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Galen's Soul (SYTO's thread [Fine, "Philosophy Thread"])

Discussion in 'Miscellaneous' started by Sytoplasma, Nov 5, 2014.

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  1. SAcptm

    SAcptm Haxor Staff Alumni

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    Yeah you're absolutely right that my argument against PZs comes from a physicalist baseline. It definitely couldn't be used to convince any kind of spiritual/mental dualist of physicalism. But it's purpose is only to nullify the seemingly active effects of the PZ argument, and shows why they don't have any force against the physicalist. The point is it shows that PZ-advocates do these mental acrobatics and declare it a proof of dualism. The objection to that is to show that if we did the same mental acrobatics from our starting position, it would advocate physicalism. The point is to show that the argument is worthless, and the dualist needs to look elsewhere to justify the invisible stuff.

    Most physicalists are perfectly happy with this because they take their view to be the more inherently plausible one (by virtue of theoretical parsimony - it posits the existence of less stuff), so you see this kind of response quite a lot.
     
  2. FuzzyBlueBaron

    FuzzyBlueBaron Warm, Caring, Benign, Good and Kind Philanthrope Global Moderator Forum Moderator Donator Tester
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    I confess I find the reverence that's often accorded parsimony to be intriguing, bordering on fascinating. I mean, I appreciate that when given two forms that satisfy a criteria, the simper of the two is to be preferred for its greater economy and reduced capacity for confusion.

    But, this said, it seems odd to me to use O's R as the basis for deciding plausibility, if for no other reason that H. L. Mencken was spot-on when he remarked that "For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong".

    Tell me, are there other mechanics that under-gird the use of parsimony to justify a position? Or is it just a matter of arbitrary human affection for simplicity outweighing other considerations for plausibility?
     
  3. Fernegulus

    Fernegulus Bison Rider

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    Alright, what is this madness here?
    Sac, you're being a baddie.
    You could've just said it's a matter of perceiving only what you wish to see and stop with the pseudo-sciency crap.
     
    Last edited: Dec 7, 2014
  4. SAcptm

    SAcptm Haxor Staff Alumni

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    I agree that parsimony is no guarantee of truth, but in this instance I'm not sure you fully appreciate the scale of the problem. When parsimony is a rationally compelling force it is because of things like this: On the one hand, you can attempt to explain mind using processes that we already know exist. And year on year we seem to be getting better at this. On the other hand, you have to literally invent an entire new kind of thing, not even a physical thing, you suggest that unlike anything else we've ever seen in the entire universe, minds are composed of some new kind of stuff. It would be unlike anything else, the only case of non-physical stuff interacting with our universe that we know of. This stuff, whatever it is, has never been necessary to explain any other problem, and we have no other evidence for its existence at all. If we advocate it we also have to forget about more or less everything we think we know about causation and physics at large. The only reason you might suggest it does exist would be to let you say something about people and minds that secures the position you want to advocate on issues such as free will or general religiosity.

    Imagine that you had no previous thoughts or vested interests in this issue. Given that every year we get better and better at explaining mental phenomena using the first approach, it seems you'd have to be utterly insane to start believing the latter from scratch. Now, there are legitimate reasons why you could be convinced of the latter. If, for example, it just seemed utterly hopeless that a physicalist description could ever explain the phenomena, even though the models are regularly replaced with better and more sophisticated ones. In that situation it might seem that, however implausible the dualist model seems on the face of it, we might just have to bite the bullet and go for it anyway. We don't seem to be in that situation though. Arguments of that sort from dualists have been plentiful (particularly surrounding the qualia debate), but I'm yet to see one which hasn't been pretty thoroughly objected. Largely on account of this, support for the dualist position within the philosophy of mind academic community has been pretty steadily declining since the 70s at least. I know majority opinion is no basis for anything, of course, but it isn't just a coincidence. The philosophical arguments for it just don't succeed in showing it to be either a necessary or useful way to understand mind.

    In terms of contemporary literature, David Chalmers is probably the strongest remaining contemporary dualist. I've read a number of his books and he makes about as solid a case for it as anybody could hope to. He's a good read and I'd recommend him if you're interested because he certainly makes things harder for physicalists, but his arguments have been pretty heavily examined and they are subject to some pretty damning rebuttals too. Daniel Dennett is a good source of counterargument to Chalmers, whatever else you might want to say about him. If you ever want to seriously put in the time to get to grips with the debate as it currently stands, I'd say you could do a lot worse than reading the arguments and replies between those two. Note that neither of them can claim to speak for everybody in either camp, but they are both pretty readable.
     
