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Products of our Environments

Very well, I concede that it might be of interest to some people to discuss the proton beyond its interaction with the universe. However, I don't think you could actually learn anything about the proton by doing so; it would be pure speculation.

On the other hand, I think I can pretty safely assume other people have their own experiences apart from their actions in the physical world just like me. Technically that's speculation. That doesn't make it unimportant.

While you could discuss the nature of consciousness, I don't think you could meaningfully talk about an actual person in this manner. For certain values of "meaningful", perhaps, but you couldn't actually learn anything about the person in question this way.

Ok, but it's not really a matter of talking about a person; it's about how we think of what a person fundamentally is.

Out of curiosity, are you more introverted or extraverted?

In any case, I feel that despising a person's behaviour instead of the person makes no difference whatsoever. Then I would also have to say that "I'm not friends with that guy, I'm friends with his behaviour" and "you don't love your mother, you love your mother's actions". There simply is no good reason to distinguish between "person" and "everything a person says and does", because it leads to a more or less useless definition of "person". If I know a guy whose actions are generous, then I will think of him as generous, not as completely unknowable.

It's not so much the mutually beneficial actions that make a friendship, I think, it's the shared experience. I could care less about the objective, quantitative spatial fluctuations we make in the time continuum. It's the fact that we're both subjectively experiencing something, while knowing that the other shares more or less the same qualitative experience, which forms a bond between us. It's why I can never love my computer the same way I love a person. It's why we love playing online matches in video games against actual people when we could be playing CPU's of the same difficulty. So I am distinguishing between everything a person says and does and everything a person thinks and feels.

How do you know you might as well have ended up in their situation? You're a different person.

Because if I had been born in to their situation, presumably I would have done the same thing. There is no reason I (as in my essence or consciousness) was born as me and not them (as far as I can tell). So I might as well have been them.

Pretty much, because I don't think they could exist.

Maybe not, but it's only meant to be a thought experiment. Unless you have some principle that says why they couldn't exist, it is a meaningful concept.
 
エル.;570365 said:
On the other hand, I think I can pretty safely assume other people have their own experiences apart from their actions in the physical world just like me. Technically that's speculation. That doesn't make it unimportant.
I think it does, actually. Yes, it is reasonable to assume that other people have thoughts and emotions just like I do, but there's no way for me to ever know anything about those thoughts and emotions unless I draw conclusions based on that person's actions. Thoughts and emotions don't interact with the rest of the world in any way whatsoever, except through the actions they cause. They have absolutely no effect on anything and we can never know anything about them. That's about as unimportant as it gets.

エル.;570365 said:
Ok, but it's not really a matter of talking about a person; it's about how we think of what a person fundamentally is.
But what's the point of thinking about a person as fundamentally being "we don't know anything at all about what a person fundamentally is"? That's a useless definition. For all intents and purposes, it is reasonable to assume that a person's actions say something about who that person is.

エル.;570365 said:
Out of curiosity, are you more introverted or extraverted?
A bit of both, like most people, but leaning more towards extroverted.

エル.;570365 said:
It's not so much the mutually beneficial actions that make a friendship, I think, it's the shared experience. I could care less about the objective, quantitative spatial fluctuations we make in the time continuum. It's the fact that we're both subjectively experiencing something, while knowing that the other shares more or less the same qualitative experience, which forms a bond between us. It's why I can never love my computer the same way I love a person. It's why we love playing online matches in video games against actual people when we could be playing CPU's of the same difficulty. So I am distinguishing between everything a person says and does and everything a person thinks and feels.
But how can you know that the other person is sharing "more or less the same qualitative experience" if you can't infer anything about a person from his behaviour?

Besides, the reason playing against humans is more interesting is not "humans are conscious, CPUs are not"; it's more interesting because humans behave differently.

エル.;570365 said:
Because if I had been born in to their situation, presumably I would have done the same thing. There is no reason I (as in my essence or consciousness) was born as me and not them (as far as I can tell). So I might as well have been them.
I disagree. "You" couldn't have been born as another person, because then "you" wouldn't be "you". So I actually don't think you might as well have been them.

エル.;570365 said:
Maybe not, but it's only meant to be a thought experiment. Unless you have some principle that says why they couldn't exist, it is a meaningful concept.
Philosophical zombies are like circular squares; they're self-contradictory, at least as far as I'm concerned. They're supposed to be physically indistinguishable from humans except they're not conscious. Well, I don't buy that. If they're physically indistinguishable from humans, then they are humans, and conscious.

As far as I can tell, consciousness is a product of the brain, or at least the body. Given the nature of consciousness, this is difficult - if not impossible - to prove, but I have no reason to believe otherwise. Therefore, if you have a body that is identical to that of a human, including a functioning brain that is identical to that of a human, you are necessarily conscious to the same extent as a human. Besides, I don't believe it would be possible for a being to act exactly like a human in all conceivable situations unless it had a human consciousness. How exactly would that work?
 
I think it does, actually. Yes, it is reasonable to assume that other people have thoughts and emotions just like I do, but there's no way for me to ever know anything about those thoughts and emotions unless I draw conclusions based on that person's actions. Thoughts and emotions don't interact with the rest of the world in any way whatsoever, except through the actions they cause. They have absolutely no effect on anything and we can never know anything about them. That's about as unimportant as it gets.

I am amazed, because essentially what you have proposed is solipsism.

Look, nothing interacts with the rest of the world in any way except through the actions it causes, be it a subatomic particle or the chair at your desk. Photons bounce off the chair's atoms and into your eyes, allowing you to see its image. It actively interacted with the light. When you sit on it electromagnetic repulsive force is actively pushes you up. So yes, you have to draw conclusions of what it is based on its actions. A chair is still a chair. A chair is not the things a chair has done. There are so many things you could do with a chair, it's not even funny. And a chair is extremely simple compared to a person. That's why it becomes useful to think of a person as their thoughts and feelings, because those are what cause their actions. Your definition of a chair will become ever more complex as you use it in more and more different ways. Defining the chair as the things that dictate how it is likely to behave (a clump of matter with X type of structure) is infinitely more preferable than defining it as its actions.

But what's the point of thinking about a person as fundamentally being "we don't know anything at all about what a person fundamentally is"? That's a useless definition. For all intents and purposes, it is reasonable to assume that a person's actions say something about who that person is.

