Ok, but how are you defining 'complexity' with these biological systems?Arising_uk wrote:Obvious Leo argued for increased complexity, this use of 'intelligence' in these matters is mistaken I think as the cetaceans have more complex brains than us but does that make them more 'intelligent'?
Mind cannot be created
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Re: Mind cannot be created
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Re: Mind cannot be created
You can take your pick I guess, neuronal connections, chromosomes, genes, language, etc. depending upon what facets or aspects of the system you are concerned with.attofishpi wrote:Ok, but how are you defining 'complexity' with these biological systems?
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The aspect in question is what constitutes a human mind.Arising_uk wrote:You can take your pick I guess, neuronal connections, chromosomes, genes, language, etc. depending upon what facets or aspects of the system you are concerned with.attofishpi wrote:Ok, but how are you defining 'complexity' with these biological systems?Arising_uk wrote:Obvious Leo argued for increased complexity, this use of 'intelligence' in these matters is mistaken I think as the cetaceans have more complex brains than us but does that make them more 'intelligent'?
What is this 'complexity' within a cetacean that exceeds the complexity of the human brain. How are you differentiating the difference?
Re: Mind cannot be created
Quantitative relationships in delphinid neocortex https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4244864/attofishpi wrote:The aspect in question is what constitutes a human mind.Arising_uk wrote:You can take your pick I guess, neuronal connections, chromosomes, genes, language, etc. depending upon what facets or aspects of the system you are concerned with.attofishpi wrote: Ok, but how are you defining 'complexity' with these biological systems?
What is this 'complexity' within a cetacean that exceeds the complexity of the human brain. How are you differentiating the difference?
It looks like "swings and roundabouts" here. My guess is that our advantage comes from our social structures that can build and store bodies of knowledge. As the body of knowledge grows, progress grows ever faster.We found that the long-finned pilot whale neocortex has approximately 37.2 × 109 neurons, which is almost twice as many as humans, and 127 × 109 glial cells. Thus, the absolute number of neurons in the human neocortex is not correlated with the superior cognitive abilities of humans (at least compared to cetaceans) as has previously been hypothesized. However, as neuron density in long-finned pilot whales is lower than that in humans, their higher cell number appears to be due to their larger brain.
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Re: Mind cannot be created
Thanks Greta, i think you're right there. I should apologise to Arising...i posted quite late after a noon on many beverages and thought by Cetacea he meant snails!Greta wrote:It looks like "swings and roundabouts" here. My guess is that our advantage comes from our social structures that can build and store bodies of knowledge. As the body of knowledge grows, progress grows ever faster.
A nice Wiki list:- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_a ... of_neurons
Re: Mind cannot be created
It is possible to have a beginning for a thing but no end.NielsBohr wrote:Okay, nice,bahman wrote: First definition of mind: Mind is essence of any being with the ability to experience, decide and act.
1) Intellect is utility of mind
2) This means that it is impossible to understand mind because intellect is utility of mind
3) This means that it is impossible to perform an act to create mind
but I am rather interested in the impossibility to destruct the mind. Depending on me, it is impossible to imagine a thing as being endless in the past and having an end in the future, (when it is possible to imagine a thing having a beginning with no end).
What do you think of all this?
Re: Mind cannot be created
Thanks, but do you think possible, can you imagine that a thing - whatever it is - may have an endless past with an end in the future?bahman wrote:It is possible to have a beginning for a thing but no end.NielsBohr wrote:Okay, nice,bahman wrote: First definition of mind: Mind is essence of any being with the ability to experience, decide and act.
1) Intellect is utility of mind
2) This means that it is impossible to understand mind because intellect is utility of mind
3) This means that it is impossible to perform an act to create mind
but I am rather interested in the impossibility to destruct the mind. Depending on me, it is impossible to imagine a thing as being endless in the past and having an end in the future, (when it is possible to imagine a thing having a beginning with no end).
What do you think of all this?
Personally, I am in the impossibility to imagine it; that is why I ask - if you can - and why it is most probably impossible.
I am in the impossibility to find a (somewhat nor rather) "scientific" principle to explain this impossibility! Some ideas, there?
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Re: Mind cannot be created
Yes, i'm tending to agree. I wonder if the ability to manipulate matter at the atomic level to permit the above would come about prior to us ever truly understanding the human mind.Terrapin Station wrote:As long as it's undergoing the right processes, yes. You need the right materials, in the right structures, undergoing the right processes. It should be easy, well or relatively easy, in this scenario to have it undergo the right processes if it's the (nominalistically) same materials in the same structures. You'd just need to jumpstart its heart to get its blood pumping, etc.attofishpi wrote:You may need to re-read. I am not talking about a simulation, rather some advanced 3D 'printer' that could build a human - lets say replicating yourself atom by atom...all the molecules are rebuilt precisely as the original you. Do you believe this 'human' would be conscious, would we have a working mind?
