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RE: OK, if the soul begins from conception, then what a... - 3/6/2012 3:19:52 PM   
Kirata


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quote:

ORIGINAL: GotSteel

what is the point of trying to insert a supernatural explanation?

All tweak said was, "it could well turn out that we are obliged to look beyond materialism." To charge her with supernaturalism is rather amusing. What could be more supernatural than the proposition that bringing the right ingredients into close proximity under the right circumstances will cause dead matter to become "alive." I mean, seriously. Eye of newt, tail of lizard, blood of newborn mongoose, combine on the night of the first New Moon after the Vernal Equinox, cover and warm. Have a broom.

K.

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RE: OK, if the soul begins from conception, then what a... - 3/7/2012 1:39:28 AM   
tweakabelle


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quote:

GotSteel

quote:



ORIGINAL: tweakabelle
Emotions are an integral part of the human experience. They don't appear to have a physical presence but their operations can be traced physically sometimes. Their effects are sometimes measurable while the cause remains invisible and intangible.



What? I'm under the impression that we have a pretty decent idea of where emotions are coming from.

I do hope you aren't asserting the origins of (say) love, or the need to love and be loved are located in the limbic system.

The piece you quoted in support of your claim talks about "emotional responses" and how they are thought to be processed. Which I'm sure you will agree are very different things and say nothing about the origins at all.

Indeed, what does knowing that (say) love, the need to love or be loved is processed in a given location tell us about love, the need to love or to be loved? We all know food is processed in the digestive system but what does that tell us about nutrition or the need for a balanced diet?

< Message edited by tweakabelle -- 3/7/2012 1:46:04 AM >


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RE: OK, if the soul begins from conception, then what a... - 3/7/2012 2:41:05 AM   
tweakabelle


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quote:

VincentML
You make an excellent case for the strong impact of emotions on human behavior. And Nietzsche made the case that life should be lived with passion, or one should have a passionate core. And if you wish to somehow elevate emotion over reason, I have no problem with your doing so. I will grant that emotion may be more primitive and/or precede reason in development. But consciousness is not necessarily a pre-requisite for reasoning either. Quite likely a lot of subconscious activity underlying both. Whatever their quantitative or qualitative differences both arise from the same physical structures interacting with both internal and social environment. So, I am not persuaded that Materialist explanations fail or that we need look beyond our physiology. To do so diminishes the wonder and excitement of human life.

I would suggest that a linguistic component is hidden within your argument. I see therein the memes that commonly color our perceptions of both of these brain activities. Emotions are “powerful” and often “uncontrollable” whereas logic is “cold” and “calculating.” So, the former merits special status while the latter seems to be more clearly a brain function. I am not persuaded to assign emotion any extra-material status.



Perhaps I didn’t make my point terribly clear. I wasn’t arguing that emotions are the ‘something extra'. Nor was I arguing emotions over reason or vice versa. I was offering emotions as one model that might be helpful in contemplating what that ‘something extra’ might be. If there is one critical area of human experience that seems to be non-material yet uniquely and intricately connected with our physicalities and experience, there could well be others.

I am not asserting that this ‘something extra’ definitely exists as per the model of emotions. I am certainly not attributing “supernatural” aspects to it. I am suggesting that this might be a useful way of imagining this ‘something extra’ and how it could manifest itself in the human experience,

I am definitely persuaded of two things:
1. That logic and reason alone will not deliver a complete answer. This is not a personal insight, but an application of the absolute limits that apply all knowledges generated by using those marvellous analytical tools - if in doubt, ponder the implications of Godel’s Theorem. and
2. Until such time as we do have a complete answer (if ever) it would be imprudent to place artifical limits on the investigation, or to adopt fixed positions in relation to potential explanations.

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RE: OK, if the soul begins from conception, then what a... - 3/7/2012 3:31:19 AM   
Edwynn


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quote:

ORIGINAL: tweakabelle

quote:

GotSteel

quote:



ORIGINAL: tweakabelle
Emotions are an integral part of the human experience. They don't appear to have a physical presence but their operations can be traced physically sometimes. Their effects are sometimes measurable while the cause remains invisible and intangible.



What? I'm under the impression that we have a pretty decent idea of where emotions are coming from.

I do hope you aren't asserting the origins of (say) love, or the need to love and be loved are located in the limbic system.


