Still waiting for peer-reviewed scientific publications showing this law of causality and the evidence behind it.
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Instead of answering Davian's question, you passive-aggressively tell him he's irrational. That doesn't qualify as a proper answer.We have these God-given instruments called logic, reason, and rationality. I suggest you start applying them, even if you do not believe in God.
Follow-up questions do not qualify as answers.Who says that a mind of necessity must be the emergent property of a brain?
Can you please explain this? How would the universe be proof of Gods existence?The universe is His handiwork, I would consider this vast proof of His being.
Is that supposed to be an insult? Because it certainly sounds like one.It is so simple that children in elementary school understand it.
Yes, he does use a lot of insults.Instead of answering Davian's question, you passive-aggressively tell him he's irrational. That doesn't qualify as a proper answer.
What I observe in these discussions is how the theist/dualist will refer to the 'mind' as a 'thing', rather than a process, or as you say, an emergent property. Life is a process (or collection of processes). Consciousness is a process.Follow-up questions do not qualify as answers.
All the data we have suggests that the mind is an emergent property of the brain. For example, brain tumors and head injuries have been known to change the personality of people. Drugs, too, change the personality (most often, but not always, for small periods of time), as we would expect of substances that block or stimulate neurons.
There is no evidence for the notion that the mind is separate from the brain, and there is no counter-evidence against the notion that the mind is an emerging property of the brain.
That was just a throwaway unfalsifiable claim. However, it may be that he thinks that 'unfalsifiable' is a strength, rather than what it really is - without scientific significance.Can you please explain this? How would the universe be proof of Gods existence?
I do wonder if there is a theists' handbook somewhere that says that "if your assertions are being rejected, use a condescending tone, and insult those you are trying to convince. The confidence you exude is sure to win them over."Is that supposed to be an insult? Because it certainly sounds like one.
Instead of answering Davian's question, you passive-aggressively tell him he's irrational. That doesn't qualify as a proper answer.
Follow-up questions do not qualify as answers.
All the data we have suggests that the mind is an emergent property of the brain. For example, brain tumors and head injuries have been known to change the personality of people. Drugs, too, change the personality (most often, but not always, for small periods of time), as we would expect of substances that block or stimulate neurons.
There is no evidence for the notion that the mind is separate from the brain, and there is no counter-evidence against the notion that the mind is an emerging property of the brain.
Can you please explain this? How would the universe be proof of Gods existence?
Is that supposed to be an insult? Because it certainly sounds like one.
What I observe in these discussions is how the theist/dualist will refer to the 'mind' as a 'thing', rather than a process, or as you say, an emergent property. Life is a process (or collection of processes). Consciousness is a process.
It is like asking, where did oxidation come from? Oxidation cannot come from non-oxidation! Impossible!
You do know what passive-aggressive means, right? It's not my duty to play dictionary to you.Im not quite sure how you can, as you say: "passive-aggressively" tell someone something. I think a better, more concise word would be "insinuate".
So you admit to using follow-up questions to dodge giving an answer.Who said they did?
Nice! Your answer to me presenting evidence to you is to accuse me, or at least the group you think I belong to, of being irrational!You mean rather, all the data naturalists and materialists "choose" to accept that agrees with their precommitment to naturalism.
Yes, that's what I say. Want to change my mind? Then give me the counter-evidence, and stop wasting my time with your worthless comments.So you say.
How smart! Especially because the thread has 21 pages.I shall refer you to the six page thread entitled: "apologia of the cosmos".
Accusing your conversation partners of being irrational after they clearly presented evidence to you is much better, I guess.Insults are in no way productive, conducive, or necessary for formulating a defense of Christianity. Therefore I do not use them, nor would I if they were somehow effective.
Does Phineas Gage tell you something? Got an iron rod driven through his face, changed his character. Lifelong meth addicts? Get depressed even two years after getting clean, because the reward system of their brain got burned out. Oxytocin? Neuroscientists figured out this neurotransmitter makes people loyal to each other. Turns out it really does that.After reading The Mystery of the Mind and The Self and Its Brain and many similar books and puzzling over questions about the mind-brain relationship, I have come to the conclusion that neuroscience provides no evidence whatsoever that the mind is identical with its brain.