Re: Mind cannot be created
Or maybe Crustacea? I find weed more conducive to philosophy than boozeattofishpi wrote:Thanks Greta, i think you're right there. I should apologise to Arising...i posted quite late after a noon on many beverages and thought by Cetacea he meant snails!Greta wrote:It looks like "swings and roundabouts" here. My guess is that our advantage comes from our social structures that can build and store bodies of knowledge. As the body of knowledge grows, progress grows ever faster.
A nice Wiki list:- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_a ... of_neurons
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Re: Mind cannot be created
You're right Crustacea, I think thats where my confusion came from!Greta wrote:Or maybe Crustacea? I find weed more conducive to philosophy than boozeattofishpi wrote:Thanks Greta, i think you're right there. I should apologise to Arising...i posted quite late after a noon on many beverages and thought by Cetacea he meant snails!Greta wrote:It looks like "swings and roundabouts" here. My guess is that our advantage comes from our social structures that can build and store bodies of knowledge. As the body of knowledge grows, progress grows ever faster.
A nice Wiki list:- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_a ... of_neurons
Yes, everyone is an instant philosopher after a spliff!
Re: Mind cannot be created
Something cannot have an endless past since it take infinite waiting to reach from endless past to now.NielsBohr wrote:Thanks, but do you think possible, can you imagine that a thing - whatever it is - may have an endless past with an end in the future?bahman wrote:It is possible to have a beginning for a thing but no end.NielsBohr wrote: Okay, nice,
but I am rather interested in the impossibility to destruct the mind. Depending on me, it is impossible to imagine a thing as being endless in the past and having an end in the future, (when it is possible to imagine a thing having a beginning with no end).
What do you think of all this?
Personally, I am in the impossibility to imagine it; that is why I ask - if you can - and why it is most probably impossible.
I am in the impossibility to find a (somewhat nor rather) "scientific" principle to explain this impossibility! Some ideas, there?
Re: Mind cannot be created
Minds do not exist.bahman wrote:First definition of mind: Mind is essence of any being with the ability to experience, decide and act.
1) Intellect is utility of mind
2) This means that it is impossible to understand mind because intellect is utility of mind
3) This means that it is impossible to perform an act to create mind
It's just a metaphor.
Re: Mind cannot be created
You've provided your opinion, one with which I disagree. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.A Human wrote:Minds do not exist.bahman wrote:First definition of mind: Mind is essence of any being with the ability to experience, decide and act.
1) Intellect is utility of mind
2) This means that it is impossible to understand mind because intellect is utility of mind
3) This means that it is impossible to perform an act to create mind
It's just a metaphor.
Minds may appear to be real or unreal depending on whether the perspective is in the moment, considered over a period of time, from the outside, from the inside, and based on different stimuli (or lack), and whether considered individually or collectively.
It seems to be a standard philosophical game to declare the obviously real as unreal with some kind of epistemological "disappearing trick". I expect that, using the right angle, peristalsis and other body reflexes can be declared non existent too.
Re: Mind cannot be created
Yes, exactly, provide information about any scientific experiment where we can take any particular person and prove that person has a mind.Greta wrote:You've provided your opinion, one with which I disagree. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.A Human wrote:Minds do not exist.bahman wrote:First definition of mind: Mind is essence of any being with the ability to experience, decide and act.
1) Intellect is utility of mind
2) This means that it is impossible to understand mind because intellect is utility of mind
3) This means that it is impossible to perform an act to create mind
It's just a metaphor.
There aren't any.
Re: Mind cannot be created
We appear destined to play a game of words that becomes increasingly abstracted and disconnected from the basic reality of being. If you feel that is a fruitful approach:A Human wrote:Yes, exactly, provide information about any scientific experiment where we can take any particular person and prove that person has a mind.Greta wrote:You've provided your opinion, one with which I disagree. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.A Human wrote:
Minds do not exist.
It's just a metaphor.
There aren't any.
Mind. noun
1. (in a human or other conscious being) the element, part, substance, or process that reasons, thinks, feels, wills, perceives, judges, etc.: the processes of the human mind.
2. Psychology. the totality of conscious and unconscious mental processes and activities.
3. intellect or understanding, as distinguished from the faculties of feeling and willing; intelligence.
4. a particular instance of the intellect or intelligence, as in a person.
5. a person considered with reference to intellectual power: the greatest minds of the twentieth century.
6. intellectual power or ability.
7. reason, sanity, or sound mental condition: to lose one's mind.
Which of these do you accept or deny?
What is the broader point you wish to make by denying the existence of minds? People I've run into before who make such claims have either been trying to advocate for a stronger focus on the significance of the present moment or treating "mind" as an analog for "spirit" and using the denial as another plank in the well worn materialist v spiritualist debates.