Oh, but tweaker ...

I flick my toungue out to smell things, I go outside and lie on a rock, in the sun, to warm myself ...
What issue is it that people have with our limbic system? I love that rock. More than my own mother. But then, I'm just a reptile.

Or at least I was, or my 10 million or bazillion X grandmother was, at some time. Hard to let go of the past.

Just as it is difficult for some to accept in the natural evolution of humans, and even in 'higher level' animals that we get tripped up by some sense of 'spirituality' in that venture. 

It is in fact part and parcel of an advanced social organization and mind development, as it turns out. The 'religion' thing will be over and done with at some point, but I'm not in any hurry for those who understand it unto themselves and live the practice to be shoved out the door too hastily.

Elizabeth I did that and look what happened. The poor and formerly employed dumped on the streets of London by the thousands, all at once.

"Where are all these beggars coming from?" the (now) predictable response.

I don't need any of this, "been there, done that," etc. but for those who still do, no need to slam them in the head about it.



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RE: OK, if the soul begins from conception, then what a... - 3/7/2012 5:43:09 AM   
vincentML


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quote:

What could be more supernatural than the proposition that bringing the right ingredients into close proximity under the right circumstances will cause dead matter to become "alive."


There you go again. More ridiculous reductionism. Just completely ignore the long time over which abiogenesis might have occurred and the many failures that would have occured. Nothing supernatural or magical about the Miller/Urey experiments. Clearly not like the magic of your secret ingredient in living things which you bristle at calling spirit on a thread which questions the soul. Your epistemology is your reason and logic? How faulty is that? Nevermind. It's obvious.

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RE: OK, if the soul begins from conception, then what a... - 3/7/2012 7:00:18 AM   
MrBukani


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Spirit derived from latin spiritus = to breath.
Soul derived from germanic ''Seele''.
Now look at dutch ziel=soul / zeil=sail
In german sail = segeln

Words are often derived in history from other words that have simular meanings or properties.

Hence my explanation.

The spirit is the breath of life, the wind, the air we breath(what I also call our spark). The spirit according to me is like your DNA print (that what you cant really change.) The spirit is not really concerned with ethics. It is what you like and what's your talent.

The soul is the sail catching the wind and soforth the soul is driven by the spirit. The soul is our karma, all things we do in life good and bad. And you will have a good soul if the good outweighs your bad.

Religious believers, spiritual believers and non believers could agree on what words really mean.
Only then a discussion can succeed on any level.
Wether you discuss a soul is eternal or a soul is just our concious mind. Now you can make a difference and learn from people with different backgrounds.

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RE: OK, if the soul begins from conception, then what a... - 3/7/2012 11:41:54 AM   
Kirata


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quote:

ORIGINAL: vincentML

There you go again. More ridiculous reductionism. Just completely ignore the long time over which abiogenesis might have occurred and the many failures that would have occured.

And the fundamental difference is what, precisely? You are simply arguing that the probabilities are slimmer than my recipe suggests, that it would take more than one try, and a much longer time. Fair enough. I admit it's a tough trick.

quote:

ORIGINAL: vincentML

Your epistemology is your reason and logic? How faulty is that? Nevermind. It's obvious.

What's "obvious" is the fact that you are the one promoting the supernatural claim here, namely, that dead matter can become "alive." The processes involved and how long it takes are irrelevant. What you are proposing is magic.

If we accept that there really are such things as "living beings" then, simply as a matter of reason and logic, either there is a flaw in your assumptions about the nature of mass/energy or there is more involved than you acknowledge.

Either way, you're sitting on a broom.

K.


< Message edited by Kirata -- 3/7/2012 12:41:54 PM >

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RE: OK, if the soul begins from conception, then what a... - 3/7/2012 12:42:35 PM   
Kirata


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nm

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RE: OK, if the soul begins from conception, then what a... - 3/7/2012 4:36:54 PM   
vincentML


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quote:

I am not asserting that this ‘something extra’ definitely exists as per the model of emotions. I am certainly not attributing “supernatural” aspects to it. I am suggesting that this might be a useful way of imagining this ‘something extra’ and how it could manifest itself in the human experience,


Your concept is ellusive for me. I am trying to sort your definition of “something extra,” accepting you are not proposing a supernatural construct and not something that exists outside the human experience. Not exactly sure of the latter, however. Perhaps, definition is too demanding a term, so your ‘intuition’ then of the ‘extra’ might do, if that does not offend.

