R
ronnie_bonigli
Guest
Thanks . . . that was very profound . . . really . . . I’m not kiddingHere’s a question for you all.
OK, I am
Thanks . . . that was very profound . . . really . . . I’m not kiddingHere’s a question for you all.
Oh good comeback. That’s me shot down in flames.Thanks . . . that was very profound . . . really . . . I’m not kidding
OK, I am
The human soul is the human soul precisely because it ordinarily requires the human body for its function.Why not put the miracle of human thought into a desk, or a motor car, or a painting, or a computer?
This is all beside the point.The human intelligence is in human bodies because that is the only place it can be. Desks, cars, paintings and computers can’t multiply. A painting needs a painter. A car needs an engineer, a desk needs a carpenter and a computer needs a programmer. Human beings are created spontaneously from other human beings and ultimately other lifeforms that were also created spontaneously.
Is this meant to be a conclusion from what is above?We are stuck in fragile disease prone bilogical bodies that last for a blink of an eye with no gurantee even then because they need no design and we have no design. We have no design because we have no designer. Intelligence isn’t a miracle. It’s a survival trait that has been selected from a myriad of possibilities and enhanced as millions of years have passed, simply because it is so advantageous.
I was being punny up above. Let me explain.What about intellect in the genes? It is supposedly a highly heritable trait.
I once read an article in a science magazine, only a speculation and probably wrong, but very entertaining.Regardless of the origin of the intellect-- even if we assume the intellect is wholly the product of a billions-year-long evolutionary process-- it is a separate question what its nature is.
Bingo!Love can be taken as a passion or as a virtue.
The problem here is that we risk confusing having the passions (which are proper to animated bodies) with having an intellect. A computer certainly cannot have passions, but that doesn’t mean that we’ve proven that it can’t have an intellect. Immaterial intellects, after all-- the angels-- do not suffer the passions.
If one takes love as an act of the will, i.e., the act of an agent, then perhaps one has hit on a crucial difference between the human being and the computer. The computer, much like the abacus, remains an instrument and not an agent.
-Rob
The real question is what is human nature. The origin of the intellect is not a separate nature. Human nature is a profound and unique unification of the rational/corporeal.I was being punny up above. Let me explain.
The ‘genetic fallacy’ is literally the error of taking something’s origin as a reason to discredit it. For instance, someone might say, “oh, I’m a vegetarian!” And you could respond, “well, Hitler and the Nazis invented vegetarianism!” Uh, ok. Regardless, it obvious has no direct relation to the moral standing of vegetarianism.
Even if we should suppose that genes are a causally complete explanation for why an intellect now exists, it does not follow that the intellect is “in the genes” in any relevant sense. It was caused by the genes, if that is the case, but it isn’t “in them” and certainly isn’t identical with them.
Regardless of the origin of the intellect-- even if we assume the intellect is wholly the product of a billions-year-long evolutionary process-- it is a separate question what its nature is.
-Rob
Here’s a bit of water to cool those flames from post 20.Oh good comeback. That’s me shot down in flames.![]()
The human being is cowardly, grasping, rapacious, egotistical, irrasicible, self serving, agressive, violent, vindictive and cruel. Our intelligence only makes us more efficient when it comes to destruction. We are creatures of action, the age old excuse for not stopping to think.Here’s a bit of water to cool those flames from post 20.
This sentence is one that has a lot going for it. “The human intelligence is in human bodies because that is the only place it can be. Desks, cars, paintings and computers can’t multiply. A painting needs a painter. A car needs an engineer, a desk needs a carpenter and a computer needs a programmer.”
When one keeps going with those thoughts, the result is – The human person is the pinnacle of all creatures.
Blessings,
granny
Human life is sacred.
Thanks . . . that was very profound . . . really . . . I’m not kiddingThe human being is cowardly, grasping, rapacious, egotistical, irrasicible, self serving, agressive, violent, vindictive and cruel.