This reminds me of your tactic when presented with evidence:I am convinced that those who believe that it does provide such evidence bring their naturalist convictions to the evidence. In other words, they are already naturalists (materialists) before they do their neuroscience.
You do know what passive-aggressive means, right? It's not my duty to play dictionary to you.
So you admit to using follow-up questions to dodge giving an answer.
Nice! Your answer to me presenting evidence to you is to accuse me, or at least the group you think I belong to, of being irrational!
How about you address the evidence instead of throwing disingenuous assertions at the people you are talking to?
Yes, that's what I say. Want to change my mind? Then give me the counter-evidence, and stop wasting my time with your worthless comments.
How smart! Especially because the thread has 21 pages.
Accusing your conversation partners of being irrational after they clearly presented evidence to you is much better, I guess.
I won't even bother addressing the argumentation in your next post, but I give you credit for mentioning where you copypasted it from, for once. It would still make me happy if you could stop copying texts instead of using your own arguments. If everyone would do this, this would soon become the equivalent of the pirate bay.
Just one more thing:
Does Phineas Gage tell you something? Got an iron rod driven through his face, changed his character. Lifelong meth addicts? Get depressed even two years after getting clean, because the reward system of their brain got burned out. Oxytocin? Neuroscientists figured out this neurotransmitter makes people loyal to each other. Turns out it really does that.
How come changes to the brain always go along with changes to the mind, if the two things are separate?
The claim, neuroscientists had no evidence, is factually wrong.
This reminds me of your tactic when presented with evidence:
1. Ignore the evidence
2. Claim the evidence doesn't exist
3. Accuse the other person of having no evidence
4. Call it a day
Now I know where you have it from.
So he can tell me why you don't know the difference between a six page thread and a twenty-one page thread?I suggest you address your concerns with Dr. Goetz, who is Professor of Philosophy at Ursinus College and a specialist in philosophy of mind if you want an answer from someone knowledgeable on the subject.
So he can tell me why you don't know the difference between a six page thread and a twenty-one page thread?
If you want to have a discussion led by a proxy, then I suggest you tell your Dr. Goetz that he can discuss this with Thomas Metzinger.
By the way, you just acknowledged that you have no idea about the subject.
Because of this, and because you ignored all the evidence I gave you, I now proclaim my viewpoint to be the more logical one.
The following material is courtesy of Dr. William Lane Craig, Research Professor of Philosophy at Talbot School of Theology.
The question, which is similar to what you and other non-theists have maintained regarding the mind:
Hi Dr. Craig, I have a question for you about the mind of God. I understand that we often find ourselves talking in religious contexts about a supreme, transcendant, omniscient "mind" overseeing the affairs of the universe (or generating them for that matter), but I can't help but feel that advances in neurology, cognitive psychology, biology, etc. are basically making this intuition incoherent. As we discover more and more about the workings of the brain (e.g. we can now manipulate some feelings and emotions by stimulating parts of the brain itself), it seems like an inevitable progression that we will be able to boil consciousness and all that it entails down into its material components. Using this knowledge, I don't see how one can believe that a "mind" could exist disembodied, and therefore it seems nonsensical to think of God as being a spiritual entity who still thinks like we do if he doesn't have a physical brain. I can't help but feel that all the neurological disorders that abound in the world (e.g. those with brain damage or nerve disorders, which often are the manifestation of a physical impairment of the brain tissue itself) inescapably point to a materialistic understanding of the brain and consciousness. This makes it very difficult for me to believe that it is coherent to believe that a divine mind could exist...I just don't see how one could think that there is some mind out there when all the evidence I know of suggests that minds are identical to brains. I am aware that some religious people would cite certain out-of-body or near-death experiences where people record their "soul's" witness of a post-death experience, but I inevitably find skeptical explanations for these phenomena more compelling. Your thoughts and clarification would be much appreciated,
Michael
Your sort of question is one that I encounter with increasing frequency when I speak on university campuses about the existence of God. I recently had the pleasure of reading Stewart Goetz and Charles Taliaferros excellent book Naturalism (Grand Rapids, Mich: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2008), which deals precisely with your question. So Ive invited Dr. Goetz, who is Professor of Philosophy at Ursinus College and a specialist in philosophy of mind to address your question as a guest columnist this week. His reply follows:
Dear Michael,
Dr. Craig has invited me to respond to your interesting question concerning the mind of God. The logic of your concern seems to be as follows: Our concept of God is rooted in our concept of ourselves. Thus, if we think that God is an immaterial mind (soul) that exists disembodied, then this is because we think of ourselves as immaterial minds (souls) that might exist disembodied. Advances in contemporary neuroscience and cognitive psychology provide evidence that undermines the coherence of the view that we are immaterial minds that might exist disembodied. Therefore, the coherence of our idea of God as a disembodied mind is called into question.
