stone monkey, on 06 October 2009 - 11:54 PM, said:
Gem Windcaster, on 06 October 2009 - 11:16 PM, said:
This is exactly what I have addressed. Have you not been paying attention? I am not the one saying I have proof, I am not the one saying I have answers.
That would appear to be
exactly the opposite of what you've been saying. What you've mostly been saying is "That can't be an answer because I don't believe it."
It seems indeed that you haven't been paying attention. I have said that "That could be the answer, but it doesn't have to be". That you interpret what I am saying as you just put it, is what I am talking about when I say this is like bashing my head against a wall. If I say that you interpretation of what I am saying is wrong, why can't you listen to that? I may or may not be the most proficient in explaining to you how I think, but my explanations should at least matter some of the time.
stone monkey, on 06 October 2009 - 11:54 PM, said:
The truth, if it exists at all and whether it's discoverable by humans or not, does not depend in any way on your (or anybody else's) belief in it.
Exactly! Belief is part of how we humans deal with the world, as I've already discussed. My point is that what you are saying, which is very much correct by the way, applies to all beliefs humankind builds on, not just religion. I'm not the one denying illusion here - hopefully noone else does either.
stone monkey, on 06 October 2009 - 11:54 PM, said:
Quote
I don't question the existence of the world. I just question what we know about it.
As for the methods for finding out what the reality is, and finding truth, science is only one part of it, as is logic. You cannot question one part and not question the other parts. You have to find it in yourself to imagine all possible worlds.
Remember that justification for holding a belief is purely subjective, because beliefs cannot be objective. The only thing left is your mind. So free it.
It's all well and good to attempt to imagine all possible worlds, but we don't actually live in all possible worlds; we live in this one. What that is exactly is open to debate and investigation, but the thing about the scientific method is that it's the best and most effective tool we currently have for doing so.
There you go again, making science The Tool. I have said it is one tool, but it's not the only one. And it's not very accurate either, as history shows. It may have grown considerably the last 100 years, but it's inherently incomplete because of the limits that it builds on. Nothing wrong with that, and I love science, but I won't call it what it is not. This is your belief talking - you're making Science into something that is bigger than humankind, and it's not.
stone monkey, on 06 October 2009 - 11:54 PM, said:
If that's a problem for you, go ahead and suggest something that works better. The pondering about the nature of the universe would seem to me to be what David Foster Wallace called "private sector thinking"; useful results are required...
The problem with this thinking is that Science gives you the illusion of giving ultimate answers, and then you require all other answers to give the same illusion of ultimate answers. I don't agree with this world view. The ultimate answers you speak of are built on beliefs - they're philosophy incarnated, and denying it only enforces the illusion of ultimate answers. I don't understand this need to make science into something it is not. Okay, so it is great that you find that science gives you meaning - it is something I can understand. But I can't agree with it, sorry.
stone monkey, on 06 October 2009 - 11:54 PM, said:
Also, I can't be sure about your mind (or anybody else's for that matter; you could all be
Philosophical Zombies for all I know) and I certainly can't be sure about mine, limited as it is (the
TMA sees to that...), so when you talk about minds to be freed, what exactly is it that you mean?
Well, to be fair, I do think your mind already is free, I was being rhetorical - but also I meant it, although maybe not the way you think. I believe that we all have to make up our own minds about the world, and our beliefs. What I am talking about when I say free your mind, is partly that we have to know ourselves, and our own minds. And by knowing ourselves, we will know the truth. If it is the ultimate truth, or
a truth, that is another story altogether, and not for me to answer. You have to decide that yourself.
However, my own mind is the only thing I can be absolute sure of - all my senses can be tricked, the world outside might be a lie - but my mind, if I make it my own, I can be
sure of. Because if I don't accept that, then I don't accept my own existence. Which is silly.
stone monkey, on 06 October 2009 - 11:54 PM, said:
An inelegant and purely brute force argument would seem to show that it's certain that all possible worlds can't be imagined, or conceived of, by anything merely human; there is only a finite amount of processing power available to us in this universe (you might want to look up
Bremermann's Limit), so it's therefore very probable that such a task cannot be done in anything short of infinite time by anything that exists. And I, for one, have to be at work in the morning
Yeah, I know, it is quite a task. What I mean when I say that, is that we should strive for it, even if we won't succeed, or even know
if we succeed. You are deliberately taking me too literally here.
Which is smart, I give you that. And you are - a smart guy I mean. I am simply talking about a state of mind, a way to view yourself and the world. Uncertainty is not that horrible as you may think - disillusion is the first step towards real knowledge - insofar as something can be called real.
stone monkey, on 06 October 2009 - 11:54 PM, said:
Having an open mind is one thing, having a mind so open that your brain falls out of it is another...
This is silly, we're not talking about brain melting here, we're talking about making your mind strong, not the opposite. I don't mean to say that you shouldn't believe in nothing, or that conviction is wrong - quite the opposite.
Opening your mind and having strong convictions are not mutually exclusive - they are in fact dependent on each other.
Man, that was interesting - my brain is melting a little after all.
If I forgot to reply to something, please let me know.
This post has been edited by Gem Windcaster: 17 October 2009 - 03:07 PM