Heheh Ohhh Gabs you darling.

On Aug 4, 4:36 pm, gabbydott <[email protected]> wrote:
> Hahaha, Lee and me solved the technical problem of sensing the other side of
> deconstruction just a couple of hours ago over at Google +.
>
>
>
> On Thu, Aug 4, 2011 at 2:41 PM, archytas <[email protected]> wrote:
> > I gave up on the Matrix when I realised Nerds thought it neat.  Some
> > animations are better acted than traditional film and some avatars
> > already seem smarter than we manage as a mob.  I want Vam to be right
> > on some form of simple apprehension, but suspect he isn't in the end.
> > Even in Allan's 'play' we can still ask 'what's it all about Alfie'?
> > I do 'sense' along your lines Allan.
>
> > We can't reach philosophical conclusion of this, but we can turn the
> > 'attitude' on normal areas of life like the struggle to earn through
> > work and the futility of this as governments spend on wars we can't
> > afford and slash wages in a mad scheme that allows money to make money
> > rather than rewarding labour.  Economics is similarly 'empty' of
> > purpose.  An old friend is over from the States (we were soldiers) and
> > he was bemoaning the collapse of our pub life here.  The reason is
> > obvious - in 30 years wages have fallen to such a massive extent that
> > the bottom 20%, who used to hold 15% of the country's cash at any
> > given time, now has less than 1% of it.  Being Zombies they haven't
> > noticed and are now drinking themselves to death at home on cheap
> > cider.
>
> > I suppose I suggest there is something of Chomsky in the notion we
> > might be Zombies - the same reasoning tends to deconstruct most of our
> > cherished institutions.  What we lack is some sense of the other side
> > of the deconstruction.  This is what concerns me - what is belief once
> > you know belief is arbitrary?  What is in the feeling of despair that
> > knowing this can bring?  I'm always struck as a scientist that I give
> > up easy social and traditional explanation and that this lacks
> > something.
>
> > On Aug 4, 12:45 pm, gabbydott <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > Hm, I see the problem, but sustainable knowledge communication has become
> > > more flexible even in its firmness compared to the days of truths being
> > > written in stone, don't you think? Just watch our new blog culture,
> > everyone
> > > can be the scribor of their own script!
>
> > > On Thu, Aug 4, 2011 at 12:06 PM, allan deheretic <[email protected]
> > >wrote:
>
> > > > neo to his script
> > > > Allan
>
> > > > On Thu, Aug 4, 2011 at 11:58 AM, gabbydott <[email protected]>
> > wrote:
>
> > > >> Which hard wiring are you referring to? Neo to Keanu Reeves or Neo to
> > his
> > > >> script?
>
> > > >> On Thu, Aug 4, 2011 at 8:04 AM, allan deheretic <[email protected]
> > >wrote:
>
> > > >>> the problem with Neo is he is hard wired into the system
> > > >>>  and dependent on the hard wiring
> > > >>> Allan
>
> > > >>> On Thu, Aug 4, 2011 at 1:05 AM, gabbydott <[email protected]>
> > wrote:
>
> > > >>>> How about old Jesus' speed at ascension? Wouldn't he count as
> > > >>>> unconstrained by agency at that point in time? Without the being Neo
> > burden,
> > > >>>> I mean?
>
> > > >>>> On Wed, Aug 3, 2011 at 11:30 PM, Vam <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > >>>>> " If you think you have free will
> > > >>>>> because you can choose between varieties of toy and other ADMASS
> > > >>>>> drivel then pass on by - free will for me would concern beating
> > > >>>>> Einstein's speed of light and its constrictions - but even then I
> > > >>>>> would not know I was free rather than selecting from pre-programmed
> > > >>>>> alternatives or being switched."
>
> > > >>>>> Are you still identified with Neo, in Matrix ?
>
> > > >>>>> What has free will to do with anything concerning Einstein or speed
> > of
> > > >>>>> light ?
> > > >>>>> I find the association demented.
>
> > > >>>>> How is free will, the exercise of choice, in a toy shop any
> > different
> > > >>>>> from the same in any other situation ?
>
> > > >>>>> The Wiki says : Free will is the apparent ability of agents to make
> > > >>>>> choices free from certain kinds of constraints. Isn't it what you
> > are
> > > >>>>> speaking of ?
>
> > > >>>>> On Aug 3, 5:34 am, archytas <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > >>>>> > Much wise in what you say RP and indeed, Orn, many believe they
> > have
> > > >>>>> > no dreams at all.  I note Polkid is beginning his serial killer
> > trip.