Really? You don't know anything at all about the thoughts or feelings your best friend is likely to be having? Those are what cue you in on how they are likely to behave. At least that's how it is for me.

A bit of both, like most people, but leaning more towards extroverted.

Huh. You might have realized, that's what I had guessed. Introverted, literally, "turned inward", verses Extraverted, "turned outward". I'm pretty introverted, but usually have no problem being social when I want to. It amazes me how much our personality affects our philosophy!

But how can you know that the other person is sharing "more or less the same qualitative experience" if you can't infer anything about a person from his behaviour?

You can infer, but the same person, put in vastly different situations, will have vastly different behaviors. You can make a criminal out of anyone if you put them in the right psychological cages at the right times.

Besides, the reason playing against humans is more interesting is not "humans are conscious, CPUs are not"; it's more interesting because humans behave differently.

I completely disagree! While playing against humans definitely trumps playing poorly programmed AI, the reason I play against people is because someone is experiencing the other end of the game. When I play against the computer, there is either a winner or a loser. The computer could care less what the outcome is. When I play a person there is a winner and a loser. I actually frustrated someone's victory celebration when that green shell hit its target meters from the finish line in Mario Kart!

I disagree. "You" couldn't have been born as another person, because then "you" wouldn't be "you". So I actually don't think you might as well have been them.

If my consciousness was in their body, I would effectively have been them. That principle's not that difficult to understand.

Philosophical zombies are like circular squares; they're self-contradictory, at least as far as I'm concerned. They're supposed to be physically indistinguishable from humans except they're not conscious. Well, I don't buy that. If they're physically indistinguishable from humans, then they are humans, and conscious.

But how do you know other humans are conscious? Because they are biologically similar? That proves nothing.

As far as I can tell, consciousness is a product of the brain, or at least the body. Given the nature of consciousness, this is difficult - if not impossible - to prove, but I have no reason to believe otherwise.

I have reason to believe otherwise because consciousness is not mechanical in nature. If you can explain how "blue" arises from physical reactions, you will be world famous, forever.

Therefore, if you have a body that is identical to that of a human, including a functioning brain that is identical to that of a human, you are necessarily conscious to the same extent as a human. Besides, I don't believe it would be possible for a being to act exactly like a human in all conceivable situations unless it had a human consciousness. How exactly would that work?

Give me some tasks you think a philosophical zombie would react differently than a conscious person, and I will explain it to you.
 
エル.;570588 said:
Give me some tasks you think a philosophical zombie would react differently than a conscious person, and I will explain it to you.
Isn't the entire point that it would react identically to a conscious person? It's meaningless. Looks like a duck, quacks like a duck, it's probably a duck.
 
Music Dragon wants to know how it would work for something without consciousness to react as if it were conscious, and I'm prepared to explain it.
 
エル.;570588 said:
I am amazed, because essentially what you have proposed is solipsism.

Look, nothing interacts with the rest of the world in any way except through the actions it causes, be it a subatomic particle or the chair at your desk. Photons bounce off the chair's atoms and into your eyes, allowing you to see its image. It actively interacted with the light. When you sit on it electromagnetic repulsive force is actively pushes you up. So yes, you have to draw conclusions of what it is based on its actions. A chair is still a chair. A chair is not the things a chair has done. There are so many things you could do with a chair, it's not even funny. And a chair is extremely simple compared to a person. That's why it becomes useful to think of a person as their thoughts and feelings, because those are what cause their actions. Your definition of a chair will become ever more complex as you use it in more and more different ways. Defining the chair as the things that dictate how it is likely to behave (a clump of matter with X type of structure) is infinitely more preferable than defining it as its actions.
But how do I even know that a chair is a chair if I'm not allowed to infer anything from its interactions with the universe? I only think of an object as a chair because it looks like a chair, feels like a chair and behaves like a chair. If I disregard all of that, it might as well be a guitar or a banana. In the same way, I only know a person through his actions.

エル.;570588 said:
Really? You don't know anything at all about the thoughts or feelings your best friend is likely to be having? Those are what cue you in on how they are likely to behave. At least that's how it is for me.
Of course I don't; I'm not a mind reader. I can guess what my best friend is thinking based on what he says and does, and based on what he's said and done previously, but if I don't take behaviour into account, then no, I don't know anything at all about him.

It has to be the other way around: my best friend's behaviour is what tells me what he's thinking and feeling (which, in turn, will allow me to guess how he will behave). I don't believe you when you say that you guess your best friend's behaviour based on his thoughts instead of the other way around. That's not possible, unless you're reading his mind somehow. How do you know what he's thinking and feeling if not for the way he acts and the things he says?

エル.;570588 said:
Huh. You might have realized, that's what I had guessed. Introverted, literally, "turned inward", verses Extraverted, "turned outward". I'm pretty introverted, but usually have no problem being social when I want to. It amazes me how much our personality affects our philosophy!
It is quite interesting, yes.

エル.;570588 said:
You can infer, but the same person, put in vastly different situations, will have vastly different behaviors. You can make a criminal out of anyone if you put them in the right psychological cages at the right times.
"You can infer" is all I wanted to hear. Excellent.

And yes, even the most virtuous people can be made to do horrible things, on that I agree. I still believe people have distinct personalities (not fixed personalities, but personalities nonetheless), though; so while anyone could be made to do anything if put in the right "psychological cage", two people faced with the exact same situation will probably behave differently. Therefore, the concept of "personality" - attributing various qualities and characteristics to people - is meaningful. And in order to do so, one infers, based on behaviour.

Of course, if I think of a person as generous, that doesn't mean he would never act selfishly, and it would in fact be quite easy to make him act selfishly by putting him in the right "psychological cage". Any attempt to describe a person using adjectives such as "generous", "rude" or "talkative" is an oversimplification. And then there's the fact that I could quite simply be wrong. But describing a person as "generous" signifies that, in general, he acts in a way that other (non-generous) people might not. There is some sort of consistency to his behaviour, or at least something that sets him apart from other people - something that I can infer from his behaviour. That makes me justified in regarding different people differently, and in judging people.

