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Post 20

Wednesday, January 2, 2008 - 11:53amSanction this postReply
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I plan on being frozen- so, for me, the concept of an afterlife has some rational justification. I may die and yet come back- there's nothing in physics that forbids me the possibility.

I've realized that this idea brings some comfort. I imagine waking up to a future rational society with unlimited horizons for exploration and learning. This serves the same purpose for me as heaven does for others: it mitigates the sting of death. But I think my approach is far more rational than any mystic.  I know that science exists, that it progresses, and that medical 'miracles' have happened in my lifetime. I have rational reason to believe that medicine will be much more powerful in the future, and it is within the realm of possibility that I may brought back to life. 

Even if I am not brought back, I will die knowing I did everything possible, that I never gave in to the inevitability of non-existence and that I fought to live.


Post 21

Wednesday, January 2, 2008 - 12:18pmSanction this postReply
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Reply to post 20.

Isn't it a bit presumptuous to think that someone in the medium or far future will have any good reason for thawing you out? What do you have to offer, besides some historical witness?

Bob Kolker


Post 22

Wednesday, January 2, 2008 - 12:45pmSanction this postReply
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Yes Richard, Bob's got a point.  Rent the movie "Idiocracy".  ;-)

Post 23

Wednesday, January 2, 2008 - 3:55pmSanction this postReply
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I suppose if you had the money, you could set up some sort of trust fund or endowment that would go on in perpetuity and a piece of that could be earmarked for someone who went through the effort of bringing you back.  Also, future relatives and offspring might have an interest in meeting one of their ancestors.  Those are a couple motives, anyway. 

Post 24

Wednesday, January 2, 2008 - 8:17pmSanction this postReply
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Once frozen, your memories and yourself are much more likely and able to be restored than if you were to lets say rot to bones in the graveyard or be burned to ashes.

On the question of feasibility of technology, I do not have a doubt that we will have the technology to pause, repair, and resume a person. More of a question of when then if. Current pausing technology isn't perfect, but using the latest technology is much less information lossy than cremation! : )

So if you have the cash to do it, and you would like the chance, I'd recommend it. Its really an incredible technology to invest in, whether your particular case is successful or not. Think about it... the technology leads to ever increasing time doctors will have to operate on a patient in critical condition. Inter solar system travel too.

Post 25

Thursday, January 3, 2008 - 8:31pmSanction this postReply
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There was a real case reported some years ago about this old uncle in a British family who simply stopped moving.

Not all at once, but gradually, year by year, he spent more and more time in his armchair dozing, until finally the family realized that nobody could recall the last time he had moved.  He failed to respond to anything, they also noted.

At which point, they called for an ambulance.  The first assumption was that the uncle was dead.

Turns out, he was alive, but with zero thyroid function.  As soon as they gave him some thyroid, he was as lively as ever.  However, it turned out that the problem with the thyroid had been caused by a huge tumor, which had stopped growing after it shut down all the thyroid secretions in the body.  He died shortly thereafter from the regrowing cancer.

More recently it had been discovered that low doses of hydrogen sulfide gas can induce animals that don't normally hybernate at all, ever, to go into a true state of hybernation.  DON'T TRY THIS AT HOME!!!

The difference between the level needed to induce hybernation is very close to the dosage that is fatal.  And it probably varies enough between individuals to make the correct dosage a real gamble.  However, once the bugs are worked out this appears to pose a very useful techniue for puting people - astronauts on their way to Mars or people with terminal diseases - into a state of suspension that could last for months at a time, with very little aging taking place.


Post 26

Saturday, January 5, 2008 - 7:47pmSanction this postReply
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The problem with being frozen and thawed out in some future life is that that future could be very, very different from ours. The skills and knowledge required to survive well in that world would probably be ones that you wouldn't possess. You'd have to learn them, and it could be difficult, depending on how old you were when you died. In the meantime, you might be useful as a worker or employee in only the most menial capacity -- until you acquired the knowledge to become more productive. If, however, the society were very advanced, you could probably live well even as an unskilled or semi-skilled worker.