So, let me ruminate a bit and use emotions and love as a surrogate for the ‘something extra.’ Trying to circle around and find the outlines of this diaphanous thing. Please, consider my comments in the spirit of inquiry. Let’s see if we can find common ground.

There is a subjectivity to human experience, can’t we agree, that takes us on a journey beyond the purely physical limits of body. We encounter reality, both obvious and often hidden. But we also encounter ourselves encountering reality beyond ourselves. We know that we know. We watch ourselves watching. We also know that being requires being a part of something more than ourselves. Being in total isolation is not in any sense being. So, we are immersed in the world, we thrust ourselves into it, and we bring the world into ourselves. Consciously or not we absorb it and sort it all in one way or other to gain identity.

The engine for all of this activity, this reaching out, merging, and bringing in . . . is the brain. Our encounters with social group: love, hatred, annoyance, tolerance, etc. may be intangible and out there; but they are also in here, in the brain. It is there that we sort, associate, and evaluate not only what’s out there but also what’s in here. To answer a question you posed to GS, not only is the brain a processor but it is an originator of needs and emotions, imo. The clue to that comes from those who are physically brain damaged or are psychopaths, who lack the ability to give love and feel empathy. To borrow and twist a phrase: we have met the brain and it is us.

I can agree with you that there is more to being than just physical processes. But I find it difficult to limit the brain as the receptor and originator of social processes, which is what it seems you might wish to do. Or at least, you wish to leave open the possibility and not close off other avenues of investigation, as I read your messages. Hopefully, I am not misreading, which is so easy to do in this venue.

The unheard sound of a tree falling in the forest makes waves that ruffle the grass; it does not need animal senses or brains for validation. But, what is love if it is not processed by a brain? How is love given if not from the brain? What is love if there are no people to generate it and receive it? It has no existence otherwise, I think. So, your ‘something extra’ is integrally human in my view, but you seem reluctant to limit it so. Am I wrong? Is there any common ground to be found between us?

Regards . . .

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RE: OK, if the soul begins from conception, then what a... - 3/7/2012 4:56:39 PM   
vincentML


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quote:

What's "obvious" is the fact that you are the one promoting the supernatural claim here, namely, that dead matter can become "alive." The processes involved and how long it takes are irrelevant. What you are proposing is magic.

If we accept that there really are such things as "living beings" then, simply as a matter of reason and logic, either there is a flaw in your assumptions about the nature of mass/energy or there is more involved than you acknowledge.

Either way, you're sitting on a broom.


Kudos for the sitting on a broom remark.

My assumptions about mass/energy derive from the physics of particle collisions and chemical bond formations. That you cannot accept the transitions from simple carbon and hydrogen atoms to more complex molecules and then self-replicating DNA as a basis for the evolution of life is a stuborn flaw in your reason and logic. We can accuse each other of sorcery ad nauseum, it will not change the fact that you bring nothing but unsubstantiated speculation to the table. Some vague, unidentified infusion that possesses matter either in its micro form or when it is constituted in living form. That is only gussied up tree spirit worship, although you pretend it is physics and throw tantrums when called out on it. Life is here. Derived from non-living matter without divine assistance or the assistance of some Kirata invented ingredient. So, beat your tamborine and have a good dance around the tree, but get over it.

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RE: OK, if the soul begins from conception, then what a... - 3/7/2012 6:32:32 PM   
GotSteel


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All the hand waving about how it's impossible is pretty funny considering how close it is to being proven true.

quote:

ORIGINAL: http://www.wired.com/wiredscience/2009/06/tpna/
A self-assembling molecule synthesized in a laboratory may resemble the earliest form of information-carrying biological material, a transitional stage between lifeless chemicals and the complex genetic architectures of life.

Called tPNA, short for thioester peptide nucleic acids, the molecules spontaneously mimic the shape of DNA and RNA when mixed together. Left on their own, they gather in shape-shifting strands that morph into stable configurations.

The molecules haven’t yet achieved self-replication, the ultimate benchmark of life, but they hint at it. Best of all, their activities require no enzymes — molecules that facilitate chemical reactions, but didn’t yet exist in the primordial world modeled by scientists seeking insight into life’s murky origins.

