. It is an insult to me to assume I have not thought deeply about this and taken it into the consideration of my own beliefs, though I am not saying you are doing this here.
 
Not necessarily. I am not proposing a God of the gaps. Rather, I am saying we will never discover how non-rational matter can be arranged to create rational consciences by itself because it is a flat contradiction to say that it can. Just like we can never discover a two-dimensional round square. It is a flat contradiction and foolhardy to go on looking for it on that basis.
There is disagreement as to what it actually means when we say ‘life’. We have everything from protocells which are definitely not alive but have some of the characteristics of life (see the TED talk: ted.com/talks/martin_hanczyc_the_line_between_life_and_not_life), through to collections of cells which appear to be alive but do not have all the characteristics that are normally associated with life - viruses, through to the smallest of bacteria which are considered to be alive.

A bacteria would not be considered to be conscious in any sense. It may react to its environment but with no more intention than a flower turns to the sun.

Now work your way up the line that connects the virus, through the bacteria, through various organisms with rudimentary nervous systems to ones where the nervous system is specifically located to those with what might be describes as a brain (I think the smallest is a fruit fly) and we still haven’t reached anything that can be described as having a consciousness.

But keep going and we will eventually reach a point where there may be some debate as to whether a particular animal or insect becomes aware of its environment and its position within that environment.

Keep going and we will eventually reach a point where we could discuss if the creature was self aware. And further up the food chain we go and maybe we can discuss whether something else had distinct thought processes. And eventually we will get to a point where we can definitely say that there is intelligence. And then rational intelligence. And then a conscience.

There is no point along that line that you can say that anything specific happened. Just like you can’t say that on Tuesday 3rd at 4:35pm half a million years ago, homo erectus became homo sapien.

Now how all this happened exactly is likely to be never known. But to suggest that it cannot firstly denies the obvious fact that it has already happened and secondly shows an inability to understand the gradual changes that can happen over geological time.

It’s like having a blue ball and saying that it can’t change into a red one. But if you had a billion balls, the first being blue and all the rest turning incrementally from blue to red, you could take a group of a thousand balls and state that there is obviously no change. They all look exactly the same. There is no evidence of change being made. Therefore some intelligence created the red ball at this particular point.

You appear to think that there was no life and then life. And then no consciousness and then consciousness. And then no rational thought and then Einstein. That is not the case.

Just imagine yourself and then your father. And then his. And then his before him. Keep going back and tell me exactly at what point you became non human. And at what point you had no consciousness. There obviously was a point when whatever you were could be considered not to have a capacity for rational thought. And you obviously have it now. So it obviously developed.
 
Not necessarily. I am not proposing a God of the gaps. Rather, I am saying we will never discover how non-rational matter can be arranged to create rational consciences by itself because it is a flat contradiction to say that it can. Just like we can never discover a two-dimensional round square. It is a flat contradiction and foolhardy to go on looking for it on that basis.
The stuff you got inside a brain is merely electromagnetic field plus a bunch of neurons. Neurons fire electrons collectively and generate a coherent electromagnetic field. This gives rise to a physical state which can be conscious. Not all state of matter are conscious. They are just different states, metal, liquid, superconductor, etc. This means that you could create a conscious being if you can generate similar coherent electromagnetic field.
 
The matter depends entirely on whether you consider the act of stealing to be morally correct or not. There is nothing se to consider.
Bradski;14303084:
If I steal my neighbours gun to sell so that I can buy drugs you might consider that to be immoral.
Wouldn’t you as well?
But what if I steal it because he just told me he was going to shoot his family?
The taking would be just iff the community’s just laws allowed the preemptive taking of a neighbors property on suspicion of its use in a future criminal act. I don’t see such a law as practical. The problem, after all, is your crazy neighbor; not his gun. Or did you plan to take all his knives, ropes, plastic bags, etc.?
 
