> On 25 Jul 2019, at 21:19, Philip Thrift <[email protected]> wrote:
> 
> 
> 
> On Thursday, July 25, 2019 at 12:43:27 PM UTC-5, Bruno Marchal wrote:
> 
> > On 25 Jul 2019, at 13:27, Telmo Menezes <[email protected] 
> > <javascript:>> wrote: 
> > 
> > 
> > 
> > On Thu, Jul 25, 2019, at 11:06, Bruno Marchal wrote: 
> >> 
> >>> On 24 Jul 2019, at 20:31, Telmo Menezes <[email protected] 
> >>> <javascript:>> wrote: 
> >>> 
> >>> 
> >>> 
> >>> On Wed, Jul 24, 2019, at 17:41, 'Brent Meeker' via Everything List wrote: 
> >>>> 
> >>>> 
> >>>> On 7/23/2019 11:52 PM, Telmo Menezes wrote: 
> >>>>> 
> >>>>> On Tue, Jul 23, 2019, at 17:33, 'Brent Meeker' via Everything List 
> >>>>> wrote: 
> >>>>>> 
> >>>>>> On 7/23/2019 4:50 AM, Telmo Menezes wrote: 
> >>>>>>> Hi Brent, 
> >>>>>>> 
> >>>>>>> On Fri, Jul 19, 2019, at 22:04, 'Brent Meeker' via Everything List 
> >>>>>>> wrote: 
> >>>>>>>> On 7/19/2019 4:49 AM, Telmo Menezes wrote: 
> >>>>>>>>> I share their perplexity. The idea of immaterialism is natural (and 
> >>>>>>>>> arises thousands of years ago), because the only thing that we 
> >>>>>>>>> cannot 
> >>>>>>>>> doubt (as Descartes pointed out) -- our consciousness -- is 
> >>>>>>>>> immaterial. There is not scientific instrument that can detect 
> >>>>>>>>> consciousness. 
> >>>>>>>> That's not really true. Of course doctors assess patients as 
> >>>>>>>> conscious, 
> >>>>>>>> unconscious, in coma, or brain dead every day.  The myth that 
> >>>>>>>> consciousness is a mystery is part hubris (we are too special to be 
> >>>>>>>> understood) and part an exaggerated demand for understanding. 
> >>>>>>>> There's no 
> >>>>>>>> scientific instrument that can detect the wave function of an 
> >>>>>>>> electron 
> >>>>>>>> either.  But with the electron we're happy to have an effective 
> >>>>>>>> theory 
> >>>>>>>> that tells us when the detector will click or not. Mystery mongering 
> >>>>>>>> about consciousness makes us demand something more that mere 
> >>>>>>>> measurement 
> >>>>>>>> and prediction, something that doesn't exist for any theory. 
> >>>>>>> I understand your point that we can always make additional demands 
> >>>>>>> for explanation, and that any scientific theory cannot be expected to 
> >>>>>>> do more than what successful scientific theories do, which is to 
> >>>>>>> correctly predict phenomena. 
> >>>>>>> 
> >>>>>>> My main point is this, and I think it goes to the core of our 
> >>>>>>> disagreement: 
> >>>>>>> No scientific theory predicts consciousness! 
> >>>>>> What would it mean to predict consciousness.  When we predict 
> >>>>>> electrons 
> >>>>>> what we mean it we predict the observable effects of electrons. 
> >>>>> Right, so what are the observable effects of consciousness? All I can 
> >>>>> see in neuroscience are predictions about the observable effects of 
> >>>>> (wet) computations. Neuroscience is not capable of pointing to a 
> >>>>> behavior and saying: ah! consciousness! see, this couldn't happen 
> >>>>> without consciousness. 
> >>>>> 
> >>>>> If you rob physicists of electrons, suddenly many of their models will 
> >>>>> have holes in them, they will no longer be valid. If you rob 
> >>>>> neuroscientists of consciousness, everything works the same. 
> >>>> I'm not sure that's true.  ISTM that some of the experiments by 
> >>>> cognitive neuroscientists include conscious thoughts and judgements as 
> >>>> elements of their theory. 
> >>> 
> >>> They try, but they can't measure. 
> >>> 
> >>> - Alexa, are you conscious? 
> >>> - Of course! 
> >>> 
> >>> Err… 
> >> 
> >> Most neuroscientists believes in Matter, and, sometimes even 
> >> explicitly, like the ASSC, do not address the mind-body problem. 
> >> 
> >> When they have some understanding of the problem, they eliminate 
> >> consciousness and person, which is the logical thing to do for people 
> >> believing in both matter and mechanism: consciousness does not exists. 
> > 
> > I have met a few neuroscientists, and this is also my impression. I have 
> > also met researchers who were trying to become neuroscientists, but 
> > eventually were discouraged by the lack of philosophical rigor in the 
> > field. The former become well-known, the latter disappear into other 