What evidence does contemporary neuroscience provide in support of the view that our minds are not immaterial? You believe that the evidence is causal in nature: the fact that we can stimulate different parts of the brain and causally produce feelings, thoughts, emotions, etc., supports the view that these psychological events/states are themselves material. Moreover, the fact that brain damage causes psychological impairments also supports a materialistic view of ourselves. In short, what we know from neuroscience justifies the claim that our minds are identical with our brains.
While I agree with the idea that our concept of God is rooted in our concept of ourselves, I am not convinced that evidence from neuroscience supports the view that our minds are identical with our brains. The reasons for my not being convinced are several.
First, neuroscience contributes nothing substantively new to our understanding of ourselves and our relationship to our bodies. We have known all along that our mental lives could be and are causally related to what happens to our bodies. After all, we did not need neuroscience to know that a good knock on the head could produce a change in our psychological lives. Who could fail to be aware that dropping a brick on ones foot would produce pain? What neuroscience has done is provide us with a more detailed picture of how the human mind is influenced by certain events in the brain. It has not changed the general nature of that picture. The fact that much of what happens in our minds is influenced by what happens in our bodies was something known by the first self-conscious human beings.
Second, though you do not comment on the following point, it is an important one: not everything that goes on in our minds is causally determined by what goes on in our bodies. Sometimes what goes on in our bodies is a result of what goes on in our minds. For example, the movements of my fingers as I type this response to your question are ultimately produced my mental events. I chose to accept Dr. Craigs invitation to respond to your question and this choice led to an intention to type up this response. Here we have mental-to-physical causation. What explains both this choice of mine and the physical events in my body that are ultimately produced by this choice? The explanation is the purpose that I provide an answer to your question. A purposeful explanation is a teleological explanation. It is well known that those who identify the mind with the brain typically deny that any of us freely (indeterministically) make choices for purposes. Materialists are typically determinists who insist that the only legitimate kind of explanation is a non-teleological explanation. Causal explanations are the most well-known and frequently used kind of non-teleological explanations. Those who exclude the possibility of teleological explanations are often called naturalists. My colleague, Charles Taliaferro, and I have written a book entitled Naturalism (Grand Rapids, Mich: Eerdmans Publishing Company, 2008) in which we explain what naturalism is and offer a critique of it. You might find it helpful.
Third, I believe it is important to note that some of the worlds foremost neuroscientists have believed that the mind is immaterial. These neuroscientists have been well aware that stimulating the brain can produce some intriguing psychological results. One of the pioneers in the field of neuroscience was Wilder Penfield. In his fascinating book The Mystery of the Mind, he writes the following:
When I have caused a conscious patient to move his hand by applying an electrode to the motor cortex of one hemisphere, I have often asked him about it. Invariably his response was: I didnt do that. You did. When I caused him to vocalize, he said: I didnt make that sound. You pulled it out of me. When I caused the record of the stream of consciousness to run again and so presented to him the record of his past experience, he marveled that he should be conscious of the past as well as of the present. He was astonished that it should come back to him so completely, with more detail than he could possibly recall voluntarily. He assumed at once that, somehow, the surgeon was responsible for the phenomenon, but he recognized the details as those of his own past experience. (76)
Penfield goes on to note that There is no place in the cerebral cortex where electrical stimulation will cause a patient . . . to decide (77). This is consistent with my point that choices are undetermined events with a teleological explanation. In light of his work as a neuroscientist, Penfield concludes the following: For my own part, after years of striving to explain the mind on the basis of brain-action alone, I have come to the conclusion that it is simpler (and far easier and logical) if one adopts the hypothesis that our being does consist of two fundamental elements (80).