“There have been many test tube experiments of evolving chemical sequences, but there hasn’t been a system that on its own can form under enzyme-free conditions,” said Reza Ghadiri, a Scripps Research Institute biochemist. “We satisfy some of the requirements of the long-term goal of having a purely chemical system that is capable of undergoing Darwinian evolution.”

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RE: OK, if the soul begins from conception, then what a... - 3/7/2012 7:12:09 PM   
Kirata


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Your responses in this discussion have consisted mainly of misrepresentations, appeals to authority, and dismissive ridicule. I understand that you are a man of the church. But if your faith does not permit you to confront the argument honestly, the least you could do is wear a chasuble to warn people.

quote:

ORIGINAL: vincentML

That you cannot accept the transitions from simple carbon and hydrogen atoms to more complex molecules and then self-replicating DNA as a basis for the evolution of life is a stuborn flaw in your reason and logic.

This is an example of a misprepresentation of fact. I've never rejected that at all. In fact, I specifically said that even if life was created in a laboratory it would not prove your claim.

quote:

ORIGINAL: vincentML

you bring nothing but unsubstantiated speculation to the table... gussied up tree spirit worship, although you pretend it is physics

More ridicule, and another misrepresentation of fact. I haven't said a word about physics.

quote:

ORIGINAL: vincentML

Life is here. Derived from non-living matter without divine assistance or the assistance of some Kirata invented ingredient.

A Kirata-invented ingredient, eh? You'll just make up any kind of shit, won't you. Whatever it takes to push your supernatural proposition that dead matter can become "alive." Somewhat amusingly, that's exactly what Creationists believe. But giving credit where due, they at least have enough sense to recognize that the claim is absurd on its face, hence the need for God, whereas you prefer simply to dispense with such troublesome rationality.

Another amusing aspect to all this, one directly related to your rationality and willingness to debate honestly, is your insistence, elsewhere, that no scientist believes that "non-living matter became alive". What a hoot, eh? Instead, in that post you insist, we have to rethink our assumptions about what life is, not what matter is. But I understand. As a good churchman, you will say whatever it takes to defend the faith. Bless your black little heart.

K.



< Message edited by Kirata -- 3/7/2012 8:09:03 PM >

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RE: OK, if the soul begins from conception, then what a... - 3/7/2012 8:07:58 PM   
tweakabelle


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To no one in particular: Can we please try to have this discussion without it degenerating into an all in brawl? Let's try to identify what we might have in common rather than focussing on areas of difference. In the end, not one of us knows, we're all guessing to one extent or another. So please guys, a bit more civility.

VincentML, thanks for your response. Thanks too for listening to the sense of my last post. It seems that your understanding of my admittedly vague and elusive suggestions is far closer to that which I tried to convey. Generally I appreciate precision, and much prefer it to vagueness. But I am unable to say that my ideas are developed enough to be able to claim any precision, and it is quite possible that precision might simply impose an order on a phenomenon that may well be beyond any conventional human sense of order. At the moment we simply don't know.

I'm trying to move away from hard and fast definitions. There are good reasons to believe that, whatever the linguistic formulations adopted, they will not only prove inadequate in some respects, but also impose their own shaping (limitations) on the concept I'm trying to articulate. So I don't really believe that developing concrete definitions is terribly useful. In a sense, it's a bit like trying to convey the sense of music through words - a pretty difficult undertaking that will at best always fall short of the goal.

I found myself nodding in agreement to most of your post - until I got to this bit:
" To answer a question you posed to GS, not only is the brain a processor but it is an originator of needs and emotions, imo."
I would certainly agree that humans process our experiences, feelings emotions etc through the brain. The brain appears to play a critical role in, as you put it:
"The engine for all of this activity, this reaching out, merging, and bringing in . . . is the brain. Our encounters with social group: love, hatred, annoyance, tolerance, etc. may be intangible and out there; but they are also in here, in the brain."
I don't wish to downplay or de-emphasise this function. I'm perfectly happy to proceed using the metaphor of an 'engine' for the brain. But I do wish to query the leap from 'processor' to 'originator'. I'm unaware of any compelling evidence or argument to support this. (Please feel free to offer one if you wish to maintain this position). To me it does seem to have a little more than a whiff of Cartesian Dualism about it. And I personally don't believe that dualistic approaches are terribly helpful in this area

I see no reason why we can't consider the brain as, for example, one of a series of critical participating elements in the operation of this 'something extra'. It would make no sense to me to exclude the brain and its functions from a formulation of this something extra, but to posit the brain as the sole origin of this something extra is a step too far for me at the moment.