エル.;570588 said:
I completely disagree! While playing against humans definitely trumps playing poorly programmed AI, the reason I play against people is because someone is experiencing the other end of the game. When I play against the computer, there is either a winner or a loser. The computer could care less what the outcome is. When I play a person there is a winner and a loser. I actually frustrated someone's victory celebration when that green shell hit its target meters from the finish line in Mario Kart!
Fair enough. I can't tell you what you feel.

エル.;570588 said:
If my consciousness was in their body, I would effectively have been them. That principle's not that difficult to understand.
It's impossible for you to be someone else, because if you're another person, you're not you anymore, you're another person. That principle is also fairly easy to understand.

I'm going to illustrate this with an example to facilitate discussion. Consider a spherical serial rapist in a vacuum. (Let's assume, for the sake of this example, that we all agree that rape is morally abhorrent - feel free to contest this premise if you wish.)

Now, you would look at this man and say "Yes, what he did was horrible, but I might as well have been him, so I have no right to judge him." But I disagree. He's a serial rapist, you're not. That gives you the moral higher ground, so to speak. If you had been in his shoes, you would not have raped anyone, because you're a different person - the kind of person who doesn't rape people. Or, if you had literally been him - with the same personality, the same memories and experiences and so on - then yes, you would have acted the same, but you wouldn't have been yourself any longer. The "you" that doesn't rape people has the right to judge the "you" that does.

エル.;570588 said:
But how do you know other humans are conscious? Because they are biologically similar? That proves nothing.
Really? Solipsism? I'm astonished.

I don't know that other humans are conscious, but since they act like they're conscious, I'm going to assume that they are. If we scrap that premise - that all humans are conscious - then yes, philosophical zombies are possible; I might be one of them, for all you know. But I simply don't think that's a reasonable assumption to make. Other humans are biologically - that is, physically - similar to me, and I have no reason to posit anything beyond the physical.

エル.;570588 said:
I have reason to believe otherwise because consciousness is not mechanical in nature. If you can explain how "blue" arises from physical reactions, you will be world famous, forever.
What exactly do you mean by "not mechanical in nature"? Consciousness is a complicated thing, but the fact that we can't understand it doesn't mean that it transcends the physical. Just a few posts ago, you claimed to be capable of mind reading through brain imaging - doesn't that appear to suggest that it is the brain that causes consciousness? Then there's the fact that brain damage and death affects consciousness. Not definitive proof, of course, but no such thing exists in this context.

Notice that I keep using the phrase "reasonable to assume". The nature of discussions regarding consciousness is such that we can't really know anything for certain, so we have to make do with what seems likely. And it seems likely to me that consciousness is in the brain.

エル.;570588 said:
Give me some tasks you think a philosophical zombie would react differently than a conscious person, and I will explain it to you.
The whole point is that it wouldn't.

エル.;570600 said:
Music Dragon wants to know how it would work for something without consciousness to react as if it were conscious, and I'm prepared to explain it.
I can't "give you some tasks" to explain, because that's not what bothers me. Having a non-conscious entity perform a few tasks in the same way that a conscious entity does is not too difficult. If I ask a human "How are you?" and he replies "I'm fine!", that's not hard to replicate in a computer.

What I don't understand is how a non-conscious entity could act like a human in every conceivable situation that a human could be put in. Given the extremely wide range of things humans are capable of, I highly doubt it would be possible without actually being conscious.

Are you familiar with the Chinese room thought experiment? It's relevant to the discussion at hand.
 
An interesting experiment would be to take a pair of identical twins from birth, raise them completely separate from each other but in identical environments (as identical as possible, anyhow), then see if they would respond identically to stimuli. The variables would be extraordinarily hard to control though...
 
I'm going to illustrate this with an example to facilitate discussion. Consider a spherical serial rapist in a vacuum. (Let's assume, for the sake of this example, that we all agree that rape is morally abhorrent - feel free to contest this premise if you wish.)

Now, you would look at this man and say "Yes, what he did was horrible, but I might as well have been him, so I have no right to judge him." But I disagree. He's a serial rapist, you're not. That gives you the moral higher ground, so to speak. If you had been in his shoes, you would not have raped anyone, because you're a different person - the kind of person who doesn't rape people. Or, if you had literally been him - with the same personality, the same memories and experiences and so on - then yes, you would have acted the same, but you wouldn't have been yourself any longer. The "you" that doesn't rape people has the right to judge the "you" that does.

But if it's entirely his environment and other things outside of his control that made him a serial rapist, and entirely your environment and other things of your control that makes you not a serial rapist, then how can you judge him when, if you were exposed to purely identical influences, you could have done the same thing? How can you judge him when it is things out of his control that made him who he is, and things out of your control that made you a different person? You didn't work to not be a serial rapist, it was just the influences you were exposed to.
 
But if it's entirely his environment and other things outside of his control that made him a serial rapist, and entirely your environment and other things of your control that makes you not a serial rapist, then how can you judge him when, if you were exposed to purely identical influences, you could have done the same thing?
I wasn't exposed to purely identical influences.

This argument really just boils down to "things could have been different", which has no bearing on what actually is. "If the circumstances were different, the various elements that make up his body could easily have been a bunch of bananas instead of a human, and bananas can't be judged on moral grounds!" Yeah, okay, so what? He's not a banana, he's a serial rapist. Although I guess that makes him bananas. Or else he could have been nuts. (Please, kill me now.)

Right, that example was a bit of an exaggeration (and chemists/biologists everywhere must hate me), but my point still stands. If things had been different, maybe he hadn't been a serial rapist, and I wouldn't have judged him; or I would also have been a serial rapist, and would have had no right to judge - but that's "if things had been different". They're not.

How can you judge him when it is things out of his control that made him who he is, and things out of your control that made you a different person? You didn't work to not be a serial rapist, it was just the influences you were exposed to.
What's your point? Why can't I judge him simply because he didn't "choose" to be a serial rapist? We've already established that "choice" doesn't exist (or, at least, you and I seem to agree on that point), so where does that even enter into it? As I've said before: a flower doesn't stop being beautiful because it didn't choose to be beautiful. Similarly, a person's qualities have nothing to do with whether he "chose" those qualities or not. He's a serial rapist, which presumably means there's something detestable about him (assuming you consider serial rape detestable), and therefore you have the right to judge him.