  5. Hella

    Hella The Nightmare of Hair Global Moderator Donator Tester

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    I think that a mutually agreeable concept of a soul should be the spiritual/immaterial part of a human (or non-human animal) that is considered immortal. Anything extra that that in a personal definition should be specified, but that looks to be the basic consensus on what a soul is. Probably.

    I'm gonna step back though, because Sac does a bazillion times better job than I can.

    *fistbump*
     
  6. FuzzyBlueBaron

    FuzzyBlueBaron Warm, Caring, Benign, Good and Kind Philanthrope Global Moderator Forum Moderator Donator Tester
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    Hmm. So, out of interest, what's the actual temporal status of things of a spiritual nature? Are they normally confined by temporal restraints such that it's necessary to label some things that happen to fall into the "spiritual and not affected by time" category as "soul" and/or "soulish"? I mean, if people's physical existence involves being made up of living cells, themselves composed of indestructible matter/energy, that reproduce in order that the body they are a part of might continue to exist after the individual cell has died-- if that's how the physical side of things works, how does the spiritual side of things go? Do we have spiritual cells that die/replicate? Or is the spiritual system assumed to not be bounded by time/space like the physical is?

    What I'm getting at is, clearly define the basic elements we're dealing with (the physical, the spiritual) and then come up with a definition of the things they comprise (either directly from one/the other, or as a result of synergy between the physical & spiritual), like the body, mind, heart, spirit, soul. (Apologies if all of the above comes across as insufferably pontifical, I'm just writing on a tight schedule and don't have time to word things all nice like :3).
    >If we advocate it we also have to forget about more or less everything we think we know about causation and physics at large.
    >>Eh, I really think you're pulling a long bow on that, sac. I mean, sure, some theories about certain aspects of root causes might need to be reviewed (depending on the specific nature of the dualist position you subscribe to); but the broad majority of theories can remain reasonably untouched / rendered only slightly fuzzier due to the possibility that there might be some spiritual overly to the broader causation behind why an apple tried to bonk some (historically inaccurate) Newtonian reenactor on the head.

    >The rest of the above quote
    >>But see, discarding previous/current investment is precisely why I wind up in the dualist position I find myself in. I discard as much preconception as possible, prepare myself to be thoroughly uncomfortable, and then ask myself a couple of those big/fundamental questions like: "who am I?", "how am I here?", "why am I here?" (or, another way, "is there a reason for my being here, and if so what is it?"), "is there a God?" (and yes, before anyone asks, there's a specific reason to use the capital G in this case without necessarily referring to the Judeo-Christian YHWH-- "god" is an object of focus and worship* [*NB: also a technical term here, basically meaning 'to act towards with specific, positive, regard'], "God" is the same but the object of focus and worship also has the capacity for independent agency. A "Supreme Being" gets the capital; a cabbage you really, really happen to like, doesn't), "would the existence of a God have any bearing on me?", "what form might that bearing take?", "what are ways I could get answers to these questions?", "and what should I do in the meantime while I'm unsure/still working it all out?".

    I actually have to go, so stopping here, apologies, next time I'll type up my response to Hella second, so he gets the short end of it. ::P:
     
  7. Sytoplasma

    Sytoplasma Haxor

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    Holy crap. Thanks for the novel.
     
  8. Hella

    Hella The Nightmare of Hair Global Moderator Donator Tester

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    If you want a definition of a soul that can be mutually agreed with, then it can't be ridiculously specific in areas that we have no possible way of verifying. Perhaps we should make it even more vague so that it's indisputable: a soul is a portion of the human that exists on a separate, immaterial/spiritual level.

    We can't clearly define the elements we're working with if (a) we don't necessarily agree on what we're defining, or (b) there's no way we can actually examine the composition of what we're talking about.

    >>On Sac's side of the argument (<3), causation is spoiled if you have to throw some unknowable element into the mix; as it is known right now, if you have knowledge of all the physical influences in a situation, one could conceivably predict exactly what will happen in said situation. If there is an influence that we can never measure, predict or even see, then causation will need to be entirely re-evaluated in order to account for that effect.
    Physics is built around the interaction of physical matter. There is no room in it for non-physical matter to exist on the level you suggest.

