On Tuesday, September 3, 2013 11:36:29 PM UTC-4, Dennis Ochei wrote:
>
> 1) rationality (logic) in this case is to mean founded on justified 
> principles. This is inherently a normative judgment. the principles that 
> govern a deterministic system needn't appeal to our psychology as justified,
>

Determinism is a logical justification of cause and effect or else it is 
meaningless. No particular determination need be justified by our 
expectations, but determinism in general is an expectation of a logic of 
causality - an airtight logic of perfect correspondence. Rationality is 
more of a broad term which I would not apply to determinism in the strict 
sense of a deterministic cosmology. Rationality implies more tolerance of 
humanistic dimensions like free will. A person can freely choose to act 
rationally or irrationally, but in a deterministic universe, the logic 
would be that a person always acts to complete effects set into motion by 
prior cause. Logic is scripted and automated. Rationality can be 
responsive. You're welcome to use words in whatever way you like, but I 
don't want to dwell on word definitions. If by introducing rationality as a 
logic equivalence you mean to soften determinism, then I think we should 
stick to the word logic, since the determinism that I argue against has a 
zero tolerance for soft reasoning. Determinism is a closed shop of locked 
steps with all novelty being a pseudo-novelty derived from recombination.
 

> this is what i mean by determined doesn't mean logical. none of my desires 
> seem to me logically justified, but that doesnt imply they are not 
> deterministic.
>

The fact that you have desires at all does not make sense in a 
deterministic universe. It gets confusing if you pull examples from real 
life. If we are going to talk about the fantasy world of determinism, we 
should refer only to those things which we can justify as being logically 
deterministic.


> 2) your thesis is essentially, "i cant see how a set of rules could lead 
> to to desire,


No, my thesis is not that I can't see something, it is that I can see 
something that others may not. Nobody, including you can see how a set of 
rules could lead to desire. My thesis is that fact, along with many others, 
suggests that 'rules' are an abstraction which are fictional and derived 
from experience, whereas desire is a concrete fact from which abstractions 
can be derived. 

My thesis is that there is an important difference between presentations 
and representations, such that a natural presence has a coherent footprint 
across multiple levels of sense, which is itself multi-coherent and 
self-generated. By contrast, a representation, such as a 'rule', 
'function', 'process', 'pattern', 'figure', or 'information' is a second 
order, symbiotic phenomenon within a natural presentation. Representations 
are not whole and are not grounded in the totality of nature (space, time, 
matter, energy, significance, entropy, sense, motive) but are rather a 
facade, like a hologram, which makes sense only from a particular set of 
externally defined perspectives.
 

> i cant see how a set of rules could lead something that has experiences 
> that seem to have irreducible qualities, therefore there can be no such 
> rules." 


Even if that wasn't a misrepresentation of my position, it isn't even a 
good Straw Man. Why would the impotence of 'rules' to create natural 
phenomena mean that there can be no rules? When did I imply that there 
can't be any rules?
 

> that's fine i suppose, but I'm unable to pretend that your blindness is 
> some sort of insight. i just think you havent looked hard enough
>

I can tell from your responses that you haven't looked at my blindness at 
all, only your own, dressed up to sound like me.