Maybe he has some redeeming qualities. Maybe he actually had a really good reason to rape all those people. Or maybe some kind of mental disorder made him do it, though he's actually a good person. Or maybe all that was long ago, and he feels remorse, and now he's genuinely changed and is a different person. But if none of that's true, why can't I judge him? Even if circumstance shaped him into what he is, circumstance shaped him into something detestable.

Basically, what I disagree with is a) the notion that reality somehow isn't separate from possibility, and b) the notion that we can only judge that which is "chosen" (i.e., nothing).
 
We have a saying over here: if my uncle was my aunt, he wouldn't be my damn uncle anymore.
 
Of course I don't; I'm not a mind reader. I can guess what my best friend is thinking based on what he says and does, and based on what he's said and done previously, but if I don't take behaviour into account, then no, I don't know anything at all about him.

Okay, but to me, it's still the thoughts and feelings that define a person rather than their actions.

It has to be the other way around: my best friend's behaviour is what tells me what he's thinking and feeling (which, in turn, will allow me to guess how he will behave). I don't believe you when you say that you guess your best friend's behaviour based on his thoughts instead of the other way around. That's not possible, unless you're reading his mind somehow. How do you know what he's thinking and feeling if not for the way he acts and the things he says?

Based on the way they have acted in the past, what you know about their current mood, etc. can give you an idea of what eir thinking / feeling. Yes, you need to know what their behaviors have been, but that doesn't mean to me that their behavior is all that matters, as you seem to be suggesting.

And yes, even the most virtuous people can be made to do horrible things, on that I agree. I still believe people have distinct personalities (not fixed personalities, but personalities nonetheless), though; so while anyone could be made to do anything if put in the right "psychological cage", two people faced with the exact same situation will probably behave differently. Therefore, the concept of "personality" - attributing various qualities and characteristics to people - is meaningful. And in order to do so, one infers, based on behaviour.

*Pulls out Psych textbook* Interestingly we just did the chapter on personality.

What you describe, inferring personality based on behavior, is the trait perspective on personality. It's an important, insightful perspective that is pervasive in popular knowledge, but there are other important perspectives as well. In contrast, the psychoanalytic perspective attempts to discern the thoughts and motives behind a person's behavior by things like free association and projective tests. And yes, you have to figure it out based on behavior, but the point is the formulated thoughts and feelings of a person are more useful than their cumulative behaviors themselves. (One of the main criticisms of the trait perspective is that it is not good at predicting someone's behavior across a wide range of situations, because our behavior frequently deviates from the traits we supposedly posses.)

Of course, if I think of a person as generous, that doesn't mean he would never act selfishly, and it would in fact be quite easy to make him act selfishly by putting him in the right "psychological cage". Any attempt to describe a person using adjectives such as "generous", "rude" or "talkative" is an oversimplification. And then there's the fact that I could quite simply be wrong. But describing a person as "generous" signifies that, in general, he acts in a way that other (non-generous) people might not. There is some sort of consistency to his behaviour, or at least something that sets him apart from other people - something that I can infer from his behaviour. That makes me justified in regarding different people differently, and in judging people.

I think someone's motives for being generous are more important than the generosity itself. I guess that's fundamentally where we're going -- I think you'd be far more justified in judging a person by their motives, than their actual actions. And then, well... I'll save it for when we get there.

It's impossible for you to be someone else, because if you're another person, you're not you anymore, you're another person. That principle is also fairly easy to understand.

That's just a matter of how we define "you". If we redefine "you" to be your conscious self, it's not impossible. So we are arguing over whose definition is more appropriate.

I'm going to illustrate this with an example to facilitate discussion. Consider a spherical serial rapist in a vacuum. (Let's assume, for the sake of this example, that we all agree that rape is morally abhorrent - feel free to contest this premise if you wish.)

Now, you would look at this man and say "Yes, what he did was horrible, but I might as well have been him, so I have no right to judge him." But I disagree. He's a serial rapist, you're not. That gives you the moral higher ground, so to speak. If you had been in his shoes, you would not have raped anyone, because you're a different person - the kind of person who doesn't rape people. Or, if you had literally been him - with the same personality, the same memories and experiences and so on - then yes, you would have acted the same, but you wouldn't have been yourself any longer. The "you" that doesn't rape people has the right to judge the "you" that does.

Luckily for me, I'm not a serial rapist. "I" could have been, but since "I'm" not, "I" get to judge the "me" that was simply less lucky than I am? That's why I think it's unfair to judge.

What exactly do you mean by "not mechanical in nature"? Consciousness is a complicated thing, but the fact that we can't understand it doesn't mean that it transcends the physical. Just a few posts ago, you claimed to be capable of mind reading through brain imaging - doesn't that appear to suggest that it is the brain that causes consciousness? Then there's the fact that brain damage and death affects consciousness. Not definitive proof, of course, but no such thing exists in this context.

Just because the brain is necessary for consciousness doesn't mean it causes consciousness. This is what I mean by "not mechanical in nature"; to quote Schrodinger:
"The sensation of colour cannot be accounted for by the physicist's objective picture of light-waves. Could the physiologist account for it, if he had fuller knowledge than he has of the processes in the retina and the nervous processes set up by them in the optical nerve bundles and in the brain? I do not think so."
Complicated mechanical things, like a car engine, no matter how familiar they are to us, no matter how much they have been hammered into our intuition, are always inherently complicated. On contrast, the color red is inherently simple. Yet we can find no mechanical explanation for it.

What I don't understand is how a non-conscious entity could act like a human in every conceivable situation that a human could be put in. Given the extremely wide range of things humans are capable of, I highly doubt it would be possible without actually being conscious.

I don't see your logic in that statement, other than "there are so many different circumstances a person could be put in that surely there must be one where they act differently." That's why I asked you to give me some tasks. What kind of situation would that be?

Are you familiar with the Chinese room thought experiment? It's relevant to the discussion at hand.

No, I'm not, and unfortunately Wikipedia is down today for SOPA protest. I will get back to you on that.

We have a saying over here: if my uncle was my aunt, he wouldn't be my damn uncle anymore.

Again, definitions.

I wasn't exposed to purely identical influences.

This argument really just boils down to "things could have been different", which has no bearing on what actually is. "If the circumstances were different, the various elements that make up his body could easily have been a bunch of bananas instead of a human, and bananas can't be judged on moral grounds!" Yeah, okay, so what? He's not a banana, he's a serial rapist. Although I guess that makes him bananas. Or else he could have been nuts. (Please, kill me now.)

