DM,

I'm feeling free to have a go...

What rock "behavior" exists without the presence of humans?

That was easy.

Micah


-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of David M
Sent: Sunday, January 28, 2007 11:08 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [MD] Dawkins a Materialist (is watching?)


Hi Marsha

See below.


> If I use tongs to take a rock out of a fire after being in the fire for
> hours, is the rock hot?
> No, the rock is a rock and does not have the ability to be hot, it can't
> understand hot - it is a rock. Hot is what we are when we touch the rock.
> It
> is a concept used to describe our perceived quality of the rock. The hot
> concept is in us, not the rock...the rock just is. The universe just is,
> it - like a rock doesn't hold concepts like design - that quality, like
> all
> humans concepts resides in us, not without us.
> Our senses provide data on reality which we order to form our perceptions
> and can lead to knowledge, and two or more humans will have shared
> objective
> reality.


DM: Sure being 'burnt' by a 'hot rock' is a word for what we experience
when we touch a rock with a high temperature (or chronologically the other
way round). But we can also talk
objectively of rocks with high temperatures that we have measured
the temperature of without touching. So the rock objectively has a
certain potential when hot that it does not have when cold. But what is
a rock? Again it is only the name for certain patterns that we may
experience.
Same for the universe. Now we happily move from our experiences of something
as hot to talk about something being hot as it has a certain potential that
can be
recognised less directly, e.g. measure with an instrument. Now if you want
to know if a rock experiences being hot or having purposes there is no way
to answer such a questions other than by analogy with our own experiences.
Sure we do not see rocks sweat, jump back, draw up plans, etc. But there
are other analogies you can make. You can try to break a rock and it will
resist you, its behaviour demonstrates some form of resistance. Now why is
this
and does the rock experience anything? In my experience being pulled apart
is a bad experience and I have a desire and intention to resist this. So it
may
well be the same for the rock within the confines of its extremely limited
ability to resist and respond to it environment (yet it does respond or
otherwise
it would have no properties at all). Sure its lack of analogy to us does
mean
it must be very different but how far this goes we cannot know. All being is
a form of behaviour, the belief that some of this is in some sense necessary
or mechanical and not agentive is not at all easy to demonstrate. Feel free
to
have a go.

David M


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