I regret that I cannot be more precise or specific. I have tried above to explain why. However some common ground might be established if we can agree on the limitations of logical and rational approaches to this area. Can we agree that the standard western epistemology of identification, appellation, classification definition is structurally incapable (in its own account, following Godel et al) of providing a complete and consistent answer to this problem?

If we can agree on that, then it makes the question of what alternative epistemologies we might admit, what alternative approaches and conceptualisations (or, if you prefer, speculations) we might entertain an awful lot easier ....

< Message edited by tweakabelle -- 3/7/2012 8:18:25 PM >


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RE: OK, if the soul begins from conception, then what a... - 3/7/2012 9:37:19 PM   
Kirata


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Kirata

quote:

ORIGINAL: vincentML

you bring nothing but unsubstantiated speculation to the table... gussied up tree spirit worship, although you pretend it is physics

More ridicule, and another misrepresentation of fact. I haven't said a word about physics.

Mea culpa. In checking myself, I see that I did use the word "physics" in a couple of posts. However, I have never claimed that the findings of physics support any kind of "spirit worship" (flora, fauna, or otherwise).

K.


< Message edited by Kirata -- 3/7/2012 9:48:59 PM >

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RE: OK, if the soul begins from conception, then what a... - 3/7/2012 10:11:31 PM   
Kirata


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quote:

ORIGINAL: tweakabelle

To me it does seem to have a little more than a whiff of Cartesian Dualism about it. And I personally don't believe that dualistic approaches are terribly helpful in this area

Purely as a possibly interesting aside, the stereotype of Cartesian Dualism is not at all what Descartes actually believed.

The stereotype is that there are two types of substances, one being a publicly verifiable material substance with extension is space, the other being a private spiritual substance without extension in space, each separate from the other. In fact, though, what he said was:

I am not present in my body merely as a pilot is present in a ship. I am most tightly bound to it and, as it were, mixed up with it, so that I an it form one unit. ~Sixth Meditation

A human person, in his view, is analogous in this respect to water, which while composed of hydrogen and oxygen would not be water if those elements were separated. Not to put too fine a point on it:

I would ask your highness to hold yourself free to ascribe matter and extension to the soul, for this is nothing else than to conceive the soul as united to the body. ~Letter to Princess Elizabeth of Bohemia

This is in accord with Acquinas, by the way, who believed that if a soul exists without a body, then it does so improperly and unnaturally. That is why Christian doctrine requires the resurrection of the body. Whether or not you want to interpret that literally, the idea is clear that in order to be a person requires having a body of some sort.

I think what Descartes was attempting to come to grips with is the wholly private and interior quality of our experience, as opposed to the very public and external nature of our bodies.

K.


< Message edited by Kirata -- 3/7/2012 10:35:20 PM >

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RE: OK, if the soul begins from conception, then what a... - 3/8/2012 3:52:57 AM   
vincentML


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quote:

ORIGINAL: Kirata


quote:

ORIGINAL: Kirata

quote:

ORIGINAL: vincentML

you bring nothing but unsubstantiated speculation to the table... gussied up tree spirit worship, although you pretend it is physics

More ridicule, and another misrepresentation of fact. I haven't said a word about physics.

Mea culpa. In checking myself, I see that I did use the word "physics" in a couple of posts. However, I have never claimed that the findings of physics support any kind of "spirit worship" (flora, fauna, or otherwise).

K.



Yanno, I really enjoy jousting with you and poking at you b/c your ideas are challenging, or at least you take a firm stand when pressed. I will point out however that while you make some amusing and interesting remarks about my point of view and are not slow to say I believe in magic, you cannot seem to accept tit for tat. Ya really might wish to lighten up a bit and maybe enjoy these little exchanges of magic between dead stuff. A little sense of humor would be welcome.

I know you never claimed that your physics was spirit worship. I do find the idea of some unknown animating force akin to superstition. Just my take on the idea. My comment re: spirit worship was in a similar vein as yours about my riding a broom, which I thought was hilarious and clever. You can dish it out alright but not so much on the receiving end. Hopefully, you will take this as a friendly post and not an attempt to ridicule you or demean your dignity. Not my intention.