But bananas don't have thoughts, feelings, or consciousness (I hope), so "he" couldn't have been a banana.

Right, that example was a bit of an exaggeration (and chemists/biologists everywhere must hate me), but my point still stands. If things had been different, maybe he hadn't been a serial rapist, and I wouldn't have judged him; or I would also have been a serial rapist, and would have had no right to judge - but that's "if things had been different". They're not.

And why are they not different? Random luck.

What's your point? Why can't I judge him simply because he didn't "choose" to be a serial rapist? We've already established that "choice" doesn't exist (or, at least, you and I seem to agree on that point), so where does that even enter into it? As I've said before: a flower doesn't stop being beautiful because it didn't choose to be beautiful. Similarly, a person's qualities have nothing to do with whether he "chose" those qualities or not. He's a serial rapist, which presumably means there's something detestable about him (assuming you consider serial rape detestable), and therefore you have the right to judge him.

It's not the flower that exists in the objective physical world that is beautiful, it's your brain's rendition of the flower that exists in your mind that is beautiful. Flowers are not objectively beautiful things. If you scanned the flower with say, an X-ray, and only had that version to look at, then it probably wouldn't be beautiful. You could argue that it's geometric form is beautiful, but then, a perfect daisy's form is objectively imperfect, but since its blemishes are too microscopic to notice, it is perfect in your mind. SO, if you are judging the person who exists in your mind, the person you know see them to be, you are justified in doing so, but only as far as their existence in your mind. You cannot judge the person who exists objectively, and therefore you cannot judge the biological mass that exists in the universe, which is independent of your mind, or the conscious self it contains, also independent of your mind.

Basically, what I disagree with is a) the notion that reality somehow isn't separate from possibility,

BUT WHAT ABOUT PARALLEL UNIV*shot*

I'm not going to judge someone because of some chance event(s) that were out of their control. If someone I love is in a plane, and the plane is caught in un-forecasted bad weather, and the plane goes down, I'm not going to judge the pilot for being a "murderer" since he was the one that started the plane off and led that fateful flight, or even a bad driver. The reality is, if it wasn't for his actions, no one would have been killed. But it was the circumstances that led to the disaster, and anyone could have been caught in bad weather. Of course, "I'm" not a pilot who got caught in bad weather, so the "me" that isn't has a right to judge the "me" that did.

and b) the notion that we can only judge that which is "chosen" (i.e., nothing).

We can only judge that which is perceived, not that which (we presume) actually is.
 
Again, definitions.

Exactly, an uncle's the brother of one of your parents. An aunt's the sister.

However hard you try, if your auntie had balls, she'd be called an uncle. That's kind of elementary biological sex.

A is always A. It cannot be non-A.
 
And with this you try to say that it is unimaginable that I, as in my conscious awareness, could have ended up someone else?
 
Okay, but to me, it's still the thoughts and feelings that define a person rather than their actions.
But all you know about their thoughts and feelings, you have to infer from their actions. If you define a person through their thoughts and feelings, but you infer their thoughts and feelings from their actions, then you essentially define a person through their actions.

Based on the way they have acted in the past, what you know about their current mood, etc. can give you an idea of what eir thinking / feeling. Yes, you need to know what their behaviors have been, but that doesn't mean to me that their behavior is all that matters, as you seem to be suggesting.
That depends on what you mean by "all that matters". As I've said before, I'm not saying people don't have thoughts and feelings - I'm just saying you can't know anything about them without inferring from behaviour, which means that everything you know about someone's thoughts and feelings is ultimately derived from their behaviour - so in that sense, yes, behaviour really is all that matters, at least from an outside observer's point of view.

Of course, it's often useful to ask yourself "do I really know what this person is thinking?" Other people can always surprise you, act in ways you never expected; that's why judging people is often a bad idea, at least when you do it too early. But the reality is that there's only one way to find out what someone else is thinking: considering their behaviour. It's not a foolproof method, but it's the only one.

Other people (presumably) have thoughts and feelings, but we can never actually access them. Yet at some point, you're simply going to have to stop considering other people to be completely unknowable, because that just isn't fruitful. No, you can't know for sure that your best friend actually likes you and enjoys your company - maybe he secretly hates your guts - but based on his actions, it's reasonable to assume that he does. Inferring from behaviour is the only reasonable thing to do.

*Pulls out Psych textbook* Interestingly we just did the chapter on personality.

What you describe, inferring personality based on behavior, is the trait perspective on personality. It's an important, insightful perspective that is pervasive in popular knowledge, but there are other important perspectives as well. In contrast, the psychoanalytic perspective attempts to discern the thoughts and motives behind a person's behavior by things like free association and projective tests. And yes, you have to figure it out based on behavior, but the point is the formulated thoughts and feelings of a person are more useful than their cumulative behaviors themselves. (One of the main criticisms of the trait perspective is that it is not good at predicting someone's behavior across a wide range of situations, because our behavior frequently deviates from the traits we supposedly posses.)
The trait theory isn't "inferring personality based on behaviour", it just describes personalities using traits. Hence the name. As I tried to explain in my previous post, I don't actually believe people can be described as "generous" or "stingy" precisely because we don't always act consistently - I was trying to illustrate a point, namely that it is meaningful to think of other people as having personalities, and therefore it is meaningful to try to determine what that personality is, by inferring from behaviour.

Regardless of what theoretical approach you take to the concept of "personality", the fact remains that the only way you can know anything about it is by studying the person's behaviour. All personality theories infer from behaviour. What conclusions you then draw is another matter.

I think someone's motives for being generous are more important than the generosity itself. I guess that's fundamentally where we're going -- I think you'd be far more justified in judging a person by their motives, than their actual actions. And then, well... I'll save it for when we get there.
I agree completely, but the thing is, you don't know what their motives are - unless you infer based on the person's behaviour. So even if you try to judge a person's motives, it's really still their actions you're judging.

That's just a matter of how we define "you". If we redefine "you" to be your conscious self, it's not impossible. So we are arguing over whose definition is more appropriate.
Still not buying it. "My conscious self" is not identical to "other people's conscious selves". They are not interchangeable. "My conscious self" cannot be "someone else's conscious self" because then it's not the same conscious self any more. Unless you're saying that all "conscious selves" are identical.