> > > >>>>> > I'm not very keen on these tricky questions we can't answer but
> > can
> > > >>>>> > use to expose naive and unexamined lives.  I went on a long walk
> > with
> > > >>>>> > some old colleagues who moved into brain science some years back
> > and
> > > >>>>> > it was noticeable that they are all more convinced free will does
> > not
> > > >>>>> > exist than I.  Humankind seems generally pathetic against the
> > > >>>>> vastness
> > > >>>>> > we seem to have some awareness of and nothing is given to us as
> > to
> > > >>>>> > what to do
>
> > > >>>>> > I have little interest in pursuing the question of free will - in
> > > >>>>> > normal dialogue of words, concepts, shapes and patterns I see no
> > end
> > > >>>>> > to it and many sides.  Humankind does little in any of this as
> > far as
> > > >>>>> > we can guess and has no direction on what to seek to achieve we
> > can
> > > >>>>> > guess.  We may know more in the future, but also may not be the
> > > >>>>> > future.  We accede to five senses, though 20 may be more accurate
> > and
> > > >>>>> > at least 2 more are known in dolphins than we possess.  I can
> > tell a
> > > >>>>> > story of cooling hydrogen molecules and H3+ in the forming of
> > stars
> > > >>>>> > which were our birth that suggest some form of 'shaping
> > knowledge'
> > > >>>>> > even in the inorganic and the tale of the most, that that must be
> > but
> > > >>>>> > which we cannot see and yet I can only describe my own free will
> > in
> > > >>>>> > comparison with uninspiring robots.  Some god might unplug us at
> > any
> > > >>>>> > time.
> > > >>>>> > Much of the brain science going on finds that human beings do not
> > > >>>>> make
> > > >>>>> > rational decisions.  I suspect they may have been wasting their
> > > >>>>> > electrodes, as most of us are so poor at critical reasoning it
> > > >>>>> > wouldn't make sense for us to use it.  We may not be far off a
> > robot
> > > >>>>> > programmed with emotional responses that match or exceed our own.
> >  I
> > > >>>>> > believe most people are tranced and cannot think their way out of
> > a
> > > >>>>> > wet paper bag.  This is not unusual in pack and herd
> > conditions.This
> > > >>>>> > is a biological trance in my view.
> > > >>>>> > For me there has to be more than the striving of science and I
> > don't
> > > >>>>> > want this to be a religious crock.  If you think you have free
> > will
> > > >>>>> > because you can choose between varieties of toy and other ADMASS
> > > >>>>> > drivel then pass on by - free will for me would concern beating
> > > >>>>> > Einstein's speed of light and its constrictions - but even then I
> > > >>>>> > would not know I was free rather than selecting from
> > pre-programmed
> > > >>>>> > alternatives or being switched.
> > > >>>>> > The questions come after this 'indecision' as do those of what is
> > > >>>>> > observing and its picture.
>
> > > >>>>> > On Aug 2, 10:59 pm, "pol.science kid" <[email protected]>
> > wrote:
>
> > > >>>>> > > i killed a dog.. my zombieness made me do it....
>
> > > >>>>> > > On Tue, Aug 2, 2011 at 11:21 PM, archytas <[email protected]>
> > > >>>>> wrote:
> > > >>>>> > > > "We have access to a technology that would have looked like
> > > >>>>> sorcery in
> > > >>>>> > > > Descartes's day: the ability to peer inside someone's head
> > and
> > > >>>>> read
> > > >>>>> > > > their thoughts. Unfortunately, that doesn't take us any
> > nearer to
> > > >>>>> > > > knowing whether they are sentient. "Even if you measure
> > > >>>>> brainwaves,
> > > >>>>> > > > you can never know exactly what experience they represent,"
> > says
> > > >>>>> > > > psychologist Bruce Hood at the University of Bristol, UK.  If
> > > >>>>> > > > anything, brain scanning has undermined Descartes's maxim.
> > You,
> > > >>>>> too,
> > > >>>>> > > > might be a zombie. "I happen to be one myself," says Stanford
> > > >>>>> > > > University philosopher Paul Skokowski. "And so, even if you
> > don't
> > > >>>>> > > > realise it, are you." Skokowski's assertion is based on the
> > > >>>>> belief,
> > > >>>>> > > > particularly common among neuroscientists who study brain
> > scans,
> > > >>>>> that
> > > >>>>> > > > we do not have free will. There is no ghost in the machine;
> > our
> > > >>>>> > > > actions are driven by brain states that lie entirely beyond
> > our
> > > >>>>> > > > control. "I think, therefore I am" might be an illusion.
> > > >>>>> > > > So, it may well be that you live in a computer simulation in
> > > >>>>> which you
> > > >>>>> > > > are the only self-aware creature. I could well be a zombie
> > and so
> > > >>>>> > > > could you. Have an interesting day." (from a recent New
> > > >>>>> Scientist)
>
> > > >>>>> > > > We range over debates in free will and what it is to be
> > human. So
> > > >>>>> far
> > > >>>>> > > > we haven't established free will or even that we are not
> > merely
> > > >>>>> > > > avatars in 'something else's game'.
>
> > > >>>>> > > > I wonder whether there are advantages in considering
> > ourselves as
> > > >>>>> > > > creatures limited by programming and also capable of it?
>
> > > >>>>> > > --
> > > >>>>> > > EverComing
>
> > > >>> --
> > > >>>  (
> > > >>>   )
> > > >>> I_D Allan
>
> > > >>> If you can bear to hear the truth you've spoken
> > > >>> Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,
>
> > > > --
> > > >  (
> > > >   )
> > > > I_D Allan
>
> > > > If you can bear to hear the truth you've spoken
> > > > Twisted by knaves to make a trap for fools,- Hide quoted text -
>
> - Show quoted text -

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