Craig
 

>
> On Tuesday, September 3, 2013, Craig Weinberg wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> On Tuesday, September 3, 2013 8:57:13 PM UTC-4, Dennis Ochei wrote:
>>>
>>> Craig,
>>>
>>> What UV looks like will depend on how it is transduced into the nervous 
>>> system. I could add a new opsin into your blue cones and it would appear to 
>>> be a shade of blue. 
>>>
>>
>> Sure, we can look at an infra-red camera too and see IR light as green or 
>> some other color. That isn't what I'm talking about. I am talking about new 
>> primary colors.
>>  
>>
>>> Or, I could achieve the transduction in such a way that UV doesn't 
>>> confuse with blue. In which case UV will look different from other colors 
>>> *in way you cannot describe because you don't have access to how you 
>>> condition your behavior based of the intensity of UV light. *
>>>
>>
>> It wouldn't matter if you did have access to how you condition your 
>> "behavior based on the intensity of the UV light". Color cannot be 
>> described, it can only be experienced directly. I don't want you to waste 
>> our time trying to tell me what I already know.
>>
>>
>> http://multisenserealism.com/thesis/light-revisited/is-visible-light-electromagnetic/
>>
>>  
>>
>>>
>>> I've told you in a rudimentary form what is required to build a system 
>>> that has drives and motivations, from parts that are inanimate.
>>>
>>
>> Not at all. You are projecting drives and motivations onto a system that 
>> is unconsciously serving a function that serves your drives and motivations.
>>  
>>
>>> Nature has constructed such a device using 302 neurons. It learns, and 
>>> it has motivations. 
>>>
>>
>> The neurons are an expression of the motivations, not the other way 
>> around.
>>  
>>
>>> Is your argument here that if we model the nematode deterministically, 
>>> its ability to learn and its biological drives will vanish like smoke? 
>>>
>>
>> Does a rabbit's taste for carrots vanish just because we model him as 
>> Bugs Bunny? Yes. Models, cartoons, figures, functions, shapes, 
>> descriptions, simulations...none of them can have any sense of being or 
>> feeling. Bugs Bunny is not a rabbit. He is a symbol which reminds our 
>> psychology of particular themes which overlap with rabbit themes.
>>  
>>
>>> Because if so, I'd bet good money that you're wrong.
>>>
>>
>> Sure, I'd love to take that bet. I was going to say $10,000 but I don't 
>> think that you are going to pay that when you lose. What amount sounds good?
>>  
>>
>>>  Drives are traceable to electrochemical gradients "trying" to resolve 
>>> themselves, driven by thermodynamic laws. Logic is how the pipes are 
>>> connected up, desire is the water pump.
>>>
>>
>> I agree that microphysical events correspond to microphenomenal 
>> experiences, but that does not mean that all that has to happen to scale up 
>> an inanimate object's thermodynamic motives to mammalian quality emotions 
>> is that it must be configured in the correct shapes. That is an assumption, 
>> and a seductively popular one, but it is 100% wrong. Using the hypothesis 
>> of sense as the sole universal primitive, we should anticipate that the 
>> relevant qualifier of sensitivity is not structure but experience. Giving 
>> your cat a computer will not make him computer literate, and dressing a 
>> water pump up in human clothes does not cause a human. The clues are all 
>> around us. No machine or program has every succeeded in being anything but 
>> completely impersonal and psychologically empty.
>>
>>
>>> Furthermore, deterministic does not equal logical. There is no logic 
>>> behind why opposites attract, even though this logically leads to like 
>>> dissolving like. Whatever axioms there are in this universe, they are not 
>>> logically justified.
>>>
>>
>> Determinism doesn't explain why opposites attract, but given that they do 
>> in some particular context, determinism is the logic of the consequences of 
>> that attraction. Determinism doesn't address everything, but whatever it 
>> does address is considered to behave according to the logic of the 
>> precedents which have been established. If determinism was not logical, how 
>> could it claim to determine anything?
>>
>> Craig
>>  
>>
>>>
>>>
>>> On Tue, Sep 3, 2013 at 3:33 PM, Craig Weinberg <whats...@gmail.com>wrote:
>>>
>>>>
>>>>
>>>> On Tuesday, September 3, 2013 3:42:53 PM UTC-4, Brent wrote:
>>>>>
>>>>> On 9/3/2013 12:32 PM, Dennis Ochei wrote: 
>>>>> > Telmo and Brent, 
>>>>> > 
>>>>> > The Humean quote sums it up nicely. You can think of a human as a 
>>>>> collection of desires 
>>>>> > and a reasoning process that arbitrates between and attempts to 
>>>>> realize them. In the 
>>>>> > process of reasoning, one might bring about new desires, but 
>>>>> reasoning is always 
>>>>> > employed by desires one currently has. 
>>>>> > 
>>>>> > Just couple days ago I was trying futilely to logically deduce what 
>>>>> it is that I should 
>>>>> > want to do, I realized that "logic is the servant of desire," (im 
>>>>> not quite as eloquent 
>>>>> > as hume, it seems...) and to find a logically justified want is 
>>>>> futile. Desire is 
>>>>> > inherently illogical. 
>>>>>
>>>>> I'd say "extralogical".  That doesn't mean though that your desires 
>>>>> aren't caused (by 
>>>>> evolution, by metabolism,...).  Many of them may even be predictable - 
>>>>> that's how 
>>>>> advertising agencies make a living. 
>>>>>
>>>>
>>>> *Your* desires can be included in your experience by evolution, etc, 
>>>> provided that desire in general exists as a possibility in the universe. 
>>>> No 
>>>> amount of statistical reproduction of inanimate objects or unconscious 
>>>> machines could cause a desire to appear out of nowhere though. Could it? 
>>>> Why would it?
>>>>
>>>> Craig
>>>>  
>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> > Turns out Hume beat me to this insight by quite a bit, but I suppose 
>>>>> he had a head start, =p 
>>>>> > 
>>>>> > It seems that if we were completely logical, we would simply cease 
>>>>> to function 
>>>>>
>>>>> Dostoevsky beat you to that one, "If everything on Earth were 
>>>>> rational, nothing would 
>>>>> happen."  But he had a head start too. :-) 
>>>>>
>>>>>
>>>>> Brent 
>>>>>
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