Luckily for me, I'm not a serial rapist. "I" could have been, but since "I'm" not, "I" get to judge the "me" that was simply less lucky than I am? That's why I think it's unfair to judge.
Why does it matter whether it had anything to do with luck or not?

Just because the brain is necessary for consciousness doesn't mean it causes consciousness. This is what I mean by "not mechanical in nature"; to quote Schrodinger:

"The sensation of colour cannot be accounted for by the physicist's objective picture of light-waves. Could the physiologist account for it, if he had fuller knowledge than he has of the processes in the retina and the nervous processes set up by them in the optical nerve bundles and in the brain? I do not think so."

Complicated mechanical things, like a car engine, no matter how familiar they are to us, no matter how much they have been hammered into our intuition, are always inherently complicated. On contrast, the color red is inherently simple. Yet we can find no mechanical explanation for it.
The limits of the human mind are not the limits of the universe; there's a difference between what we can wrap our minds around and what is actually true. I have no proof that the brain causes consciousness, but there is an obvious connection between the two, and I have no reason to assume that anything else causes consciousness, especially not something non-physical; until I find a good reason to change my mind, I'll stick to that belief. I'm not a huge fan of arguments that go "I don't understand it, therefore it's supernatural".

I don't see your logic in that statement, other than "there are so many different circumstances a person could be put in that surely there must be one where they act differently." That's why I asked you to give me some tasks. What kind of situation would that be?
That's not what I'm saying - that wouldn't make any sense. Acting differently from a conscious person completely defeats the point of a philosophical zombie, since they are explicitly defined to be entities that act like humans in all given situations.

But if it acts exactly like a conscious human in all conceivable circumstances, then it must necessarily be conscious, because it is physically identical to a conscious human and I have no reason to believe that there is something beyond the physical that causes some things to be conscious and others not to be. If it's physically identical, how could it not be conscious? I don't believe in the supernatural.

No, I'm not, and unfortunately Wikipedia is down today for SOPA protest. I will get back to you on that.
It wasn't really that important, just something I thought might interest you.

But bananas don't have thoughts, feelings, or consciousness (I hope), so "he" couldn't have been a banana.
But "he" could have been a completely different person? That doesn't make any sense. He could have been any conceivable conscious entity, but it wouldn't have been possible for him to be non-conscious? Why?

And why are they not different? Random luck.
Doesn't matter.

It's not the flower that exists in the objective physical world that is beautiful, it's your brain's rendition of the flower that exists in your mind that is beautiful. Flowers are not objectively beautiful things. If you scanned the flower with say, an X-ray, and only had that version to look at, then it probably wouldn't be beautiful. You could argue that it's geometric form is beautiful, but then, a perfect daisy's form is objectively imperfect, but since its blemishes are too microscopic to notice, it is perfect in your mind. SO, if you are judging the person who exists in your mind, the person you know see them to be, you are justified in doing so, but only as far as their existence in your mind. You cannot judge the person who exists objectively, and therefore you cannot judge the biological mass that exists in the universe, which is independent of your mind, or the conscious self it contains, also independent of your mind.
Well, yeah. I never said anything about beauty or morals existing in any objective sense of the word, so I'm not sure where you're going with this.

BUT WHAT ABOUT PARALLEL UNIV*shot*

I'm not going to judge someone because of some chance event(s) that were out of their control. If someone I love is in a plane, and the plane is caught in un-forecasted bad weather, and the plane goes down, I'm not going to judge the pilot for being a "murderer" since he was the one that started the plane off and led that fateful flight, or even a bad driver. The reality is, if it wasn't for his actions, no one would have been killed. But it was the circumstances that led to the disaster, and anyone could have been caught in bad weather. Of course, "I'm" not a pilot who got caught in bad weather, so the "me" that isn't has a right to judge the "me" that did.
But he crashed because of bad weather, not because he wanted to kill hundreds of innocent people. There's a pretty huge difference there; just a few paragraphs ago you mentioned you would rather judge a person's motives than their actions, am I right?

If the plane crashes as a result of an unexpected storm, I will not blame anyone.
If the plane crashes as a result of the pilot being inexperienced and unskilled, I will judge him, or possibly whoever hired and/or educated him.
If the plane crashes as a result of the pilot being a homicidal maniac who wants to murder hundreds of innocent people, I will judge him harshly.

All three cases are purely the result of "random luck" - circumstances leading to other circumstances. But the difference lies in the nature of the person I am judging.

I know nothing about the pilot who got caught in the storm, so I will not judge him.
The pilot who crashed because he was a bad pilot is irresponsible or ignorant, to the point of costing other people their lives, which I do not appreciate.
The pilot who crashed because he wanted to kill everyone aboard the plane is a homicidal maniac, which disgusts me.

I don't care at all about whether or not the homicidal maniac pilot actively chose to be a homicidal maniac, but the fact of the matter is that he's a homicidal maniac, and that makes me justified in judging him because I don't like homicidal maniacs.

Whether or not "random luck" caused these three pilots to turn out the way they did is irrelevant. That does not make them equal. Regardless of what shaped them into what they are, they are different, and therefore I will have different opinions of them, and judge them differently.

We can only judge that which is perceived, not that which (we presume) actually is.
Yeah, sure. But there is absolutely no point in saying "I don't know anything at all about the universe, I just perceive things but can't know for sure! Everything could be an illusion!" For all intents and purposes, it is reasonable to assume that we can know things - hence why I believe in defining people through their actions, as opposed to not defining them at all and just regarding them as faceless, unknowable entities.

If you're still interested in this discussion, what's your take on the chinese room experiment?
The problem with it is, of course, that it fails to consider the entire Chinese-speaking system. The man is just one component. He doesn't speak Chinese, but the system as a whole - the Chinese room - does.

The zombie is a slightly different situation, given that we're talking about consciousness instead of intelligence. Nevertheless, my point is that both in the case of the zombie and the case of the Chinese room, people tend to grossly underestimate the complexity of these systems. When you describe the Chinese room, people picture a thick book that contains instructions on how to translate various Chinese phrases. In reality, that book would have to be extremely complicated. Similarly, it might be easy enough for someone to picture a being that behaves exactly like a human without being conscious, but that kind of complexity would result in consciousness.

