B
buffalo
Guest
I can’t believe you actually posted this.
Here is a test for you - go outside and point out anything you see that man created ex-nihilo.
I can’t believe you actually posted this.
Showing us again how science is your god.
Here is what the Pope says:
Absolutely true science has a priori exclusions. It, a priori, excludes non-science.True science does not have a priori exclusions. That is why your conclusions are not trustworthy.
Not sure what that has to do with anything?I can’t believe you actually posted this.
Here is a test for you - go outside and point out anything you see that man created ex-nihilo.
Science is my god?Showing us again how science is your god.Once again you have faith and your claim of non-belief cannot stand.
Pro Life Expectancy - a look at the actual actuarials
No.Are you enslaved by science?
Time to read The Irrational AtheistNo.
You have yet to explain to me anything revelation has done for man?
Couldn’t find anything?Not sure what that has to do with anything?
Which one of these are non-science? theology, **Mariology, ****ontology, ****patrology, ****pisteology, ****alethiology and ****archelogy **Absolutely true science has a priori exclusions. It, a priori, excludes non-science.
Aaaaahhh! Do you?Do you understand the difference between philosophy and science?
Archeologists dig stuff up and analyze it. Science has to have a connection to the “real” world.Aaaaahhh! Do you?
Correct - the entire real world not just the natural world. You should really check the base definition for science.Archeologists dig stuff up and analyze it. Science has to have a connection to the “real” world.
Just a tiny observation from reading this thread. Looks to me that there are very few who are actually on the same page in the discussion. Some may have different books.Science is my god?![]()
Science is definded as “a department of systematized knowledge as an object of study”. So, tjm, Philosophy is science, so is Theology and all of the other sciences buffalo mentioned.Archeologists dig stuff up and analyze it. Science has to have a connection to the “real” world.
If what you’re studying has no connection to the natural world, it’s either religion or philosophyCorrect - the entire real world not just the natural world. You should really check the base definition for science.
Wonderful- then students can take a philosophy or theology classScience is definded as “a department of systematized knowledge as an object of study”. So, tjm, Philosophy is science, so is Theology and all of the other sciences buffalo mentioned.
*None *of these areas of study are science in the modern meaning of the discipline. (They are all branches of philosophy or theology - and no - these are not science either). It’s of no use in this discussion to attempt to use the old and now anachronistic sense of science meaning any knowledge at all, because that is not what is meant by the term today - and you know it. If someone says, “I am studying science in college”, no-one thinks they are studying patrology (if *you *think it, then you are bizarrely out of line with modern English usage). Science journal does not report philosophical musings on the nature of truth. If someone says they are a scientist, say on their job application, you’d have to be demented to think that they are claiming to be a theologian or a philosopher. The philosophy of science as a discipline is not about the philosophy of philosophy (heavens, what a dire subject that would be) or the philosophy of theology (even worse) - it is about the philosophy of those subjects that are meant by the term science today.Which one of these are non-science? theology, **Mariology, ****ontology, ****patrology, ****pisteology, ****alethiology and ****archelogy **
I assume you mean “the Mind cannot arise from a strictly physical ground, ie the brain”. It is obvious that the mind itself is not physical (almost by definition, otherwise we wouldn’t have the mind-body problem), just as pain is not a physical entity itself although it arises from physical or material processes - the question is whether the mind is grounded in the physical world - is it an epiphenomenon of physical processes? My view is that the mind, and consciousness are grounded in the physical brain and I’ll explain why I think that in a minute - but first I need to correct a couple of errors you make below:As a teaser, though, here is some of the very strong evidence that the Mind cannot be strictly physical:
In “The Emperor’s New Mind”, Penrose used arguments based on part of one of Goedel’s theorems (that in any formal mathematical system, there are propositions which are true that cannot be proven within the system) along with other arguments to support his opinion that the mind cannot be represented by an algorithm running on a Turing machine. In no way did he imply (nor does he apparently believe) that the mind is not grounded in the physical brain (indeed the whole point of the book is to find a non-algorithmic but physical process to account for mind), nor that the mind did not evolve in a purely naturalistic way.
- The eminent theoretical physicist Roger Penrose used Godel’s Theorem (a logic theorem) to demonstrate exactly this - that the mind cannot be analogous to a physical computer of any kind.
This is wrong. What you are describing here is not the Copenhagen interpretation but an interpretation of quantum mechanics called “consciousness causes collapse”. It has a number of fundamental flaws (such as the consequence of the unrealised behaviour of the universe before the emergence of minds: see Bohm and Hiley - The Undivided Universe). It has been widely rejected on ontological and scientific grounds, and the development of the concept of decoherence has been the nail in its coffin. Your claim that the cause of the collapse of the wave function in the Copenhagen interpretation cannot be a physical thing and that QM cannot otherwise work is completely wrong.
- The classical (Copenhagen) interpretation of quantum mechanics asserts that the mind - an observer - cannot be a physical thing! The entire theory of quantum mechanics cannot work unless this is the case.
Not so, as what you have described is not the Copenhagen interpretation, but some other discredited thing, although all credible interpretations have some unpalatable philosophical and scientific aspects.The only counters to this have been alternative interpretations that involve postulates far more wild, numerous, and unobservable than the simple tenet that the Mind is not physical.
Any two healthy human brains are indeed alike, having as they do, the same structure, the same centres etc; but they are not identical.If your mind is nothing but a collection of neurons and their interactions - physical, particular things - then no two brains are obviously alike.
Well, two brains represent physical entities similarly - we agree on what is red, what is hot, what is cold, what is bigger or further away than what. It is, after all, the function of brains (and minds) to represent reality with some degree of accuracy - if they didn’t we’d all be dead the first time we tried to cross the street.) Why are abstract concepts different, especially since there is good evidence that abstract thinking is an extension of concrete thinking conducted in a similar mode (see, for example, Steven Pinker’s The Stuff of Thought)?There is no basis at all to assert that two such disparate brains could represent an abstract concept identically
Why on earth do you say that? What is of course, certain, is that no representation of an abstract concept can occur in the absence of a brain.
- as a matter of fact, there’s no evidence or reason to believe that a single such brain could understand any abstract concept.
This is the bare bones of Alvin Plantinga’s argument against naturalism - he claims that naturalism is self-defeating for more or less the reason you propose (his argument of course uses more ink than you do, and much bigger words). But Plantinga’s argument is fatally flawed. Although, it is impossible to *prove *that any proposition about reality is true if the mind is grounded in the brain and has evolved, that is no reason to abandon the pragmatic assertion that the brain has evolved to make representations of reality that are true. That is, after all, its function.I did assert that it is illogical for you to claim both that your mind is nothing but a physical thing that evolved via natural selection and that it is capable of discerning truth from error with certainty.
Let me try to answer the question: I am confident that my mind, which is an epiphenomenon of my physical brain which has evolved, can discern truth about reality because that is the function that it has evolved to have - a brain that did not reasonably accurately represent reality - that acted randomly or capriciously or totally inaccurately would not allow its possessor to survive long enough to reproduce. In other words, I have confidence that my brain/mind represents and interprets reality reasonably accurately, not because it is some sort of magical Platonic entity with supernatural powers, but because my experience is that it works.Now, do you think perhaps you could answer our very basic question: If you believe your Mind, your entire ‘you’, is nothing but a blob of matter that evolved via natural selection, why do you have ANY confidence in anything it tells you? Why?