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02-01-2002, 10:55 AM | #21 | |
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02-01-2002, 11:16 AM | #22 | |
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I am saying that the material that a rock is made of does not exist anywhere but within the mind. When our attention is not focused upon the rock, the rock can still go through the motions of being a rock because the mind keeps going even when we aren't paying attention to every little detail of the mind. |
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02-01-2002, 11:42 AM | #23 | |
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To invoke metaphor, would you be willing to say: "The grand canyon is a creation of the camera because the camera is what photographs the grand canyon"? I certainly wouldn't. However, I'm more than willing to give the camera credit for creating the picture of the grand canyon. </amateur> Bookman |
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02-01-2002, 11:53 AM | #24 |
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Well of course if one rejects the objectivity of reality, anything can be made of anything. But that's meaningless. I'm talking about the real world, not fantasy.
[ February 01, 2002: Message edited by: Franc28 ]</p> |
02-01-2002, 02:28 PM | #25 | |
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Although the argument may be poorly stated, its distilled argument is unassailable, viz, "matter can impart no knowledge; unless the "mind" has some transcendent quality, i.e., supra-material, then the mind can have no knwoeldge." |
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02-01-2002, 02:32 PM | #26 | |
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If it is true, it is false. Too bad. |
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02-01-2002, 04:07 PM | #27 | |
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02-02-2002, 12:31 AM | #28 | |
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What I consider a primary proof "dualism" is the inability to assert the mind in purely physical terms. The thinking man is different qualitatively than the inanimate object, or a substance of motion like a wind. His logical conception of things is not directly equivelent to his brain waves, although there is a correlation. Basically it could be seen as an abstract, or the abstract level of being. That allows the leap of communication. The bumps on a CD allow for a message to be put upon it and "translated" by computers and then to be understood by us. It is not the "bumps" that make the message; these bumps can only produce apparent meaning once they are put in a logical framework of a code of interpretation, that meaningless physical states have been injected with meaning to convey the abstract message. Physical media are the conductors of "intelligence", but it is symbolic. A picture of a 3-D box is a symbol of a greater-dimensional object upon a lesser-dimensional medium. The intelligence of a person represents(or can/should) be represented as another dimension as the mere physical actions of the brain are not the abstract ideas themselves but the interaction or symbolic representation with the physical. One way to put this could be that "Meaning is not inherent in the physical itself" but it's claim to us that it exists and is important is enough for us to believe it exists as either a) apart or b) distinct from the purely physical. On a side note, while the ability of neurologists to "hit" a certain part of the brain and produce an association in the subject is interesting, there are some greater challenges. This arrangement of subject-environment (the subject's apprehension of the environment) causes a sense of change of environment; what could as easily be done by actually "changing" the environment. But it is not as easy to change the "identity" of the subject, or his consciousness of his self, as it is to change the consciousness of his environment. It is the thread of the "individual being" distinct from mere physical reactions that I find most important, which is the harder thing to reduce than a particular "sense" or "feeling" that is transmitted to the individual. Admittedly though those kinds of experiments, if possible, are less likely to be done because of their ethical significance. |
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02-02-2002, 05:52 AM | #29 | |
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