    Gotta go too. :P
     
  9. swagbot

    swagbot Shopkeep Stealer

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    Just depositing my soul for admission:

    [​IMG]

    What do you kids wanna chat about?
     
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  10. FuzzyBlueBaron

    FuzzyBlueBaron Warm, Caring, Benign, Good and Kind Philanthrope Global Moderator Forum Moderator Donator Tester
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    Coming up with a definition of "good" that works across religious boundaries. So we're looking for something secular, but not that kind of secular (i.e. not atheistic; bc atheism=/=secularism).
     
  11. Hella

    Hella The Nightmare of Hair Global Moderator Donator Tester

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    'Good' is either subjective, in which case what is good varies between folk and is pretty much impossible to nail down given different world-views/cultures, or objective, in which case only point of view on 'good' can be correct.

    Given that, as a standard, different persons and beliefs hold different things as 'good' (which is undeniable), providing a universal value of 'good' essentially discounts those views, which means it won't work across all religious boundaries.

    Secular as in not 'influenced by religion', rather than 'religion is a load of shit and irrelevant'?
     
  12. swagbot

    swagbot Shopkeep Stealer

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    "good
    The most general term of approval, both moral and non-moral, whether intrinsic or extrinsic."

    "From the beginning, Moore anticipated that his methods could be applied fruitfully to significant issues in moral philosophy. The first chapter of his Principia Ethica (1903) famously sought to analyze the concept of "good" as the basis for all moral valuation. Such an investigation is meta-ethical in nature; its goal is clarity and precision, not substantive normative content.

    Although the question, "What is good?" might be answered in any of several ways, Moore dismissed most of the likely answers as irrelevant to his task. What we need is neither a list of specific things in life that happen to be good nor even a set of principles by means of which to identify such things. The proper answer must be a correct general explanation of the concept (not merely the word) "good," applicable in every possible instance. Moore's central contention was that good is a simple, non-natural quality that certain things in the world happen to exhibit.

    Although many philosophers of the Western tradition had claimed to define good in terms of some other feature of the world, but Moore argued that such attempts typically confuse part with whole or cause with effect. That every attempt to define good by reference to something else fails is evident from the open question that invariably remains: "Is this really good?" (When a hedonism proposes that "Good is pleasure," for example, we naturally ask, "But is pleasure always good?") The open question shows that each effort to identify good with something else is mistaken, Moore held, and since most of these attempts equate good with a natural property, he labelled their erroneous procedure the "naturalistic fallacy."

    Although indefinable, the concept of good is not meaningless, since we use it to distinguish good from bad every day. Hence, Moore concluded that "good" must be a simple, non-natural, indefinable quality that good things have. We recognize it in our experience, even though there is no explaining it; this is a version of ethical intuitionism. In later chapters of the book, Moore himself proposed that good is most evident in our appreciation of physical objects with aesthetic value and in the uniquely worthwhile experience of human friendships. Even many whose notions about morality differ from Moore's would seem to share his basic conviction that they can only be intuited, not defined or explained."

    http://www.philosophypages.com/hy/6k.htm#eth
    Mind you ethical subjectivism and cultural relativism are fallacious and unrelated to ethical intuitionism
    --- Double Post Merged, Jan 21, 2015, Original Post Date: Jan 21, 2015 ---
    Not if it's general enough.
     
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  13. FuzzyBlueBaron

    FuzzyBlueBaron Warm, Caring, Benign, Good and Kind Philanthrope Global Moderator Forum Moderator Donator Tester
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    The first. Secular as in "no allegiance to any one belief system and thus compatible with any* of them."

    swagbot is correct, in that if you divine a sufficiently general and truly secular principle then it aught not clash with any reasonable faith (e.g. the concept of gravity is what I would call a "secular" principle inasmuch as it rests solely upon axioms derived from the temporal [rather than eternal] end of the scale).

