See not everyone has read every fancy philosophical school like you have, and just because they haven’t doesn’t mean they don’t know what they are talking about, and perhaps by limiting yourself rigidly to this massive number of facts in your brain you are limiting the possibility for dialogue with other people. When I said “utilitarian” I was using the word as it would be used in every day speech, in that it was a response to your synonymizing optional with unecessary. So that’s a very utilitarian take on it, and you are eliminating things from your phenomenalogical field because you are synonymizing optional and unecessary. That’s what I meant by your utilitarian point of view.
Now see I am not arguing that something is true or not true, you are so stuck on your quest for facts that you eliminate understanding from your viewpoint. I am not trying to get you to recognize facts I am trying to get you to understand alternative perspectives. Perhaps your neat and tidy little world in your brain is arranged exactly how you like it, but you are eliminating whole layers of reality from your view by rigidly adhering to your own subjectivity which you have convinced yourself is more objective than the subjectivity of others. You enter into a debate about the existance of God but you refuse to accept that the deists might be using a slightly different dictionary than yours. You think your Dictionary is more standard than it is simply because you have limited yourself to social groupings that confirm your bias. It’s very clear that a lot of people in this world do not share your view of the words and what they mean.
Again I think your dictionary is less standard than you believe it is. The dictionary for one is written by people who are rigid academics, so you can find perjorative contexts written into the book that is supposed to be teaching people what the words mean. Again this whole discussion about God comes down to our semantic framework, and you can’t win the argument by limiting the semantic framework to one that supports your side.
This doesn’t happen to me that often outside of the Straight Dope or similar circles where people get an erection from being an intellectual. Outside of such circles I find people are much more willing to accept a certain elasticity of language, and understand that the substance of the idea being communicated are more important than the words being used to communicate it.
Yes I mean that, as well as I mean the effect that the person’s movements had on the wind patterns, how their own electromagnetic field interacted with the electromagnetic fields of other entities, how the movement of things was affected by the person’s gravitational field, how it was affected by edifices they helped construct, how it was affected by organizational structures to which they belonged, how it was affected by how they voted in the election, how the quanta was affected by their observation of it.
Fair enough.
Ok, well we disagree that neural memory is the housing of the self. Certainly it is a PART of the housing of a human self, but every creature has an identity and is living a unique life and is aware of their own life. Why else would they avoid being killed? No I am not questioning the language you are using, what I am questioning is your inability to assimilate other semantic frameworks into your perception. I do not live in a world that lacks seperation, I live in the same world that you do, and I don’t find that suddenly all differentiation disappears simply because I move the boundaries around once in a while to see exactly what my perception is doing by attaching meaning to words and drawing lines of distinction. You and I are sharing our thoughts right now, we are firing synapses across vast distances and connecting them via intermediary technology, but we are still sharing parts of our consciousness merely by communicating, and google is caching all of that information into a global matrix of human consciousness.
I think it’s fairly arbitrary to think that the brain is the seat of conscisousness, you are picking one piece of meat over another. Without the sensory input the memory apparatus does nothing. That’s like saying that the CPU is the whole computer.
The entire body is a sensory apparatus every last cell. Right, but you are DECIDING that the aatmosphere is not a part of you. Other people do not decide that quite so readily, and that doesn’t mean they are wrong and you are right or vice versa, it’s just a matter of what their conscious narrative, or your conscious narrative chooses to view as self/not self. I am not trying to convince you to believe things the way that I believe them, but it would be nice if I could peek through the veil and help you to understand the way that I view things as a Theist so that you can understand that it is not an inability to understand ockham’s razor or all your fancy scientific tools that makes one a Theist, that it’s not a matter of merely WANTING a big teddy bear in the sky to cling to, that it is a legitimate perceptual framework, one that may not work for you, but it does work for me. I am trying to help you to understand what it means to believe in God.
And when you shed skin cells they are no longer part of your body, but that doesn’t mean they never were. I am merely challenging the notion that you are the sensory and cognitive apparatus, but that what you perceive is equally as much a part of yourself as what you perceive it with. You never stop being connected to things in the universe, you just change the configuration and create intermediaries. The universe is one contiguous energy that goes out and in, infinitely, and you are always a part of that. The ground that you walked on becomes an integral part of you because it helped shape your body, the way your feet move the curvature of your spine, and as you said, your memories.
It is perfectly plain to you but clearly not perfectly plain to others.
Fair enough. You will be assimilated. Resistance is Futile.
Well I am sorry that I am boring you, and I agree with you they are your strongest bulwarks, and that’s the essence of what I’ve been getting at. Our defenses maintain our ignorance. You might be interested in Robert Greene’s “The 48 Laws of Power” specifically the chapter about the dangers of remaining in a fortress.
Erek