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Quote from: alancalverd on 05/09/2013 23:10:38Quotethere are also no such things as good and evil as such either ... At last, a glimmer of rational thought.For your info :I was just referring to that materialist assumption on the subject <snip> see the difference ?
Quotethere are also no such things as good and evil as such either ... At last, a glimmer of rational thought.
there are also no such things as good and evil as such either ...
Quote from: dlorde on 05/09/2013 22:05:51You seem to know Dawkins work and opinions intimately - perhaps you could quote what he actually says about these things, so we can judge whether your intepretation is correct; it's easy enough to say 'Dawkins says this', or Dawkins thinks that', but I'd like to see the quotes that support it.... i lost that paper book i had ...
You seem to know Dawkins work and opinions intimately - perhaps you could quote what he actually says about these things, so we can judge whether your intepretation is correct; it's easy enough to say 'Dawkins says this', or Dawkins thinks that', but I'd like to see the quotes that support it
Quote from: DonQuichotte on 06/09/2013 19:31:55Quote from: alancalverd on 05/09/2013 23:10:38Quotethere are also no such things as good and evil as such either ... At last, a glimmer of rational thought.For your info :I was just referring to that materialist assumption on the subject <snip> see the difference ?I think you may have missed the sarcasm...
Quote from: DonQuichotte on 06/09/2013 19:53:22Quote from: dlorde on 05/09/2013 22:05:51You seem to know Dawkins work and opinions intimately - perhaps you could quote what he actually says about these things, so we can judge whether your intepretation is correct; it's easy enough to say 'Dawkins says this', or Dawkins thinks that', but I'd like to see the quotes that support it.... i lost that paper book i had ...Priceless - the forum equivalent of 'the dog ate my homework'!C'mon, some Dawkins quotes or it didn't happen
There is no place for free will, good or evil , emotions , feelings,consciousness ....as such at least whatsoever in the materialistic interpretation of evolution, or rather they are meaningless in the materialistic evolutionary terms
only Dawkins and co club are able to provide the right materialistic interpretation of evolution , as explained above, in the sense that there are in fact no such "things" such as free will, feelings , altruism, emotions, ....= just useful pragmatic survival strategies or built-in in our mechanical systems illusions we get fooled by by confusing them with reality , no matter how real they might ever appear to be to us ,once again =David Cooper was explaining just that to you , in another thread as well , better than i can ever do .
Useful or pragmatic are not always synonymous of the truth though
QuoteQuoteNo, sorry , those were just rational justifications for my potential behavior you were trying to developYes, that's how discussions on science forums go; you're expected to provide rational justifications for your argument or position.What i meant was : you were just using some romantic magical thinking...
QuoteNo, sorry , those were just rational justifications for my potential behavior you were trying to developYes, that's how discussions on science forums go; you're expected to provide rational justifications for your argument or position.
No, sorry , those were just rational justifications for my potential behavior you were trying to develop
QuoteArguments from incredulity, anecdotes, unsupported assertions, 'no true Scotsman (materialist)' fallacies, special pleading, appeals to what is 'beyond logic, rationality, and science', etc., may be entertaining, but are insubstantial. No, it's exactly the other way around : your magical romantic thinking contradicts the materialistic mechanical reductionistic interpretation of evolution
Arguments from incredulity, anecdotes, unsupported assertions, 'no true Scotsman (materialist)' fallacies, special pleading, appeals to what is 'beyond logic, rationality, and science', etc., may be entertaining, but are insubstantial.
No, you should just see them as useful pragmatic survival strategies illusions ,as they actually are in fact , according to the materialistic interpretation of evolution ,once again , David Cooper tried to explain to you .
Consciousness can operate beyond the brain, body, and the present, as hundreds of experiments and millions of testimonials affirm.
Whether Prof Dawkins thinks that or not (and I doubt that he confuses machines with robots), it seems entirely plausible that we are entirely mechanistic. Indeed there is no evidence to the contrary (assertion, however authoritative, is not evidence).
Your underlying misunderstanding arises from confusing evolution with natural selection. It's a common mistake among naive readers, particularly of "popular" science journalism. Evolution is an inherent property of a reproducing organism. Natural selection is a function of its environment.
Quote from: DonQuichotte on 06/09/2013 21:06:15There is no place for free will, good or evil , emotions , feelings,consciousness ....as such at least whatsoever in the materialistic interpretation of evolution, or rather they are meaningless in the materialistic evolutionary terms You've confused the categories there - that's either carelessness or lack of understanding. Free will and good & evil are cultural constructs, the others evolved for very good reasons (literally life or death reasons)
Quoteonly Dawkins and co club are able to provide the right materialistic interpretation of evolution , as explained above, in the sense that there are in fact no such "things" such as free will, feelings , altruism, emotions, ....= just useful pragmatic survival strategies or built-in in our mechanical systems illusions we get fooled by by confusing them with reality , no matter how real they might ever appear to be to us ,once again =David Cooper was explaining just that to you , in another thread as well , better than i can ever do .Yes, and no; perhaps if I make a simple analogy: consider a magician, an illusionist; he develops a range of illusions, 'The Vanishing Rabbit', 'Sawing A Woman In Half', 'Water Into Wine', etc. Now, these all involve a carefully arranged and choreographed set of activities with real objects. But they are not what they seem. There are things happening that give the appearance of the activities described, but none of the described activities real - the rabbit doesn't really vanish, the woman isn't really sawn in half, the water doesn't really turn to wine. Sadly, many people believe they really happen, via paranormal means. When the magician or the people want to discuss them, they use the names of the illusions to identify what they're talking about.
QuoteUseful or pragmatic are not always synonymous of the truth thoughAre they ever? Ah, but what is truth?
