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Is There More to Atheism than Lack of Belief?

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Happy Cat
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Are you referring to the chemical/electrical activity in our brain?

Yes but specifically I do not pretend to know exactly how it works, just that I don't think anything other than material is involved.

And so, there would be no proper distinction between physical processes and other processes.
 
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bhsmte

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Yes but specifically I do not pretend to know exactly how it works, just that I don't think anything other than material is involved.

And so, there would be no proper distinction between physical processes and other processes.

Well, the chemical and electrical activity in the brain is definitely physical and it can be measured. What can't be measured all to well, are the different emotions, feelings and behaviors that are the product of the chemical and electrical activity.
 
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variant

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Well, the chemical and electrical activity in the brain is definitely physical and it can be measured. What can't be measured all to well, are the different emotions, feelings and behaviors that are the product of the chemical and electrical activity.

Not yet.

I am saying that I think that with enough understanding of how the system runs now, you could build one out of different yet analogous materials, where there is a subject that "feels" (yet is artificial).

And at this point, ideas are going to be understood entirely as material things.

I disagree with Neagle or other modern dualist thinkers that there is something special about consciousness, or that subjectivity implies something non-material, or a different sort of "stuff".

Complex, difficult or even obtuse, does not non-physical make.
 
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Ken-1122

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We don't really.

I just think everything is made out of material.

I don't see a great distinction between things that are material themselves (rocks) and things that are an integral part of material that is processing in a living system (ideas).

I think the distinction between these things comes from our experiencing them differently rather than them being fundamentally different.
Imagination and thoughts are not material. Your definition of material is wrong.

Ken
 
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variant

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Imagination and thoughts are not material. Your definition of material is wrong.

Ken

You would have to show me why I am wrong rather than just asserting it.

I do not think they are made of anything other than material. I also think defining things from our perspective as "thinkers" (those beings that do not experience the nuts and bolts of our thoughts) can get us into problems metaphysically because we start thinking of things like "imagination and thoughts" as non-physical processes.

How do you suppose Imaginations and thoughts come into being? What are they made of? How do they persist? How do they interact with material?

The simplest answer is the most likely here, that they are part of the material system.
 
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Eudaimonist

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Imagination and thoughts are not material. Your definition of material is wrong.

When a computer engages in computation, is computation material? If not, what is it?


eudaimonia,

Mark
 
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Ken-1122

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You would have to show me why I am wrong rather than just asserting it.

I do not think they are made of anything other than material. I also think defining things from our perspective as "thinkers" (those beings that do not experience the nuts and bolts of our thoughts) can get us into problems metaphysically because we start thinking of things like "imagination and thoughts" as non-physical processes.

How do you suppose Imaginations and thoughts come into being? What are they made of? How do they persist? How do they interact with material?

The simplest answer is the most likely here, that they are part of the material system.
The dictionary defines it as

Matter | Define Matter at Dictionary.com

I believe #2 and #3 are the ones that pertain to matter as we are discussing it.

2. physical or corporeal substance in general, whether solid, liquid, or gaseous, especially as distinguished from incorporeal substance, as spirit or mind, or from qualities, actions, and the like.

3. something that occupies space.

Since thoughts and imagination are not a solid, liquid, gas and they do not take up any space, they are not material

Ken
 
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variant

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The dictionary defines it as

Matter | Define Matter at Dictionary.com

I believe #2 and #3 are the ones that pertain to matter as we are discussing it.

2. physical or corporeal substance in general, whether solid, liquid, or gaseous, especially as distinguished from incorporeal substance, as spirit or mind, or from qualities, actions, and the like.

3. something that occupies space.

Since thoughts and imagination are not a solid, liquid, gas and they do not take up any space, they are not material

Ken

So the process of a stone rolling down a hill is not a physical process.

Neither is the carbon cycle or nitrogen cycle.

Weather is not a physical process.

Interesting how we can get such ridiculous results when we so narrowly define things.

The answer to your question is though that it is that consciousness requires all of the states of matter as it is dispersed throughout a hugely complex network of interrelating physical things, and thus is at it's core a material system.

Do go on continuing to quote the dull acceptance of centuries out of date metaphysics from the dictionary though. It's quite the compelling argument.

Definition #2 of course asserts as a premise "incorporeal substances" (whatever those are), so I just throw it right out in the trash bin where it belongs if I take a materialist approach.

