> On 29 Nov 2018, at 21:27, [email protected] wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> On Thursday, November 29, 2018 at 7:38:26 PM UTC, Bruno Marchal wrote:
> 
>> On 28 Nov 2018, at 16:03, Lawrence Crowell <[email protected] 
>> <javascript:>> wrote:
>> 
>> On Friday, November 9, 2018 at 6:51:06 PM UTC-6, Bruce wrote:
>> From: Brent Meeker <[email protected] <>>
>>> 
>>> You're dodging my point.  The "issue" of how we have subjective experience 
>>> only seems to be an issue because in comparison to the "objective" 
>>> experience of matter where we can trace long, mathematically define causal 
>>> chains down to...a Lagrangian and coupling constants or something similar, 
>>> which is long enough and esoteric enough that almost everyone loses 
>>> interest along the way.  But some people (like Vic) are going to say, "But 
>>> where does the Langrangian and coupling constants come from?"  and "Why a 
>>> Lagrangian anyway?" My point is that when we can give a similarly deep and 
>>> detailed account of why you think of an elephant when reading this, then 
>>> nobody will worry about "the hard problem of consciousness"; just like they 
>>> don't worry about "the hard problems of matter" like where that Lagrangian 
>>> comes from or why a complex Hilbert space.
>> 
>> Why can't I worry about those things? Where does the Lagrangian come from? 
>> And why use a complex Hilbert space? I don't think this is the underlying 
>> reason for saying that the "hard problem" of consciousness dissolves on 
>> solving the engineering problems. Solving the engineering problems will 
>> enable us to produce a fully conscious AI -- but will we then know how it 
>> works? We will certainly know where it came from.....
>> 
>> Bruce
>> 
>> When it comes to science I have to back what Bruce says here.
> 
> Me to. The clever machines of tomorrow might be the descendants of our bugs, 
> not our programs …
> But I think the universal machine is very smart, it is us who don’t listen.
> 
> 
> 
>> All knowledge faces the limits of the Münchhausen trilemma, where we have 
>> three possible types of arguments. The first is the basic axiomatic 
>> approach, which generally is the cornerstone and capstone of mathematics and 
>> science. The second is a "turtles all the way down," where an argument is 
>> based on premises that have deeper reasons, and this nests endlessly. Vic 
>> Stenger found this to be of most interest with his "models all the way 
>> down." The third is a circular argument which would mean all truth is just 
>> tautology. The second and third turn out to have some relevancy, where these 
>> are complement in Godel's theorem. While in general we use the first in 
>> science and mathematics we generally can't completely eliminate the other 
>> two. However, for most work we have an FAPP limitation to how far we want to 
>> go. Because of that if there is ultimately just a quantum vacuum, or some 
>> set of vacua, that is eternal, we may then just rest our case there.
> 
> 
> 
> Yu risk to eliminate consciousness, and the machine’s explanation of 
> consciousness.
> 
> Assuming mechanism, we know exactly why we have too assume a universal 
> machinery, and nothing more. Then we can use the whole of mathematics to 
> derive the phenomenology, including matter, and compare with what we observe.
> 
> 
> 
>> 
>> If one wants to do philosophy or theology that may be fine, but one has to 
>> make sure not to confuse these as categories with the category of science.
> 
> No. That is the habit since theology has been stealer from science by the 
> con-man. 
> 
> Maybe you know a theology which does not need science, that which does not 
> need modesty, caution, critically open, etc.
> 
> The problem when you forget hat theology is a science, is that you take the 
> risk of imposing some theology or metaphysical axiom, like if today’s science 
> did solved the Plato/Aristotle extreme disjunct.
> 
> 
> 
> 
>> Maybe as Dennett says, philosophy is what we do when we do not understand 
>> how to ask the question right.
> 
> That is science. Bad philosophy and bad science is when we assert a problem 
> is solved, when it is not.
> 
> 
> 
>> In that setting at best we can only do sort of "pre-science," but not really 
>> science as such. Theology is an even looser area of thought, and I generally 
>> see no connection with science at all.
> 
> 
> Theology is just Metaphysics with the understanding that we must do a bet of 
> some sort, be it on some physical thing, (a material universe), or a 
> metaphysical things (the Tao?), or a mathematical, or musical, whatever 
> things.
> 
> If you study the history of occidental science, theology is the science which 
> brings mathematics and physics, and mathematics was a source of inspiration 
> for many non physical realities to be conceived. Most of them being often 
> mathematical in nature. 
> If you study theology from Pythagorus to damascius, you will understand that 
> it is science, even if one using a non communicable data (a first person 
> experience).
> Then theology is responsible for the birth of mathematical logic too, much 
> later. I have given references.
> 
> This may be a simplistic pov, but since there was IMO no Original Sin, there 
> was no need for a Sacrifice for its forgiveness. Under this view, 
> Christianity is overwhelmingly an illusion. And since Theology seems to be 
> primarily an extended argument about the historical history and truths about 
> Christianity, it too is essentially worthless; an extended wrangling over 
> nothing. AG 

That comes from the 1500 years of brainwashing. I use theology in the sense of 
Plato, not the Gospel. Only atheists believe in JC, except for the TV 
evangelist, which are arguably con men.
That was the goal of the Christian after 529. To make us forget that the 
original question of the greeks was about the existence of a (primary) physical 
universe. God exist by definition: it is, by definition, the truth we intuit to 
be larger than ourselves.

Bruno




> 
> No, the problem is that, for historical reason, we have separated theology 
> from science, which was necessary to associate religion with politics, which, 
> is OBVIOUSLY what the blasphemy is all about. 
> 
> Not all theologian are duped, but things have not been simple for the pagan 
> and non confessional theologian, after 529 in Occident, and after 1258 in the 
> Middle-East (where the theologian banished from Occident survived a bit of 
> centuries).
> 
> The Renaissance was incomplete. All sciences came back to … 
> science/reason/observation, except theology, for the contingent reason that 
> theology is still in the hand of “argument-of-authority”. 
> Institutionalised religion are machine to prevent religion, and mystical 
> experience, and theorising about what we se and don’t see. You are right, 
> theology is a looser era, as long as we fear to use reason in that domain.
> Now, if you read the theologians, instead of the secret text, you can see 
> that some theologian are not duped, and can be quite good, and the 
> christian,muslims and the jewish theologies, have has school quite close to 
> neoplatonism, which is quite close to the universal (Löbian) machines 
> discourse, which I insist is testable, as physics is in the head of that 
> machine, to put it shortly.
> 
> Science without religion is blind self-destructive technology.
> Religion without science is fairy tales, obscurantisme and manipulations all 
> the way long.
> 
> Only bad faith fears reason. Only bad reason fears faith.
> 
> Sincerely,
> 
> Bruno
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
>> 
>> LC
>>  <https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/M%C3%BCnchhausen_trilemma>
>> 
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