    Hallelujah! Preach it, brother! Been saying that for years and hardly anyone will listen. ::(:


    Using that excellent extract as starting point, here's a few things based off of my own ponderings over the years re: a secular definition of 'good':
    1. If we want to get very far we'll be needing to rely upon induction rather than deduction. I know people go ape over the latter, but it really doesn't work very well when you're playing at metaphysics. I assume I'm stating the obvious for people here, but I feel it's good policy to get it out in the open. :3
    2. Given that we're being secular here, my cogitations lead me to conclude that a really, really good starting point would be seeing what principles are pretty much common among all* belief systems.
    3. A starting commonality that I feel is worth digging into is people. All* faiths, sooner or later, come down to people with some form of commentary on how they aught to relate to one-another, the world, and God**.
    4. Focusing in on that word "relate", and then taking into account the very real fact that humans are communal creatures (<insert "No man is an island" spiel here>), my thoughts of late have been leading me to the conclusion that it might be possible to define "the good" in regards to "relationality".
    5. Further backing up my thoughts re: relationally defining 'good' is the observation that pretty much all* religions have a positive view of "life" (as opposed to, you know, being dead) and that it's kinda hard to have relationships if one is dead.
    6. Also there's the notion that if it's true that "the furthest thing from love [nominally a 'good' thing] is not hate [nominally a 'bad' thing] but rather indifference" then it would seem to my mind (well versed in fuzzy logic as it is) that once again we've got this thing where relationality is caught up in the mix (in this case, a lack of relationality is equated with being the "furthest thing from <a 'good' thing>").
    7. Drawing from my own Christian roots (I know, I know, this thing needs to be secular and work with any* faith; but that doesn't mean I can't take inspiration from my own) where God, being the actual, definitive, standard of 'good' Himself (i.e. it's not that "God is good", it's that "God is good") it occurs to me that the measure of "good" in Christian terms actually comes down to how closely something relates/corresponds with God. Again, that relationship thing.
    8. Furthermore, the 'title' of the Holy Spirit given in many creeds is "The LORD, the giver of life" which we can then take and mix with the outworking of the Holy Spirit in Christian thinking (i.e. the HS being someone with whom Christians are supposed to cultivate a close relationship with) as well as putting it alongside point #5 (about "life" being a pretty much universally positive value in all* faiths) and, once again, we see these parallels between 'good' and relationship (as well as love and life).
    Imma stop here bc long post is long and I need to sleeps. But yes. Would love peoples thoughts on my ideas and ramblings; 'specially seeing as some of them have been rattling around for years. ::):

    Also, yes, I'm aware that with some of the inductive reasoning I'm doing here I'm indulging in a spot of 'weak' induction; but, hell, atm it's all just supposition and fuzzy reasoning-- so better to start out adventurous I say. ::P:

    *NB: "any" and "all" only include belief systems that can stand up under their own weight and internal stresses-- so no subjectivism here, sir; thankyouverymuch!
    **NB: "God" in this case means something analogous to: "the focal point of the system. That which serves as the internal motivation (goal & motor) for the faith".
     