To be honest, this debate doesn't really pique my interest any longer. It has strayed a bit too far, left simplicity and elegance behind.

And with this you try to say that it is unimaginable that I, as in my conscious awareness, could have ended up someone else?
Well, yeah. You can't be another person because then you're not you any more. It's a self-contradiction. It just doesn't make any sense. I don't how else I can put it, but there you go.
 
But all you know about their thoughts and feelings, you have to infer from their actions. If you define a person through their thoughts and feelings, but you infer their thoughts and feelings from their actions, then you essentially define a person through their actions.


That depends on what you mean by "all that matters". As I've said before, I'm not saying people don't have thoughts and feelings - I'm just saying you can't know anything about them without inferring from behaviour, which means that everything you know about someone's thoughts and feelings is ultimately derived from their behaviour - so in that sense, yes, behaviour really is all that matters, at least from an outside observer's point of view.

Of course, it's often useful to ask yourself "do I really know what this person is thinking?" Other people can always surprise you, act in ways you never expected; that's why judging people is often a bad idea, at least when you do it too early. But the reality is that there's only one way to find out what someone else is thinking: considering their behaviour. It's not a foolproof method, but it's the only one.

Other people (presumably) have thoughts and feelings, but we can never actually access them. Yet at some point, you're simply going to have to stop considering other people to be completely unknowable, because that just isn't fruitful. No, you can't know for sure that your best friend actually likes you and enjoys your company - maybe he secretly hates your guts - but based on his actions, it's reasonable to assume that he does. Inferring from behaviour is the only reasonable thing to do.

The trait theory isn't "inferring personality based on behaviour", it just describes personalities using traits. Hence the name. As I tried to explain in my previous post, I don't actually believe people can be described as "generous" or "stingy" precisely because we don't always act consistently - I was trying to illustrate a point, namely that it is meaningful to think of other people as having personalities, and therefore it is meaningful to try to determine what that personality is, by inferring from behaviour.

Regardless of what theoretical approach you take to the concept of "personality", the fact remains that the only way you can know anything about it is by studying the person's behaviour. All personality theories infer from behaviour. What conclusions you then draw is another matter.

Okay, I agree with you that the only way you can know anything about a person is by their behavior. I don't have a problem with that. What I do have a problem with is the paradigm of viewing a person as the way they behave. Subjective experience is infinitely more important than objective truth, and you won't be able to convince me otherwise on that. Because if there is no subjective experience, there might as well be nothing at all.

People are completely unknowable, as is everything, but it doesn't make a difference, because making assumptions is a reasonable thing to do.

Again, there is no problem with inferring based on behavior. I just don't like when people then put the behavior on a pedestal, and regard thoughts and feelings as just a logical consequence. The logic here is really simple.

Subjectivity is more important than objectivity.
Behavior is objective, experience is subjective.
Therefore, another person's mind is more notable than another person's brain and behavior.

I agree completely, but the thing is, you don't know what their motives are - unless you infer based on the person's behaviour. So even if you try to judge a person's motives, it's really still their actions you're judging.

That still doesn't make their behavior more important than their thoughts and feelings, which includes their motives.

Still not buying it. "My conscious self" is not identical to "other people's conscious selves". They are not interchangeable. "My conscious self" cannot be "someone else's conscious self" because then it's not the same conscious self any more. Unless you're saying that all "conscious selves" are identical.

Why can't they be? They obviously can't be the same conscious self, but why can't they be in nature identical? If two things are identical, they are interchangeable.

A fascinating psychological phenomenon can be seen with split brain patients, whose corpus callosom, connecting the left and right hemispheres, has been severed. One optic tract goes to each hemisphere, so if they stare at a center point, and then we flash, say, "ice" on one side and "cream" on the other, one hemisphere will see "ice" and the other "cream". If we ask them to point with their right hand to the picture of what they saw, they will point to the word "ice", and if we ask them to point with the left hand they will point to "creme", but never icecream. It gets weirder: since language is controlled by the left hemisphere, if we ask the person why they pointed to a picture of "creme" with their left hand, which is controlled by their right hemisphere, they will rationalize their response by associating "ice" with "creme".

Each hemisphere goes on living a life of its own. That means a lot for conscious selves. There are now two people living in the same head, which were at one time one person. What if I had a split brain disechtomy? Would "I" live in the left brain or the right brain? The answer is both, which is freaky to think about.

Why does it matter whether it had anything to do with luck or not?

Because how can you judge someone for something that fundamentally isn't their fault?

The limits of the human mind are not the limits of the universe; there's a difference between what we can wrap our minds around and what is actually true. I have no proof that the brain causes consciousness, but there is an obvious connection between the two, and I have no reason to assume that anything else causes consciousness, especially not something non-physical; until I find a good reason to change my mind, I'll stick to that belief. I'm not a huge fan of arguments that go "I don't understand it, therefore it's supernatural".

For one that is a huge oversimplification of my argument, which regarded simplicity; I think you need to read it again. Also I don't like the word "supernatural" because of its false connotations, namely that something supernatural is mysterious and non-understandable. Supernatural doesn't even have to imply non-physical. Non-physical is not the same as non-mechanical. Subjectivity fundamentally is supernatural, where supernatural simply means it can't be described from an objective viewpoint. Hence the word "subjective".

Also, I'm not a huge fan of the notion that there are some things that are beyond human comprehension. Sure, there could be something so complex that I don't have enough neurons to understand it fully, but colors are not complicated.

That's not what I'm saying - that wouldn't make any sense. Acting differently from a conscious person completely defeats the point of a philosophical zombie, since they are explicitly defined to be entities that act like humans in all given situations.

But if it acts exactly like a conscious human in all conceivable circumstances, then it must necessarily be conscious, because it is physically identical to a conscious human and I have no reason to believe that there is something beyond the physical that causes some things to be conscious and others not to be. If it's physically identical, how could it not be conscious? I don't believe in the supernatural.

You believe in subjectivity though. Would you agree that there is a fundamental difference between subjectivity and objectivity? One is alive, one is dead.

It wasn't really that important, just something I thought might interest you.

It does, thanks for mentioning it!

But "he" could have been a completely different person? That doesn't make any sense. He could have been any conceivable conscious entity, but it wouldn't have been possible for him to be non-conscious? Why?