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RE: OK, if the soul begins from conception, then what a... - 3/8/2012 4:41:38 AM   
Kirata


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quote:

ORIGINAL: vincentML

Ya really might wish to lighten up a bit and maybe enjoy these little exchanges... A little sense of humor would be welcome.

Yep, ol' Kirata is known far and wide for having no sense of humor.

quote:

ORIGINAL: vincentML

I do find the idea of some unknown animating force akin to superstition.

I wasn't aware that I had in any way suggested "some unknown animating force."

quote:

ORIGINAL: vincentML

You can dish it out alright but not so much on the receiving end. Hopefully, you will take this as a friendly post

What else could it be?

K.

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RE: OK, if the soul begins from conception, then what a... - 3/8/2012 6:12:34 AM   
GotSteel


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quote:

ORIGINAL: tweakabelle
That logic and reason alone will not deliver a complete answer. This is not a personal insight, but an application of the absolute limits that apply all knowledges generated by using those marvellous analytical tools - if in doubt, ponder the implications of Godel’s Theorem.


quote:

ORIGINAL: http://cscs.umich.edu/~crshalizi/notabene/godels-theorem.html
There are two very common but fallacious conclusions people make from this, and an immense number of uncommon but equally fallacious errors I shan't bother with. The first is that Gödel's theorem imposes some some of profound limitation on knowledge, science, mathematics. Now, as to science, this ignores in the first place that Gödel's theorem applies to deduction from axioms, a useful and important sort of reasoning, but one so far from being our only source of knowledge it's not even funny. It's not even a very common mode of reasoning in the sciences, though there are axiomatic formulations of some parts of physics. Even within this comparatively small circle, we have at most established that there are some propositions about numbers which we can't prove formally. As Hintikka says, "Gödel's incompleteness result does not touch directly on the most important sense of completeness and incompleteness, namely, descriptive completeness and incompleteness," the sense in which an axiom systems describes a given field. In particular, the result "casts absolutely no shadow on the notion of truth. All that it says is that the whole set of arithmetical truths cannot be listed, one by one, by a Turing machine." Equivalently, there is no algorithm which can decide the truth of all arithmetical propositions. And that is all.

This brings us to the other, and possibly even more common fallacy, that Gödel's theorem says artificial intelligence is impossible, or that machines cannot think. The argument, so far as there is one, usually runs as follows. Axiomatic systems are equivalent to abstract computers, to Turing machines, of which our computers are (approximate) realizations. (True.) Since there are true propositions which cannot be deduced by interesting axiomatic systems, there are results which cannot be obtained by computers, either. (True.) But we can obtain those results, so our thinking cannot be adequately represented by a computer, or an axiomatic system. Therefore, we are not computational machines, and none of them could be as intelligent as we are; quod erat demonstrandum. This would actually be a valid demonstration, were only the pentultimate sentence true; but no one has ever presented any evidence that it is true, only vigorous hand-waving and the occasional heartfelt assertion.

Gödel's result is of course quite interesting, if you're doing mathematical logic, and it even has some importance for that odd little specialization of logic, the theory of computation. (It is intimately related to the halting problem, for instance.) It also makes a fine piece of general mathematical culture; but it doesn't shake the foundations of the house of intellect, or exalt us above all else that greps.

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RE: OK, if the soul begins from conception, then what a... - 3/8/2012 6:20:51 AM   
crazyml


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Souls aren't real things. They don't exist, they're merely a concept.

So it really doesn't matter a flying fuck how many post conception divisions occur.

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(in reply to farglebargle)
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RE: OK, if the soul begins from conception, then what a... - 3/8/2012 7:02:54 AM   
GotSteel


Posts: 5871
Joined: 2/19/2008
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quote:

ORIGINAL: tweakabelle
In a sense, it's a bit like trying to convey the sense of music through words - a pretty difficult undertaking that will at best always fall short of the goal.


I submit that given schematics for every bit of hardware in your computer, source code for every bit of software, a textbook on precisely how the two interact and a binary printout of an mp3, you still wouldn't have a sense of that song but that doesn't mean that there's "something extra" in your computer.

(in reply to tweakabelle)
Profile   Post #: 220
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