There is no point along that line that you can say that anything specific happened. Just like you can’t say that on Tuesday 3rd at 4:35pm half a million years ago, homo erectus became homo sapien.
Pardon, but I never actually said there was a distinct point on the evolutionary timeline at which we suddenly had consciousness. Richard Dawkins has given an excellent explanation for how a human eye could have developed. If an eye can come about through gradual evolution, so can a brain. If you think that is what I’m disputing, then I haven’t presented my argument lucidly enough.
There is disagreement as to what it actually means when we say ‘life’. We have everything from protocells which are definitely not alive but have some of the characteristics of life (see the TED talk: ted.com/talks/martin_hanczyc_the_line_between_life_and_not_life), through to collections of cells which appear to be alive but do not have all the characteristics that are normally associated with life - viruses, through to the smallest of bacteria which are considered to be alive.
Well, “life” is not what I am primarily concerned about here, since biologists say that plants are “alive,” but it is no trouble at all to understand how a “live” plant cluld have developed exclusively from physics.
A bacteria would not be considered to be conscious in any sense. It may react to its environment but with no more intention than a flower turns to the sun.
Now work your way up the line that connects the virus, through the bacteria, through various organisms with rudimentary nervous systems to ones where the nervous system is specifically located to those with what might be describes as a brain (I think the smallest is a fruit fly) and we still haven’t reached anything that can be described as having a consciousness.
But keep going and we will eventually reach a point where there may be some debate as to whether a particular animal or insect becomes aware of its environment and its position within that environment.
Keep going and we will eventually reach a point where we could discuss if the creature was self aware. And further up the food chain we go and maybe we can discuss whether something else had distinct thought processes. And eventually we will get to a point where we can definitely say that there is intelligence. And then rational intelligence. And then a conscience.
A “rational,” conscious mind, if entirely physical, is just as irrational as the flower turning to the sun. If our physical brains can account for our consciousness by themselves, then we can’t really say that we are rational. Even my thoughts that result in me typing this message and the “decisions” I made to get here were not being made by “me,” at all, but were predetermined by the physical laws of the universe; a result of atoms and subatomic particles doing what they will according to physics until they make larger structures that then do what they will until a brain and its operations result. Just as stupid, just as dumb, just as mindless as the flower turning to the sun.

Now, you can say that this is how it really works, but you then have to go on and admit that no moral outrage can be valid or rational; that it is, in fact, irrational to be morally outraged by anything, which is the point of my original post.

C. S. Lewis went even further and said that it would then be a flat contradiction to go on trying to argue anything rationally. I think he was right.
Now how all this happened exactly is likely to be never known. But to suggest that it cannot firstly denies the obvious fact that it has already happened and secondly shows an inability to understand the gradual changes that can happen over geological time.
See, this is where I’m being misunderstood. Even if our consciousness requires some extra-physical component as I think it does, we still need our brains to be physically conscious in the same way that the person behind a microphone needs working speakers of a certain physical structure in order to manifest his voice across a great distance to a different place. Now, this brain, as you have already said, came about through gradual evolution. You and I have always been in agreement about that (though, apparently, without being aware of it).
It’s like having a blue ball and saying that it can’t change into a red one. But if you had a billion balls, the first being blue and all the rest turning incrementally from blue to red, you could take a group of a thousand balls and state that there is obviously no change. They all look exactly the same. There is no evidence of change being made. Therefore some intelligence created the red ball at this particular point.
exhuasted

I know how evolution works. That’s not what I am contesting. You are attacking a straw man. My “therefore, intelligence” is not the result of thinking evolution is not responsible for our brains. I very explicitly think it is.
You appear to think that there was no life and then life. And then no consciousness and then consciousness. And then no rational thought and then Einstein. That is not the case.
I don’t know what to say to this except to clarify that I don’t think that it works that way, appearances aside. Hopefully this post will have cleared that up by now.
 
There obviously was a point when whatever you were could be considered not to have a capacity for rational thought. And you obviously have it now. So it obviously developed.
Yes, our ability to be physically conscious is dependent on our brains which developed through evolution. I have never not thought this. I am just repeating it on this post ad nauseam. in order to thoroughly reply in an effort not to be misunderstood about this again.

Admitting to that, however, does not necessitate that our consciousness is solely dependent on our physical brains. I am saying it can’t be.
 
Yes, our ability to be physically conscious is dependent on our brains which developed through evolution. I have never not thought this. I am just repeating it on this post ad nauseam. in order to thoroughly reply in an effort not to be misunderstood about this again.

Admitting to that, however, does not necessitate that our consciousness is solely dependent on our physical brains. I am saying it can’t be.
My apologies for appearing tomassume that you don’t understand the processes involved. But I tend to overwrite posts in this matter because someone invariably jumps in and claims that I haven’t even explained how life just ‘popped into existence’. Which it clearly didn’t.