Another famous neuroscientist who believed that the mind is immaterial was Sir John C. Eccles. He and the widely respected philosopher of science Sir Karl Popper wrote a book entitled The Self and Its Brain in which they argued that the human mind is best understood along interactionist dualist lines (the mind and brain are separate entities that causally interact). After reading The Mystery of the Mind and The Self and Its Brain and many similar books and puzzling over questions about the mind-brain relationship, I have come to the conclusion that neuroscience provides no evidence whatsoever that the mind is identical with its brain. I am convinced that those who believe that it does provide such evidence bring their naturalist convictions to the evidence. In other words, they are already naturalists (materialists) before they do their neuroscience.
Fourth, we might ask why neuroscientists like Penfield and Eccles believed in the immateriality of the mind, even though they were well aware of the causal dependency of many psychological events on brain events. I believe that part of the answer is that they did not confuse the concept of the correlation of two events with the concept of the identity of two events. It simply does not follow from the fact that two events are correlated that they are identical. For example, when one learns that a high score on the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) is correlated with entrance to a good college one does not identify scoring well on the exam with entrance to college. Similarly, when one discovers that eating a certain food is correlated with an upset stomach one does not identify eating that food with having an upset stomach. Then there is the fact that movements of bodily limbs like arms and legs are correlated with events in the motor cortex of the brain. No one believes, however, that movements of arms and legs are identical with their causal antecedents in the brain. Upon reflection, it is just as obvious that there is no good reason to believe that psychological events are identical with brain events simply because the two are correlated.
Finally, you state that some religious people cite out-of-the-body or near-death experiences as evidence for the immateriality of the mind and the possibility of its surviving disembodied. With all due respect, I seriously doubt that this is what really convinces people that the mind is immaterial. Most people start out believing that the mind is immaterial and in light of this initial conviction find nothing conceptually problematic with near-death and out-of-the-body experiences. They do not come to believe that the mind is immaterial on the basis of having or hearing about such experiences. Moreover, I believe that most people are religious because they believe that the mind is immaterial. They do not come to believe that the mind is immaterial because they are religious.
With all good wishes,
Stewart Goetz, Ph.D.
Professor of Philosophy
Ursinus College
Collegeville, PA 19426
Read more: God and Mind/Body Dualism | Reasonable Faith
LOL. Ok, if you say so. I see you are more concerned about winning an argument than discovering what truth is. So I shall leave you to the task of validating your "proclamation". Best wishes to you.![]()
How about yourself? Are you here in an effort to discover truth, or to proselytize?
So why are you here?
No, the data does not demand that at all. In fact, it is a nonsensical proposition. You are claiming that nothing (immaterial), nowhere (non-spatial) and at no time (timeless) brought into existence everything, including space and time. The kind of cause you are postulating is radically unlike any other cause we observe in the universe.
I also don't understand why you think God must the simplest explanation for the existence of the universe. I don't think "God did it" is a sufficient explanation at all. But supposing that it were an explanation, it would only add another level of complexity for us to explain.
So much to reply to...
First, there is no proof that the universe is not eternal. If the conservation law is in fact "truth" then it would be strong evidence that the universe is eternal and therefore needs no creator.
Second, truth in language is near impossible to relay and that is because language is interpreted and perceived differently by everyone. Truth in math is easy and common because it is what it is and cannot be misinterpreted.
This is why the truth cannot come from the bible, even though it may be possible that the bible is the truth.
So if God is rea,l why would he use a method of relaying the truth that would cause us to come to false conclusions?
Your statement is riddled with unsubstantiated presumptions.