QuoteQuoteQuoteNo, sorry , those were just rational justifications for my potential behavior you were trying to developYes, that's how discussions on science forums go; you're expected to provide rational justifications for your argument or position.What i meant was : you were just using some romantic magical thinking...OK, so you said 'rational justification' when you meant 'romantic magical thinking'; it's probably nothing to worry about, everyone has senior moments now and then.
QuoteQuoteArguments from incredulity, anecdotes, unsupported assertions, 'no true Scotsman (materialist)' fallacies, special pleading, appeals to what is 'beyond logic, rationality, and science', etc., may be entertaining, but are insubstantial. No, it's exactly the other way around : your magical romantic thinking contradicts the materialistic mechanical reductionistic interpretation of evolutionYou still seem confused - as a response, that's not 'exactly the other way round', it's a complete non-sequitur.
QuoteNo, you should just see them as useful pragmatic survival strategies illusions ,as they actually are in fact , according to the materialistic interpretation of evolution ,once again , David Cooper tried to explain to you .I can see them however I wish; but as I said, I think it's a valid viewpoint (are you having trouble following these threads?), I just like to acknowledge the subjective experience.
If we are entirely mechanistic , as you put it at least , then there are no such things as consciousness, feelings , emotions , love ....as such =they cannot rise from mechanical biological processes = otherwise we can make intelligent machines robots which would be conscious , which would have feelings , emotions ...and even love ....
Quote from: dlorde on 06/09/2013 22:46:14You've confused the categories there - that's either carelessness or lack of understanding. Free will and good & evil are cultural constructs, the others evolved for very good reasons (literally life or death reasons)They are not different categories , not in the sense that the one comes from Mars and the other comes from Venus at least , no : they are only different categories which take place at different levels of man : the one is biological and the other is a matter of consciousness shaped by the environment and by world views , not to mention that consciousness has a biological sort of basis also it cannot escape from .
You've confused the categories there - that's either carelessness or lack of understanding. Free will and good & evil are cultural constructs, the others evolved for very good reasons (literally life or death reasons)
What you cannot understand is how consciousness or the mind ( I see the human mind or consciousness as a whole process which contains intelligence , emotions, feelings , imagination ...) can rise from those biological mechanical processes ?
I made a mistake though when i used to say that Dawkins and co are the real true materialists : they are not , in fact : simply because they do think like yourself via that magical romantic side when it comes to mind and body , cultures, societies , ethics ,free will, good and evil ...The only real materialist here i have seen is : David Cooper :
The biological evolution occurs via the ...natural selection ,dude.You should try to enhance or to improve your knowledge of evolution .
Quote from: DonQuichotte on 08/09/2013 19:29:13The biological evolution occurs via the ...natural selection ,dude.You should try to enhance or to improve your knowledge of evolution .Oh dear me! You really slept through Biology 101, Introduction to Logic, and Basic Common Sense, didn't you? Nor, it seems, have you read anything by Darwin. Do you look exactly like both of your parents? Obviously not. As a consequence of the inherent instability of DNA, plus the genetic lottery of sexual reproduction, you have evolved. When environmental pressures are such that only those who embrace logical thought can survive, you will be eliminated by natural selection.The two mechanisms are not the same, nor even interdependent. But as Darwin observed, the successive application of natural selection to evolving generations results in the differentiation of species.
Quote from: DonQuichotte on 08/09/2013 20:34:39Quote from: dlorde on 06/09/2013 22:46:14You've confused the categories there - that's either carelessness or lack of understanding. Free will and good & evil are cultural constructs, the others evolved for very good reasons (literally life or death reasons)They are not different categories , not in the sense that the one comes from Mars and the other comes from Venus at least , no : they are only different categories which take place at different levels of man : the one is biological and the other is a matter of consciousness shaped by the environment and by world views , not to mention that consciousness has a biological sort of basis also it cannot escape from .Exactly - they're not different in a way I didn't describe, but they are different in the way I did describe. Well done.QuoteWhat you cannot understand is how consciousness or the mind ( I see the human mind or consciousness as a whole process which contains intelligence , emotions, feelings , imagination ...) can rise from those biological mechanical processes ?As far as I'm aware, no-one understands that completely. There are many hypotheses of varying plausibility and many opinions about those plausibilities. Perhaps you'd care to share your own hypothesis?QuoteI made a mistake though when i used to say that Dawkins and co are the real true materialists : they are not , in fact : simply because they do think like yourself via that magical romantic side when it comes to mind and body , cultures, societies , ethics ,free will, good and evil ...The only real materialist here i have seen is : David Cooper :Aww, you mean I'm relegated to the ranks of losers like Dawkins & co, while David Cooper is now the only True Scotsman Materialisttm?It seems like only yesterday I was being accused of not following the guidance of Dawkins & co... oh, wait, it was yesterday
What do you mean the 2 mechanisms are not the same
from the materialistic perspective at least , considering the fact that we are allegedly just machines or robots driven by DNA via the natural selection of evolution , as Dawkins says here below :How can consciousness, the mind, feelings , the thought process...be mechanical, or at least rise from our alleged mechanical biological systems ? etc.....
Let's just move to that consciousness thread , instead of wasting our energies on 3 related threads at the same time: consciousness , evolution and the scientific method are related to each other . [/size]
see that Dawkins' quote as well there about the "fact or truth " that we are just machines or robots driven by DNA through the natural selection of evolution...
Quote from: DonQuichotte on 09/09/2013 17:02:19see that Dawkins' quote as well there about the "fact or truth " that we are just machines or robots driven by DNA through the natural selection of evolution... Quite right; but that doesn't mean we can't identify and label particular behaviours and traits, and attribute certain abstract qualities to them. In fact, as you well know, that's exactly what we have done.