But having said that, the last point I made, which everything else was leading to, still stands. So let’s distill it down to rationality.

It appears that you have no problem in seeing how consciousness developed. But you baulk at it developing into rational mind (notwithstanding that creatures such as dogs and apes are rational). So there is obviously an acceptance that we are, as we stand, rational beings. And that at some point in the past we were not.

But even a rat makes rational decisions. And I wouldn’t think that we’d consider ratus ratus to be a great example of rodent morality. And whatever we were a few billion years ago made some sort of rational decisions as we developed. You might claim the decisions ns to be nothing more than instinct, but here’s where all those balls come into the discussion.

Because what you are saying is that it is impossible for some basic instinctive behaviour to evolve into something we’d call rational behaviour. Well personally speaking, I can’t see how, if you have a lineage long enough and some hundreds of millions of years with which to play, you wouldn’t get something like rational thought processes.

If it was not a natural, incremental process, then you are stuck with something similar to the argument that says that at 3:30pm on the 3rd of July X amount of years ago, rational thought popped into existence.

This is Adam and Eve territory.

So either it is an incremental, entirely natural process or…kazam! One day we were amoral, non rational beasts and then we became Man.
 
My apologies for appearing tomassume that you don’t understand the processes involved. But I tend to overwrite posts in this matter because someone invariably jumps in and claims that I haven’t even explained how life just ‘popped into existence’. Which it clearly didn’t.
Thankfully accepted. I understand. Those people frustrate me, too. It’s like they’re not even trying to understand their opponents.
So there is obviously an acceptance that we are, as we stand, rational beings. And that at some point in the past we were not.
I’m with you so far…

But, this:
But even a rat makes rational decisions. And I wouldn’t think that we’d consider ratus ratus to be a great example of rodent morality. And whatever we were a few billion years ago made some sort of rational decisions as we developed. You might claim the decisions ns to be nothing more than instinct, but here’s where all those balls come into the discussion.
only glosses over this:
A “rational,” conscious mind, if entirely physical, is just as irrational as the flower turning to the sun. If our physical brains can account for our consciousness by themselves, then we can’t really say that we are rational. Even my thoughts that result in me typing this message and the “decisions” I made to get here were not being made by “me,” at all, but were predetermined by the physical laws of the universe; a result of atoms and subatomic particles doing what they will according to physics until they make larger structures that then do what they will until a brain and its operations result. Just as stupid, just as dumb, just as mindless as the flower turning to the sun.
Now, you can say that this is how it really works, but you then have to go on and admit that no moral outrage can be valid or rational; that it is, in fact, irrational to be morally outraged by anything, which is the point of my original post.
C. S. Lewis went even further and said that it would then be a flat contradiction to go on trying to argue anything rationally. I think he was right.
which is what I am chiefly concerned with and has nothing to do with our evolutionary development.
Because what you are saying is that it is impossible for some basic instinctive behaviour to evolve into something we’d call rational behaviour. Well personally speaking, I can’t see how, if you have a lineage long enough and some hundreds of millions of years with which to play, you wouldn’t get something like rational thought processes.
If by “rational thought process” you mean something which we can duplicate in a complex computer, then I agree, but that is not what I’m talking about. It is tough to come to an agreement on definitions when talking about these things, but I’ll try my best to clarify exactly what I’m talking about.

Human beings, even though we evolved from lower species, are so drastically higher than our nearest living animal relatives that to compare the two is almost laughable. Certain apes live in small communities with their highest technological achievement being the use of sticks to acquire bugs from thin holes. Nor is there a shred of anything we’d call “art” produced by them. The beings which created the most primitive cave art are much nearer to us than they would be to currently living apes. Yet, modern human beings, chemically speaking, are only half a chromosome away from chimpanzees. Something accounts for the difference and it must be in the mind. What do we have that apes don’t? I’m going to hypothesize that it is something which I will call self-conscious rational thought. Currently, that’s the best name I can come up with. It’s probably severely lacking in specificity and accuracy, but let’s try and move on.