If this is the best you can do, I can fully understand why you don’t expect to find any intelligence residing in the human brain.Thanks . . . that was very profound . . . really . . . I’m not kidding
OK, I am
Actually, the two times you’ve posted in this thread amounted to nothing more than a rant. No one would take those posts seriously, too bad you’re the only one who’s not aware of thatIf this is the best you can do, I can fully understand why you don’t expect to find any intelligence residing in the human brain.![]()
It’s hardly my fault if you can’t see the point I’m trying to make. Let me spell it out for you in the form of a couple of questions.Actually, the two times you’ve posted in this thread amounted to nothing more than a rant. No one would take those posts seriously, too bad you’re the only one who’s not aware of that
Humans have the same behaviour as any other mammal?It’s hardly my fault if you can’t see the point I’m trying to make. Let me spell it out for you in the form of a couple of questions.
- What possible grounds are there for thinking that human intelligence or anything about humans is supernatural when we are physically and in behaviour just like any other mammal?
- What possible reason can there be for thinking the human race is divine when we are perfectly capable of the most atrotious behaviour imaginable?
I’m definitely crossing off the planet Venus from my travel schedule – no humans, no fun.The human being is cowardly, grasping, rapacious, egotistical, irrasicible, self serving, agressive, violent, vindictive and cruel. Our intelligence only makes us more efficient when it comes to destruction. We are creatures of action, the age old excuse for not stopping to think.
How you can think that we are the pinnacle of all creatures is absolutely beyond me. Even the planet Venus, a Miltonian hell hole, has one aspect of paradise about it. No humans.
It’s hardly my fault if you can’t see the point I’m trying to make. Let me spell it out for you in the form of a couple of questions.
- What possible grounds are there for thinking that human intelligence or anything about humans is supernatural when we are physically and in behaviour just like any other mammal?
- What possible reason can there be for thinking the human race is divine when we are perfectly capable of the most atrotious behaviour imaginable?
I once read an article in a science magazine, only a speculation and probably wrong, but very entertaining.
It said that our reasoning is not particularly rational. When we do 2 + 6, we don’t use registers like a computer, we just know that symbol 2 and symbol 6 relate to symbol 8 because we learned that back at school.
= We learn rules that make us appear rational.
Plus, the different regions of the brain work in parallel, each having their own thoughts. Feedback between them makes corrections and develops the thoughts. When that isn’t enough, for example with me now trying to explain this idea, particular thoughts are promoted into the conscious. The conscious picks the most useful take and that feeds back to the other regions. Consciousness is needed to learn something but then we can do it unconsciously (like driving home listening to the radio, and then not remembering anything about the journey).
= The mind is a community - “I” don’t really exist as such, “I” is an illusion.
Probably wrong, but entertaining to think of the mind (soul?) as a selfless community.
You are confusing ontological hierarchy with moral greatness.How you can think that we are the pinnacle of all creatures is absolutely beyond me. Even the planet Venus, a Miltonian hell hole, has one aspect of paradise about it. No humans.
What computers do is formalism, blind string manipulation of axioms and rules of inference, just like what a child does once it’s learned how to do long division, that is not intelligence. True intelligence comes in when you step outside the formalism and make an act of understanding. True acts understanding are nonalgorithmic, as Roger Penrose demostrates in The Emperor’s New Mind. For a nice summary of the Godelian argument against formalism displaying intelligence I would recommend Stephen Barr’s Modern Physics and Ancient FaithAgainst the extreme materialists, they import unduly formal and materialistic criteria for judging what is to count as true ‘addition.’ There is no reason to think that because a computer must do addition in only one way that this is the only true way of doing addition (or even that this counts as a definite advantage). Indeed, the computer is limited because it can only ‘think’ in that specific way, in specific terms. The intellect, on the other hand, can add in many ways. (There is also my point from above, that the computer when said to ‘think’ or ‘add’ does so in the secondary or instrumental sense, just as the abacus does. This is a straightforwardly Aristotelian doctrine which no Catholic, or any other sort of Christian, should be worried about.)
What computers do is formalism, blind string manipulation of axioms and rules of inference, just like what a child does once it’s learned how to do long division, that is not intelligence. True intelligence comes in when you step outside the formalism and make an act of understanding. True acts understanding are nonalgorithmic, as Roger Penrose demostrates in The Emperor’s New Mind. For a nice summary of the Godelian argument against formalism displaying intelligence I would recommend Stephen Barr’s Modern Physics and Ancient Faith