That matter is distinct from say, energy Definition #3 seems quite contentious as a philosophical statement given that matter and energy are known to be interchangeable....
 
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Ken-1122

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So the process of a stone rolling down a hill is not a physical process.
Just because something is a part of a physical process doesn't make it material. In your scenerio, the stone is the material, and the rolling down the hill is the action of the stone.

Neither is the carbon cycle or nitrogen cycle.
Nitrogen is a gas thus it is material.

Weather is not a physical process.
Weather is not, but rain, snow, etc; that is material.

Interesting how we can get such ridiculous results when we so narrowly define things.

The answer to your question is though that it is that consciousness requires all of the states of matter as it is dispersed throughout a hugely complex network of interrelating physical things, and thus is at it's core a material system.
Where are you getting this information? I mean are we supposed to just discard the dictionary definitions and go with yours?

K
 
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Eudaimonist

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No. Actions do not take up space.

I was really looking to a reply for this:

When a computer engages in computation, is computation material? If not, what is it?

But your reply is also interesting. Apparently, you typed your reply without moving your fingers, since actions do not take up space.

Actions do take up space, since it is entities that act. That's what an action is, not something abstract. That means that the computation that a computer performs is material, since it is a material process.


eudaimonia,

Mark
 
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variant

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Just because something is a part of a physical process doesn't make it material. In your scenerio, the stone is the material, and the rolling down the hill is the action of the stone.

"Stones" are groups of atoms, they "take up space" because they are made of particles that exclude each other from space via magnetic fields.

The distinction you are making between matter, potential energy, and kinetic isn't really appropriate. It is all made from the same stuff.

Nitrogen is a gas thus it is material.

The nitrogen cycle is a cyclical process of nitrogen in the environment without which life on earth would be impossible.

320px-Nitrogen_Cycle.svg.png


You would like to say this is not a material thing but then, what is it made of?

You are a collection of cycling compounds too.

CoverArt1.png


Is your body not material because you are composed of cycling compounds in a process that has an end point?

Is your consciousness non-material because it exists as a complex set of interactions of material things?

brainscan.jpg


Weather is not, but rain, snow, etc; that is material.

The weather is a process of those components not the components themselves.

Weather is not made of water but something water does, how it effects other things.

Where are you getting this information? I mean are we supposed to just discard the dictionary definitions and go with yours?

K

I am telling you that your dictionary contains some metaphysical propositions that are not entirely agreeable even if they are widely accepted (How you get a definition in the dictionary is to use a term a certain way).

You should question dictionary definitions when they come from a specific metaphysical schema rather than taking it for gospel.

The dictionary comes from common usage, and in common usage Idealism is perfectly valid and energy and matter are different things.

Quoting a dictionary this way is an appeal to popularity. So, you are attempting to settle a metaphysical disagreement by appealing to the "well it's widely accepted enough to appear as a definition in the dictionary" approach.

So, to the average person matter and energy are distinguishable, made from different stuff, even if that non material stuff isn't a really well thought out idea.

But then you have to throw old ideas like this one out:

stock-photo-21449571-e-mc2.jpg
 
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Ken-1122

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When a computer engages in computation, is computation material? If not, what is it?
Action

But your reply is also interesting. Apparently, you typed your reply without moving your fingers, since actions do not take up space.
My actions don't take up space, but I do. If what you said were true, me plus action would take up more space than me without any action. My fingers take up the same amount of space typing that they do when they aren't doing anything at all.

Ken
 
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Eudaimonist

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Action of...?

My actions don't take up space, but I do. If what you said were true, me plus action would take up more space than me without any action.

No, that's not a valid conclusion.

When your body moves, you take more space than when standing still, because we are considering the space you take up over time, not in snapshots of time. The only way that actions such as typing don't take up more space if it you eliminate time from consideration. But time is precisely relevant to the issue of action.


eudaimonia,

Mark
 
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Ken-1122

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No, that's not a valid conclusion.

When your body moves, you take more space than when standing still, because we are considering the space you take up over time,
How much time? a second? A minute? An Hour? day? How much time? In 10 minutes I will be in a different room taking up space there; does that count when considering the amount of space I am taking up right now?
Eidao said:
not in snapshots of time. The only way that actions such as typing don't take up more space if it you eliminate time from consideration. But time is precisely relevant to the issue of action.


eudaimonia,

Mark
Next week I will be taking up space in another state. Am I taking up space there now? Where are you getting this stuff?

Ken
 
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