Because when he stops being conscious, he stops being a person. When I die, I am no longer myself. There is no "me" anymore. Like when I sleep, only unreversable. That's just the way I define "self". Like the "self" in the right hemisphere could have been the self in the left hemisphere (in fact, is!) he could have been someone else. I'm not sure if the barrier to understanding what I'm getting at is the concept, or if you're getting hung up on the definitions.

Your argument goes like this.

An uncle is an uncle.
An aunt is an aunt.
An uncle is not an aunt.
Therefore, an uncle's consciousness is not interchangeable with an aunt's consciousness.

Which is non sequitur. If A =/= B, but A has C, and B has C, A's C is interchangeable with B's C.

Well, yeah. I never said anything about beauty or morals existing in any objective sense of the word, so I'm not sure where you're going with this.

Well, if we both realize that there is no such thing as a "bad person", we don't really disagree on much.

But he crashed because of bad weather, not because he wanted to kill hundreds of innocent people. There's a pretty huge difference there; just a few paragraphs ago you mentioned you would rather judge a person's motives than their actions, am I right?

Right, but here's the card I was saving: everyone's motives are understandable.

Why would someone go homicidal? I can think of the following reasons: (feel free to add more)

-They want to cleanse the world of bad people or otherwise make the world a better place
Who would judge a knight templar? They're trying to do what they genuinely believe is right and good for the world, probably risking everything in order to do it. Pure good doesn't get more pure.
-It's life or death
Problem?
-They want to get revenge
Emotions have come into play. If you're at the point where you want to kill someone, they have agitated you extremely. You might regret it later, but they have somehow pushed your buttons so much that they make you actually believe it would be better if that person was dead. A revenger is a knight templar guided by emotions. You might blame them for being guided by their emotions, but how can you? Emotions are not bad things. The consequences are bad, but in the moment they were not, and had no ability to, think about the consequences.
-Material gain, because they get pleasure out of it, or other totally selfish reasons
Can you judge a 3 year old for being selfish? Then why can you judge any such adult with extremely mal-developed psyche? This is the most convoluted, and, not accidentally, the most detestable. The exact reason would differ with every case, but with enough tracing of motives, it would become understandable. No one does evil for evil.


If the plane crashes as a result of an unexpected storm, I will not blame anyone.
If the plane crashes as a result of the pilot being inexperienced and unskilled, I will judge him, or possibly whoever hired and/or educated him.
If the plane crashes as a result of the pilot being a homicidal maniac who wants to murder hundreds of innocent people, I will judge him harshly.

All three cases are purely the result of "random luck" - circumstances leading to other circumstances. But the difference lies in the nature of the person I am judging.

But how can you negatively judge something that is understandable?

I know nothing about the pilot who got caught in the storm, so I will not judge him.
The pilot who crashed because he was a bad pilot is irresponsible or ignorant, to the point of costing other people their lives, which I do not appreciate.
The pilot who crashed because he wanted to kill everyone aboard the plane is a homicidal maniac, which disgusts me.

I don't care at all about whether or not the homicidal maniac pilot actively chose to be a homicidal maniac, but the fact of the matter is that he's a homicidal maniac, and that makes me justified in judging him because I don't like homicidal maniacs.

Well since we agree that people are not objectively good or bad, I think we don't really have a disagreement here, so long as you realize that your judgement is irrational.

And that kind of leads us back to our consciousness argument; I said I'm okay with being irrational about liking people but not hating people, because it's good to be loved and bad to be hated, and I might as well have been that other person. Hating someone is potentially good for modifying their behavior, but it is not the only way or the best way. If someone is hated, they will have a very low self-image, which will only make them live up to that expectation.

Yeah, sure. But there is absolutely no point in saying "I don't know anything at all about the universe, I just perceive things but can't know for sure! Everything could be an illusion!" For all intents and purposes, it is reasonable to assume that we can know things - hence why I believe in defining people through their actions, as opposed to not defining them at all and just regarding them as faceless, unknowable entities.

Point being, don't judge the real person, judge the person in your mind, because you don't understand why that person did what they did.

The problem with it is, of course, that it fails to consider the entire Chinese-speaking system. The man is just one component. He doesn't speak Chinese, but the system as a whole - the Chinese room - does.

I mostly agree with you. Obviously the system speaks Chinese, but does it understand it? The primary argument with the Chinese room is that the processing is syntactical, as in it relies on a bunch of rules, rather than semantical, which deals with meaning. Consider a blind man (for the sake of the argument, he also has no sensation of touch) who has memorized a ton of facts about shapes: a line is one dimensional, there are 360 degrees around a point, a square is made up of four equal lines that intersect perpendicularly, circles have infinitely many angles, etc. By knowing these definitions, he can answer any question you ask him regarding geometry. (What is the area of this shape, does X square fit inside circle Y, what is this line's curvature, does X jigsaw shape fit Y jigsaw shape, etc.). If he is creative and intelligent, he can come to have an intuitive understanding of shapes, but he doesn't need to. You can know a bunch of rules and definitions without having any idea what those rules or definitions reference.

Well, yeah. You can't be another person because then you're not you any more. It's a self-contradiction. It just doesn't make any sense. I don't how else I can put it, but there you go.

I don't see why you equate the entirety of a person with their conscious self. That doesn't make any sense. There is more to a person than that: their body, their actions, their unconscious mental processing… All I'm saying is the conscious bit is interchangeable, and in that case "I" (referencing the conscious part) might have been someone else.
 
It's a simple logical law. The law of identity. If I can't count on my aunt to be my aunt because she's my mother's sister, definitions are going to be perversely pointless.

Aunties don't have balls. That is why we call them aunties. Grass is green. A circle is round. Etc, etc. If we can't accept these definitions as normal and axiomatic we might as well be talking an entirely different language.
 
Aunties don't have balls. That is why we call them aunties. Grass is green. A circle is round. Etc, etc. If we can't accept these definitions as normal and axiomatic we might as well be talking an entirely different language.

:[
 
Yeah, yeah, I'm aware of transgender people and all of the pizzazz. My point is one of logic, if you want to debate the example then I'll pick a different one next time. Just to keep it simple. But if you want, you can have fun and extend the definition, I'm not opposed to it. I was trying to make a different, unrelated point.

Besides, you do know that "if my auntie had balls..." is a common proverb, right?
 
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