A
AgnosticBoy
Guest
Even with arguments from analogy, there are some embedded premises, like the premise that the mind and brain works together, etc. I agree with that premise, but I don’t agree with the other ones that involve the mind being a product and function of the brain. Multiple people have asked you multiple times to provide evidence for your bold claims on this issue but all you’ve offered is an analogy.It was an analogy, not an equivalence. I could have used the legs/walking paradigm. You could argue that “walking” is primary, and “legs” are secondary.
So I’ll ask again. Do you have anything more than just abstract examples/analogies to prove your claim? In other words, do you have any scientific evidence?
So then why is there an issue here with you presenting the evidence? Is it just that you don’t like the alternatives (dualism) if materialism/determinism are shown to be inadequate?The evidence is overwhelming, unlike the “dwgmah” that there is a separate “mind” independent of the brain.
I’ve been searching for the scientific evidence and so far I’ve found nothing conclusive. Instead, I’ve found that the issue has been dogmatized by materialists (some scientists, some philosophers, and atheists) that assume that the mind must be physical just because the brain is. Although this view sounds reasonable, but the empirical verification is lacking and it doesn’t fit well with common experience where the mind doesn’t seem to be physical/mechanistic.
The “overwhelming” evidence that I’ve found is that brain states affect mental states. However, this does not explain how or if brain states cause mental states (subjective experiences). So your claim that the mind is the brain is not a scientifically-backed statement. It’s just a jump to a conclusion since you make it before the evidence is in. Then there’s emerging evidence showing mental activity that cause brain states to change and this doesn’t bode well for a deterministic/materialistic worldview. Factoring in the evidence from both sides, I can conclude that the mind and brain are a function of each other.
Perhaps you’re only speaking for yourself, and if so, I respect that! However, a lot of materialists and atheists presume that no God nor supernatural exist. This belief or metaphysical claim turns into dogma when it is accepted and used unquestionably by many atheists. There are many atheist groups, atheist podcasts/media, as well as notable atheist authors and debaters out there. Inevitably, atheists are getting a lot of their views from these higher-ups while also sharing them between each other just like an organization. It’s no accident that many atheists share many of the same arguments and skeptical attitudes against Christianity.By the way, maybe you are not familiar with the concept of “dawgmah”, which is something you must accept not on evidence, but on some authority. In the atheistic / materialistic world there are no “dawgmahs”. All you need to do is bring up evidence to the contrary, and the original assumption WILL be discarded. Though it is amusing that you use the word in a pejorative fashion.