- Bill

Post 27

Saturday, January 5, 2008 - 10:34pmSanction this postReply
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By that time, or within one's lifespan... I'm sure we'd have the technology to instantly learn (or forget if you desire) vast amounts of information very quickly (hours) through molecular/cellular machines building neural structures. Knowledge will not be as important as information processing rate for things like pattern matching and planning. And even that will probably be heavily enhanced or enhanceable by computers, human computer interfaces, and genetic/biological improvements. I guess sensory and high speed and bandwidth communication will also be important! : P Ahh the future : )

Post 28

Sunday, January 6, 2008 - 12:57amSanction this postReply
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Wouldn't believing in some colorful, fantastical, heavenly afterlife with Unicorns, rainbows and angelic, nude fairies create perverse incentives while living IN reality? Does this not lead to an implicit (or explicit) symbolization of death as liberating, and of life as a prison - i.e. a glorification of death and a demonization of life? Imagine the twisted set of incentives that gives to humans who blindly swallow this kind of belief. They would likely find it in their interest to approach death in the quickest manner possible, within any arbitrarily acceptable bounds. Like through some kind of "noble" self-sacrifice - jumping in front of a train to save a suicidal stranger. Gee, maybe they didn't stop to think that the stranger was trying to get into heaven too!

Of course, to the extent that they have a beacon of rationality somewheres underneath all that dogma, they'll hesitate to be so suicidal themselves. So maybe they'll be partially suicidal. Instead of leaping in front of trains to save strangers, they'll just make smaller, more numerous sacrifices - like coughing up hard earned money at beggars on street corners. And maybe they'll sacrifice their human creativity as well, and wear all black - like they're at a perpetual funeral. Ah, to hell with it, they might as well depart from civilization itself, and retreat into some mountainous seclusion with a bunch of other kooks who also wear all black robes. Gee, what's with all the black? Are they so Gothic that they shit bats? Must be part of their death-worshipping regimen.


Post 29

Sunday, January 6, 2008 - 1:39pmSanction this postReply
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Warren: I've observed this in many, many cases.  One case in point is a Vietnamese friend who drifts from one primarily Asian mysticism to the next, all the while telling me that she is looking for a path to happiness when she dies.  Meanwhile, she puts up with a largely loveless and somewhat dreary existence and becomes a little grayer in her own personality with each passing year, while denying herself any real pleasures on the basis of guilt.  When I met her, it was her constant embrace of happiness that was most attractive, and is now sadly mostly gone.

Just as bad, IMHO, are the parents, especially the MOMs, who LIVE for the CHILDREN.  They adopt a vicarious existence in which real, solid rational planning for their children's objective welfare is rarely attempted, while the husband or father becomes marginalized and eventually divorces or otherwise drops out of a useless and depressing relationship.

In both cases sex - or the enjoyment of it anyway - is one thing that is taboo.


Post 30

Monday, January 7, 2008 - 4:46pmSanction this postReply
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"Can Objectivists be sure that there is no afterlife?"

~ What a question! And, for "O-ists" only (not all atheists?)

~ Can one 'be sure' (aka 'certain') about that? (Hmmm...visions of woodland-fairies hiding from all of us come to mind.)

~ Well, can the questioner 'be sure' that we're not already in it?

LLAP
J:D

PS: 'Freezing' I don't consider 'afterlife'...and have no prob with the idea, chancy though it be.

(Edited by John Dailey on 1/07, 4:48pm)


Post 31

Tuesday, January 8, 2008 - 5:00amSanction this postReply
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Reply to post 0.

For the living, the question cannot be decided empirically at all. For the dead, who knows? The proposition is untestable by any practical means. As far as anyone knows by observation Dead is Dead. No one has ever seen a flatline dead person be resurrected ever.

For the morbidly curious they can find out (or not found out) easily enough. Just commit suicide.

Bob Kolker


Post 32

Thursday, January 24, 2008 - 12:47amSanction this postReply
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I myself do not believe in a god, but that does not keep me from thinking that there may be a form of afterlife. I am including under the heading of "afterlife" any type of alleged afterlife, including life as a reincarnated being or life as a disembodied spirit. I was wondering if anyone knows how an Objectivist, qua Objectivist, could refute the idea that it is possible that there is an afterlife. I realize that this may sound like a strange question for some of you, just as some theists questions to me have seemed strange.... Nonetheless, I hope that one of you could help me out on this one.

An open mind (at last).

But to sum up shortly, it is impossible to prove a negative. No one can disprove an afterlife just as no one can disprove there is an invisible purple dragon living in your house.

Re “impossibility of proving a negative”:

Syllogism:

Major Premise: No man is immortal
Minor Premise: Socrates is a man
Conclusion: Ergo, Socrates is not immortal

The conclusion is a negative statement, proven by the two preceding premises.

