Absence of evidence is only evidence of absence if we would expect evidence to be there. But as I said I don't think (if a quark were conscious) we would actually expect it to pass a neurological examination.
Why not?
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Absence of evidence is only evidence of absence if we would expect evidence to be there. But as I said I don't think (if a quark were conscious) we would actually expect it to pass a neurological examination.
But you have raised the bar. You initially implied claimed that there might be a non-neural consciousness (i.e.a quark consicousness) were illogical, and therefore I assume nonsensical. Remember this:
All I did was to point out that they are in fact regarded as coherent viewpoints by the likes of Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy and co.That is a problem if you want to claim it is actuallny true. It is not a problem if you either claim it is possibly true, or that more simply the theory is logically coherent (both of which you apparently deny).
But quarks cannot be made of chocolate because chocolate is more complex that a quark, having a larger scale chemical make up.
Because nobody has shown me that passing a neurological test is a necessary condition for there being consciousness there. It may work well enough for humans, but I don't think it was ever intended to be a universal test in the first place.Why not?
Why should there be an observable difference to us in order for the concept of it to make semantic sense? That is what you are implying, right?Considering you can't even tell us what difference it would make if office furniture were conscious or not, I'm not sure my "nonsense" claim is that far off the mark.
But the science we know, afaik (ie neuro tests) were never designed or intended to be universal tests for consciousness, rather medical tests for humans and perhaps animals.Using your words :
Absence of evidence is only evidence of absence if we would expect evidence to be there. But as I said I don't think (if a quark were chocolate) we would actually expect it to pass a chemical examination.
If you get to reject all the science we know to make your point, so should the rest of us.
Because nobody has shown me that passing a neurological test is a necessary condition for there being consciousness there. It may work well enough for humans, but I don't think it was ever intended to be a universal test in the first place.
Why should there be an observable difference to us in order for the concept of it to make semantic sense? That is what you are implying, right?
Kind of like the tests we have were never designed or intended to be universal tests for chocolateness, rather culinary tests for food. So I guess not only is office furniture possibly conscious, but it might also be chocolate. Imagine the ethical dilemma that creates - it might be self-aware, but at the same time I might enjoy eating it. What to do?But the science we know, afaik (ie neuro tests) were never designed or intended to be universal tests for consciousness, rather medical tests for humans and perhaps animals.
Because nobody has shown me that passing a neurological test is a necessary condition for there being consciousness there. It may work well enough for humans, but I don't think it was ever intended to be a universal test in the first place.
Kind of like the tests we have were never designed or intended to be universal tests for chocolateness, rather culinary tests for food. So I guess not only is office furniture possibly conscious, but it might also be chocolate. Imagine the ethical dilemma that creates - it might be self-aware, but at the same time I might enjoy eating it. What to do?
I guess all houses could be made of chocolate then, like I said previously.
Chocolate has a chemical definition such that veering too far does not make something "chocolate" anymore. Consciousness on the other hand has an observed correlation to certain chemical states, but is not necessarily defined by them. See the dictionary for details.Sure, if "conscious" can mean anything anything can be called conscious.
Same with chocolate.
So there are no such things as unobservable properties?Yes, something that's described as different should be different.
Sorry dont understand that one....Otherwise it would be "semantically" different and the same simultaneously.
It is very popular for anti-philosophy intellectuals define philosophy as meaningless word games. Yet ironically that seems to be the only game they really have much acumen in. I am not even sure what a "word game" is meant to be, so perhaps it's all just an attempt to muddy the waters?As I said, instead of substance there's nothing but word games here.
Chocolate comes from a fairly well definmed set of chemical compounds containing cacao etc. Without them the term "chocolate" becomes inappropriate. My chair is not made of chocolate but metal, and the two are logically incompatible (it would be nonsense to say that chocolate is metallic in that sense because of the set of compunds that are regarded as chocolate is not metallic and metal bars are not regarded as a foodstuff).Kind of like the tests we have were never designed or intended to be universal tests for chocolateness, rather culinary tests for food. So I guess not only is office furniture possibly conscious, but it might also be chocolate. Imagine the ethical dilemma that creates - it might be self-aware, but at the same time I might enjoy eating it. What to do?
True I could be wrong but like I said I am skeptical of your standard of proof.So your objection is that the tests work well enough for all the consciousness we're actually aware of, but reality might not back up your feeling that office furniture is conscious?
Yours of mine?To me, that would be a hint that I should reconsider my assumptions.
Sorry I don't get that one.I guess putting faith in deductive logic rather than reality leads to different priorities.
No because if you look at the definition of "chocolate" you will find that it has certain chemical properties like containing cacao.I guess all houses could be made of chocolate then, like I said previously.
This may or may not be an accurate observation of yours, but it wouldn´t mean that every meaningless word game is therefore philosophy.It is very popular for anti-philosophy intellectuals define philosophy as meaningless word games.
So there are no such things as unobservable properties?
It is very popular for anti-philosophy intellectuals define philosophy as meaningless word games.