- “around” is the key word - as if a spatial attribute settles the matter!
Red herring. Is targeting semantics the best you can do?
- We **know **full well that matter does not think whereas we have the not insignificant power to think about matter.
Strike#1! This is your standard argument, and it is the Argument from Ignorance. It’s also wrong - we are made from matter, and we have the ability to think. You’re equivocating. Matter, in certain configurations,
can think. We’re proof of that. In the same way that a brick can’t provide shelter… but a
collection of bricks, in a certain configuration, can.
- “emergent property” is merely a cloak for ignorance. No one has ever reduced thoughts to electrical impulses.
Indeed - nobody claims to understand exactly how it works. However, what evidence there is suggests that it
does work, somehow. It’s only superstitious wingnuts who have to introduce an unnecessary supernatural element to cover for their fear of not knowing. Rational people accept that not knowing something is okay. If it wasn’t for such honesty, science wouldn’t exist and we’d all still live in mud huts dying in our mid-thirties.
- If the mind is disturbed bodily functions are also disturbed. Correlation does not entail unidirectional causation.
As the “mind” is merely an abstraction of the brain, and the brain controls most bodily fuctions, then it is to be expected that changes in brain structure or chemistry can cause change to bodily functions. Moreover, changes to body chemistry can affect both brain and body. No mystery there. It’s just biology.
- Intangible thoughts are detected by the person is who thinking without the need for a scientific device.
Irrelevant to the comment I posted, which is that no extra-corporeal intelligence has ever been detected. If you can give me an example of a sign of intelligence which has incontrovertibly been traced to a non-corporeal source I’ll retract my statement.
- The use of “mechanism” reveals the unsubstantiated assumption that every event has a mechanistic explanation - which neatly disposes of rationality and responsibility, thereby confirming the facts in my last post:
Actually what it reveals is your incapacity to understand a basic comment.
I don’t know if you’re equivocating on purpose - I suspect so given your long history of setting up Straw Men. But “mechanism” does not ineluctably mean “mechanistic.” Read the dictionary. And in the meantime allow me to rephrase for the benefit of your limited capacity to comprehend:
Nobody has ever been able to describe any plausible means, method, mechanism, process or paradigm by which intelligence might exist outside of matter.
- A “rational reason” for rejecting matter is that it takes reason to determine what is unreasonable!
Non-sequitur. I don’t know what you think this proves.
- The theory that reason consists of irrational events is self-destructive.
Strike#2! Argument from Ignorance again. I and other posters have addressed it dozens of times, and you still cling to it like a shipwreck victim. I believe you understand why your stance is fallacious, but to do the decent thing would mean opening your beliefs up to self-scrutiny, and we all know where that would lead!
- Since the demise of logical positivism materialism is exposed as an inadequate hypothesis.
I disagree. And even if your assertion were true, materialism continues to work, consistently and predictably, and has been the most successful “hypothesis” for accurately describing our universe, for enhancing quality of life, for providing robust and objective answers to many of “life’s mysteries” (many of which were previously answered by arbitrarily inserting one or more gods into the equation).
How galling it must be that the thing you so despise is so wonderfully successful, and has benefited you personally so much!
- How can the verification principle be explained scientifically?
Sorry, I don’t see how this is relevant. Can you explain the purpose of the question?
- The power of reason and self-control presuppose supernatural agency.
No.
You presuppose those things. Your opinion does not constitute fact. I’d really like to see you provide some sort of justification for your statement. But I know you can’t.
- To derive thoughts from unthinking molecules is the height of absurdity.
Strike#3! Your third appeal to Ignorance.
- The more absurd a hypothesis is - like solipsism - the easier it is to maintain.
Unless by “absurd” you’re referring to the placing of a hypothesis beyond the scope of investigation, I don’t follow. Of course, if that
is what you mean then it explains the tenacity of religious faith.
- What is the precise “mechanism” by which everything is **known **to have a mechanistic explanation?
I don’t know. Nor have I ever claimed to know. Why is this relevant?
Or is this just a resurrection of one of your other stupid arguments - that unless you get a precise, molecule-by-molecule scientific explanation of *everything *in the universe, you reserve the right to reject whatever part of it you like? Preferring instead to subscribe to stone-age superstitions that don’t even
begin to provide an explanation? Why is it that the standards of evidence you demand, are so infinitely far in excess of those you are able to provide for your own absurd claims?