But to believe in an afterlife ought to require some proof one exists.

Lots of scientists believe in the possibility of intelligent extra-terrestrial life – even spending billions of tax dollars to send up satellites and start programs like SETI – and they do so with NO PROOF whatsoever that intelligent extra-terrestrial life exists. They base their belief – their hope – on considerations about the nature of life, the nature of the earth, a little probability and statistics, and voila! your tax dollars are gone.

There’s nothing irrational or self-contradictory about their assumptions (even if I think it’s a waste of my tax money).

Same for the notion of “afterlife” or “antecedent life”. A consideration of consciousness and biological organisms shows them to be complementary to each other; we don’t find consciousness without a living biological organism; we don’t find living biological organisms without some degree of consciousness. We also know that matter is ultimately never created or destroyed; it merely changes its forms. Perfectly reasonable to ascribe to consciousness what we ascribe to matter.

You say that consciousness requires sensory apparatus to perceive reality? The converse is equally true: sensory apparatus requires consciousness to convert what would simply be material electro-chemical impulses into something called “experience”, which exists only within consciousness.

The notion that consciousness is a “property” of the physical part of the organism implies that it is ultimately physical in nature and is ultimately reducible to and explainable by physical laws. Furthermore, the notion that consciousness is “inside” matter contradicts the previous notion that it is a property: if consciousness is “inside” the brain in the same sense that Coca-Cola is “inside” a glass bottle or aluminum can, then consciousness and brain are two separate physical things, just as “Coke” and “can” are two separate physical things. Coke is not a “property” of the can, so consciousness is not a property of the brain. On the other hand, if we maintain that consciousness IS a property of the brain, then it is not physically located “inside” the brain. Size is a property of a block of wood; it is not located “inside” the block.

The most we can say about consciousness (since we have no idea what it actually is) is that it accompanies living biological organisms, and living biological organisms accompany it. I think of them as intersecting. This would imply that it is at least possible to have a biological organism with no consciousness whatsoever, as well as a consciousness with no biological organism whatsoever.

This model might, of course, be incorrect – just as the assumptions of the SETI scientists might be incorrect – but there’s no inherent contradiction involved.

If your basis for belief is not based on sensory perception, you will find you will run into a lot of problems in life.

There are different kinds of knowledge about reality and different levels of certainty regarding the different kinds. For example, mathematical knowledge is completely certain yet requires no sensory evidence. No one has ever seen, felt, or touched a perfect circle, yet it can be known exactly by the equation: (x - h)^2 + (y - k)^2 = r^2, where “h” and “k” are the coordinates of the center of the circle, and “r” is the radius. We do not arrive at the notion of “perfect circle” by “abstracting” from actual circles (which are all imperfect). You can’t abstract from the imperfect to the perfect since the “perfect” does not exist except in the head of the mathematician.

If we suggest one should believe in what one cannot prove, it would suggest knowledge is subjective and the fanciful whims of the individual is as valid as cold hard logic and sensory evidence.

Knowledge ultimately rests on axioms that cannot be proven and need not be proven; they simply have to work. Axioms lie at the base of knowledge and at the base of further proof.

Post 33

Thursday, January 24, 2008 - 11:14pmSanction this postReply
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Claude Shannon quotes Christopher Parker: "It is impossible to prove a negative. No one can disprove an afterlife just as no one can disprove there is an invisible purple dragon living in your house."

In Post #3, I disproved the possibility of an after life, by showing that the idea is self-contradictory.

Claude wrote,
Re “impossibility of proving a negative”:

Syllogism:

Major Premise: No man is immortal
Minor Premise: Socrates is a man
Conclusion: Ergo, Socrates is not immortal

The conclusion is a negative statement, proven by the two preceding premises.
To say that one can't prove a negative doesn't mean that one can't prove a conclusion by expressing it in a negative form. It means that one cannot prove the non-existence of that for which no evidence exists. A positive statement can be refuted by exposing its errors and contradictions. But doing so constitutes disproving a positive, not proving a negative.

Suppose I were to accuse you of murder without offering any evidence for it, either in terms of who the victim is, or how, where or when you were alleged to have committed the murder. And suppose I then demanded that you prove that you didn't commit a murder. Well, of course, you couldn't satisfy my demand, because you couldn't "prove a negative" in that sense of the terminology.