> > endeavors. I will not get into more details to protect identities. This 
> > sort of dynamic creates a false impression of consensus in some scientific 
> > fields, especially with the lay people who are interested in science, and 
> > helps make scientists with non-aligned positions seem crazy. 
> 
> 
> I know. That lasts since 1500 years. 
> 
> Separating religion from science is like saying that you have the right to 
> believe in any BS, which is exactly what the exploiters of fears needs. 
> 
> Some scientists (to be sure very few, but some are influent and nobody knows 
> why) consider that doubting physicalism is just an heresy. 
> 
> They don’t argued, and unlike John Clark and Bruce Kellet, they only ignore. 
> It is the lie by Omission. 
> The lie by omission is what Barr did when “summarising” the Mueller report 
> (to give another example). 
> 
> The book by Patrick Dehornoy “Théorie des Ensembles” has the merit to point 
> how the Bourbarki (the French mathematicians with many heads) imposed somehow 
> their misconception on sets to some generation of mathematicians. Just the 
> field of mathematical logic is not well seen in both mathematician circle and 
> philosophical circle. At the social level, we are still at the primal level 
> where people dispute territories, instead to collaborate on extracting and 
> sharing what grows there. 
> 
> Theology has to come back to reason. Reason + the universal machine => 
> modesty, and essentially undecidable theories. 
> 
> Presented roughly, 
>  - Gödel’s first incompleteness theorem says that about the numbers (and 
> digital machines)  we just understand about nothing. 
> - Gödel’s second incompleteness theorem is that the (sound) machine’s 
> themselves understand “quickly” that they understand about nothing about the 
> numbers. 
> 
> Judson Webb is right, Gödel’s incompleteness protect Mechanism. It makes the 
> Church-Turing thesis consistent with Cantor-Kleene's diagonalisation. The 
> “negative theology” of the universal machine (that is Solovay’s results, and 
> G and G* and the intensional variants) makes the universal like a baby god, 
> and if we can understand this, in the long run that makes terrible children. 
> 
> Unfortunately, the current option seems to perpetuate the old technics of 
> insults, violence, and lies, in the fundamental domains (and then in the 
> rentable domains as well). 
> 
> The problem is always with the dogma. The inability to doubt might be a form 
> of symptôme of insanity, like the pretence of selconsistency by the machine 
> makes her  inconsistent. 
> 
> We have just to transform the Renaissance, and let Theology comes back where 
> it is born, in science, through science, that is trough doubts and 
> dialogs/arguments. 
> Only the liars fear the truth. 
> 
> That will take some time. Meanwhile if we could stop the lies on medications, 
> that would already help a lot. 
> 
> Bruno 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> Actually, from the Stawsonian materialist view, most neuroscientists do not 
> believe in matter, or rather, they believe in a facade of matter absent 
> experientiality.

That seems like a contradiction. How could something be a facade in case of 
absent experentiality. You might elaborate a little bit here.


> 
> Feyerabend talked of science and religion, but as science has been turned 
> into a religion,

Something unavoidable when you separate science and theology. With becomes 
pseudo-science and pseudo-religion.




> with scientists claiming that their theoretical entities are godlike in their 
> reality (their "truth”),

… which of course is highly NON scientific. A scientist never claim that a 
theory is true, only that is not refuted, and explain something better than 
another theory, or things like that.



> and thus other competing theoretical entities are like other gods that should 
> be banned.


Yes. A part of the academical world remains “religious” in metaphysics. But not 
all, far from that. But those who does not make extraordinary pseudo-religious 
claim attracts less the attention of the media. Or when they do, the 
journalists can’t publish their papers ...

Bruno


> 
>  @philipthrift
> 
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