  14. Fernegulus

    Fernegulus Bison Rider

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    You're doing it wrong.
    The term of good is indubitably one of the most (if not the most) general, as in unspecific, terms human has ever created, and yet every speech, every toungue in the world has a word for 'good'. And those words are very old, and mostly of local origin, so that there's so many of them. Troughout the entire history the definition of good was (and still is) being constantly changed due to what we hope to be moral progress of humans (as entire societies). And although those changes were heavily complicated, twisted and full of piles of shit, we seem to observe a general tendency.
    And so, humans started in the phase of herds. Every man thought and did what was best for himself and his family, the ones and only ones he cared for and about. And obviously, people started to notice that fighting one another isn't that beneficial and the good that comes from it is usually of short-term. Bigger tribes formed. And they were still loyal to their tribe, they still felt like a family. And after they stopped fighting for life all the time, they got bored and created culture, religion (which, at the time, were the same), and later on, even civilization. And as they grew, there formed different social structures. The poor and the rich emerged. And when the poor were working for their ink, paper, and wine, the rich could exploit them as bloody tyrants or noble, enlighted wise men, sometimes called priests and sometimes philosophers. And those philosophers started messing with the religious ideas. So did the priests, but the priests were able to tame the mob and make it follow them just like a herd of sheep (what is now done in the politics and we call it demagogy). So the philosophers had to keep quiet.
    And suddenly, one of the religions, a relatively young one, called judaism actually made sense. It wasn't myths, inside-empty ceremonies and all this useless rubbish which was used to explain the principles of nature by the lazy ones who preferred gods over science, or to exploit peons. Jews followed their god to be good. Yahweh, the Creator, demanded from them that they would be good. There were no promises, they weren't expecting to get to heaven after their died. They didn't have to fear hell to be good, like the europeans.
    And Yahweh was just. Kind and caring for the good, though cruel for the evil. The God of Old Testament. There came the days of justice. Strict rules were to be followed. The concept of justice spread out to different societies.
    Suddenly, Jesus Christ. Yes, him. He came and teached a shocking concept, love. Love, forgiveness, understanding. The idea that you should give up your benefits to the others. You should be ready to give up your life if that means saving the life of someone else, even the worst of your enemies. He taught of a God who forgives. Every man could enter the Kingdom. And yet the idea of sacrifice was what men could not stand.
    And there we are, in the times of paranoia. Some people try to forgive, the law tries to be just, and many primitives do only what's best for themselves (and since the other ones don't blindly desire power, it is the primitve, though good looking, who hold it). But the hope exists, that we will one day live in a better world. And after Jesus, people have fought even more blindly over what is good. And they, sometimes purposely, sometimes foolishly, quote once the Old, and once the New Testament, fogetting, or not even noticing that they present values that totally contradict each other. When a man says that we should forgive someone, it's accepted. And if in 5 minutes he says, 'justice must be done', it's also widely agreed on. And obviously, the most (and least at the same time) funny example, people killing 'in the name of Jesus Christ'. Iron logic, man.
    Basically, good is a value. One that describes the benefits of a given part of the society, an object, or even an abstract concept. Noteworthy is the fact that it's widely exploited and misused.
     
    Last edited: Jan 21, 2015
  15. Hella

    Hella The Nightmare of Hair Global Moderator Donator Tester

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    I was fuzzily drawing on the work I did on ethics a couple years ago, and looking at the value of good, rather than just giving it a definition. In that case, I'd tentatively agree with the definition given at the beginning of Swagbots quote, because I can't argue with it.
     
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  16. FuzzyBlueBaron

    FuzzyBlueBaron Warm, Caring, Benign, Good and Kind Philanthrope Global Moderator Forum Moderator Donator Tester
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    I approve of doing things fuzzily. :potato:

    That said, I probably should have said at the beginning that I'm actually looking for a working definition; such that it allows us to quantify the 'goodness' of stuff. :teabag:
     
  17. Lawrence_Shagsworth

    Lawrence_Shagsworth Joke Slayer Official Server Admin

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    Screw reading the above, nobody got time fo dat
     
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  18. Hella

    Hella The Nightmare of Hair Global Moderator Donator Tester

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    So you are trying to work out whether one thing can simply be good, and, if so, whether something can be more or less good than another?
     
  19. Fernegulus

    Fernegulus Bison Rider

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    Good isn't relative in the same way physical values are (i.e. height - you can set your zero point anywhere, but the difference in two heights will be constant independently of the frame of reference). A can be more good (not better, more good) than B for mind X. That does NOT imply that A is more good to any other mind Y by the same amount, and in many cases B will be more good than A.
     
  20. swagbot

    swagbot Shopkeep Stealer

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    [1] Can you say that again? I don't think I heard you correctly. Did you say that I was correct? :B):

    [2] I was taught that axioms are only used in a mathematical context, and maxim for a philosophical context. I guess it's the other way around?

    [3] Values tend to be a better starting point. Are you familiar with John Rawls' Veil Of Ignorance thought experiment?

    [4] As in social creatures? Or as Aristotle refers to them, political creatures. Not too sure what you mean by relationality.

    [5] It'd be more clear if you explained your criteria for personhood, as you seem to be hinting that only persons (particularly [maybe exclusively] political creatures who value life and are capable of loving other political creatures) are capable of good.

    As Ferne said, the definition of "good" will and should change depending on: the model presented, the branch of philosophy a given model falls into, and the values and assumptions given to arrive to said framework/model (logic isn't subjective, but the inputs are). A definition doesn't necessarily have to fit with every model, across every branch; idk where you're getting this notion from.

    Not to mention the definition I posited was arrived to by analyzing countless definitions of good across countless (ethical and nonethical) models, as well as casual usage. The resulting definition was the only commonality among all of them, apparently
     
    Last edited: Jan 21, 2015
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