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The Hard Problem of Consciousness
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2019-03-21 at 10:42 AM UTC
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2019-03-21 at 10:43 AM UTC
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2019-03-21 at 10:46 AM UTC
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2019-03-21 at 10:47 AM UTC
Divination is also considerably older than that date and the early writings he claims show bicamerality: The oldest recorded Chinese Writing was on oracle bones, meaning that divination arose at the same time or even earlier than writing in Chinese society.[37][not in citation given]
So the Chinese developed conciousness before us? Big deal. That's not a counter argument.
Unless you're racist and can't accept the hypothesis that the Chinese developed conciousness thought before the rest of the world?
It certainly does not bother me, but, then again, I'm not a racist prick. -
2019-03-21 at 10:48 AM UTCSame with Aborigines, who wouldn't have consciousness.
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2019-03-21 at 10:49 AM UTC
Originally posted by gadzooks So the Chinese developed conciousness before us? Big deal. That's not a counter argument.
Unless you're racist and can't accept the hypothesis that the Chinese developed conciousness thought before the rest of the world?
It certainly does not bother me, but, then again, I'm not a racist prick.
They developed conscious thought outside of her proposed timeline, i.e. falsifying it on temporal grounds. -
2019-03-21 at 10:49 AM UTC
Originally posted by Common De-mominator They do not, they won a Nobel Prize in consciousness before Jaynes thought it possible.
The Nobel prize is not exactly the one true measure of scientific accuracy.
Next you'll tell me the Academy awards are an objective source of quality in the cinematic arts. -
2019-03-21 at 10:51 AM UTC
Originally posted by gadzooks The Nobel prize is not exactly the one true measure of scientific accuracy.
Lobotomy is a legitimate medical procedure.Next you'll tell me the Academy awards are an objective source of quality in the cinematic arts.
No nobody in the Academy won a Nobel Prize in film, how can they be an authority? -
2019-03-21 at 10:51 AM UTC
Originally posted by Common De-mominator They developed conscious thought outside of her proposed timeline, i.e. falsifying it on temporal grounds.
HIS timeline, first of all. That's been bugging me for a while now.
But more on topic: That does not disprove the theory. It it means that the predictions made based on the theory are slightly inaccurate. Do you have any idea how common a thing that is in science and academia? It probably happen a 50 times a day. -
2019-03-21 at 10:56 AM UTC
Originally posted by gadzooks HIS timeline, first of all. That's been bugging me for a while now.
But more on topic: That does not disprove the theory. It it means that the predictions made based on the theory are slightly inaccurate. Do you have any idea how common a thing that is in science and academia? It probably happen a 50 times a day.
No, it means she made a theory to fit the historical data but it doesn't fit all the relevant historical data. So it's a nice work of historical fiction "based on a true story".
The Aboriginal example is good too. -
2019-03-21 at 10:57 AM UTC
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2019-03-21 at 11 AM UTCActual video of Hitler's final minutes (slightly inaccurate theory):
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2019-03-21 at 11:01 AM UTC
Originally posted by Common De-mominator No, it means she made a theory to fit the historical data but it doesn't fit all the relevant historical data. So it's a nice work of historical fiction "based on a true story".
The Aboriginal example is good too.
It is possible that we evolved consciousness at different rates, ya know?
Either way, every theory has edge cases. Some kids die from being vaccinated.
Are you also anti-vaxxer? -
2019-03-21 at 11:02 AM UTC
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2019-03-21 at 11:05 AM UTC
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2019-03-21 at 11:05 AM UTC
Originally posted by gadzooks It is possible that we evolved consciousness at different rates, ya know?
Either way, every theory has edge cases. Some kids die from being vaccinated.
Are you also anti-vaxxer?
There's nothing to support the theory and the theory does not fit the data nor even really make testable predictions, nor answers the Hard Problem.
I mean you can read it if you want, but understand that you're not really receiving any information about reality from it. -
2019-03-21 at 11:06 AM UTCBtw many vaccine scientists have won the Nobel Prize in vaccination.
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2019-03-21 at 11:11 AM UTC
Originally posted by Common De-mominator There's nothing to support the theory and the theory does not fit the data nor even really make testable predictions, nor answers the Hard Problem.
I mean you can read it if you want, but understand that you're not really receiving any information about reality from it.
You haven't even read it. -
2019-03-21 at 11:12 AM UTC
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2019-03-21 at 11:14 AM UTCIs Jayden Jaymes won a Nobel prize or if the data all fit or if people thought that it was actually valuable for studying consciousness then I might read it.