The physical organs necessary to facilitate self-conscious rational thought developed gradually through evolution just like everything else with our bodies. Facilitate is the key word. That is the role our brains play; and it is a very large and crucial role. However, I maintain that it cannot be solely responsible for our self-conscious rational thought for reasons I have already stated, but which have not yet been directly addressed. (I refer you to the fourth quote bubble in this post.)
If it was not a natural, incremental process, then you are stuck with something similar to the argument that says that at 3:30pm on the 3rd of July X amount of years ago, rational thought popped into existence.
This is Adam and Eve territory.
So either it is an incremental, entirely natural process or…kazam! One day we were amoral, non rational beasts and then we became Man.
While this is a bit of a charicature, I’ll agree with it and defend it here. Maybe self-conscious rational thought did not instantaneously spring into existence in the form which we now possess. Obviously, that couldn’t have happened since our brains are/were gradually evolving physical organs. They could not have suddenly had the ability to handle the types of thinking which we do today if the instant before their most complex thought was how to use a stick to pull bugs out of a hole. But, logic and intuition say that there had to have been a first self-conscious thought, right? There’s no way to fracture the self-consciousness of a thought. It either is or it isn’t. An almost self-conscious thought is the same as a non-self-conscious thought. That makes the very first self-conscious thought, small as it may seem, a very big event in human evolution. I always think about the scene in 2001: A Space Odyssey with the ape first figuring out how to use/make a weapon from the strewn about bones. A very small event in our vast chronology, but huge in terms of ramifications. His tribe became the dominant one and the less evolved tribe died out.
 
That might be more accurately stated as: ‘I do not understand how non rarional matter etc’.

I would then agree with you. Because I don’t understand it either. Nobody does yet.
The stuff you got inside a brain is merely electromagnetic field plus a bunch of neurons. Neurons fire electrons collectively and generate a coherent electromagnetic field. This gives rise to a physical state which can be conscious. Not all state of matter are conscious. They are just different states, metal, liquid, superconductor, etc. This means that you could create a conscious being if you can generate similar coherent electromagnetic field.
I’m too spent for this. Bradski, perhaps you can explain for STT why that is not a fully sufficient explanation for how irrational matter can generate consciousness on its own.
 
I’m too spent for this. Bradski, perhaps you can explain for STT why that is not a fully sufficient explanation for how irrational matter can generate consciousness on its own.
I don’t think if such a argument is valid. Matter can be sentient too. There is a nice talk by Peter Russel about this topic in here.
 
I always think about the scene in 2001: A Space Odyssey with the ape first figuring out how to use/make a weapon from the strewn about bones. A very small event in our vast chronology, but huge in terms of ramifications. His tribe became the dominant one and the less evolved tribe died out.
As regards not fracturing a self conscious thought, that’s like saying you either see or you don’t - there’s no half way point. Which there clearly is.

You can take a line from Man all the way down to bacteria and there is a gradual decrease in the ability to make rational decisions. It’s not as if at some point it doesn’t exist and then all of a sudden it does. There was no 2001 moment, which is what you need for your explanation to make any sense at all.

Again, consider your own lineage. Are you really suggesting that at one particular point one of your ancestors had no ability at all for rational thought and then the next generation did?

I’ve made this point before but it is worth repeating. What you appear to believe is that the natural processes that brought us to this point were ordained by God. I have no problem with that. But you are selling God short in that you cannot believe that He could organise matters so that we would develop an ability for rational thought as part of those processes.

You are saying that we got to a particular point and then stalled. We came so far but then…no further. Whatever He had set in motion could not take us to where we are now. So He had to step in a second time and adjust a few settings. Fiddle with the dials. Readjust a couple of levers. And then…ah, yes, now we’re looking good. Now all of a sudden the monkey picks up a bone and realises he can beat someone to death with it. No more poking insects with a stick. He’s going to use that stick as the first step in developing lasers and interplanetary travel and nuclear fusion.

You may as well swap your crucifix for an obelisk.
 
Non-rational matter by itself, no matter how it is combined, cannot produce a “me” that is self-aware
And the idea that: well, it’s possible for non-rational matter to create is…not supported by evidence. Ever.

Unless there is a scientist somewhere in the world who wants to provide the empirical data that demonstrates some non-rational matter (a Number–perhaps 30734108?) creating matter.

I continue to be astounded at what will be embraced by the “I Won’t Believe Until There’s Evidence” folks, who will believe…“Hey, it’s possible! We just don’t know everything, yet!”
 
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