Christopher wrote, "But to believe in an afterlife ought to require some proof one exists." Claude replied,
Lots of scientists believe in the possibility of intelligent extra-terrestrial life – even spending billions of tax dollars to send up satellites and start programs like SETI – and they do so with NO PROOF whatsoever that intelligent extra-terrestrial life exists. They base their belief – their hope – on considerations about the nature of life, the nature of the earth, a little probability and statistics, and voila! your tax dollars are gone.
What Christopher is saying is relation to your example is that to believe in the actual existence of intelligent extraterrestrial life ought to require some proof. I assume that if the scientists you refer to have no proof whatsoever that intelligent extraterrestrial life exists, then they don't yet believe in its existence; at most, they believe in its likelihood, and are looking for evidence that it actually does exist.
There’s nothing irrational or self-contradictory about their assumptions (even if I think it’s a waste of my tax money).
Of course, but if they have no evidence at all for intelligent ETs, then what they're assuming is presumably its likelihood, not its actuality. And there does exist evidence for the likelihood of intelligent extraterrestrial life, given the number of planets capable of supporting it.
Same for the notion of “afterlife” or “antecedent life”. A consideration of consciousness and biological organisms shows them to be complementary to each other; we don’t find consciousness without a living biological organism; we don’t find living biological organisms without some degree of consciousness.
Not true. Plants are living organisms that have no consciousness. What you intended to say, I take it, is that we don't find animal life without some degree of consciousness, which is true.
We also know that matter is ultimately never created or destroyed; it merely changes its forms. Perfectly reasonable to ascribe to consciousness what we ascribe to matter.
You mean that consciousness is neither created nor destroyed? I don't think so. The evidence indicates that consciousness arose with the emergence of animal life, and did not exist before its emergence. And consciousness is certainly capable of being destroyed. It's destroyed whenever an animal dies.
You say that consciousness requires sensory apparatus to perceive reality? The converse is equally true: sensory apparatus requires consciousness to convert what would simply be material electro-chemical impulses into something called “experience”, which exists only within consciousness.
Yes, but consciousness still depends on matter; it cannot exist independently of it. Matter, by contrast, can exist independently of consciousness.
The notion that consciousness is a “property” of the physical part of the organism implies that it is ultimately physical in nature and is ultimately reducible to and explainable by physical laws.
But it has to be a property of a physical organism, because it requires a physical organism in order to exist.
Furthermore, the notion that consciousness is “inside” matter contradicts the previous notion that it is a property: if consciousness is “inside” the brain in the same sense that Coca-Cola is “inside” a glass bottle or aluminum can, then consciousness and brain are two separate physical things, just as “Coke” and “can” are two separate physical things. Coke is not a “property” of the can, so consciousness is not a property of the brain. On the other hand, if we maintain that consciousness IS a property of the brain, then it is not physically located “inside” the brain. Size is a property of a block of wood; it is not located “inside” the block.
Right. I would say that consciousness is not "inside" the brain, since that would imply that it is an independent occupant; instead, I would characterize consciousness as the subjective manifestation of the operation of the brain and central nervous system.
The most we can say about consciousness (since we have no idea what it actually is) is that it accompanies living biological organisms, and living biological organisms accompany it.
Consciousness is known introspectively by direct experience, but I wouldn't say that the organisms that possess it "accompany" consciousness any more than I would say that they "accompany" the brain, since that would suggest that consciousness has an independent existence apart from these organisms. Nor would I say the reverse -- that consciousness accompanies the organisms that possess it -- any more than I would say that the brain "accompanies" the organisms that possess it, since that too suggests that consciousness has an independent existence.
I think of them as intersecting. This would imply that it is at least possible to have a biological organism with no consciousness whatsoever, as well as a consciousness with no biological organism whatsoever.
No, there's no intersection between consciousness and the physical brain and body, for the very reason that such an intersection would imply a consciousness that could exist independently of an organism. Again, a consciousness requires sense organs and a brain in order to exist and function.
This model might, of course, be incorrect – just as the assumptions of the SETI scientists might be incorrect – but there’s no inherent contradiction involved.
Yes, there is! A consciousness without a physical organism is a consciousness without the preconditions for experiencing the external world (for being conscious of it) and for retaining its perceptions and experiences in the form of memories and other kinds of cognitive processes.
There are different kinds of knowledge about reality and different levels of certainty regarding the different kinds. For example, mathematical knowledge is completely certain yet requires no sensory evidence.
Oh, yes it does! Without sensory evidence, one couldn't form concepts of any kind, including quantitative relationships.
No one has ever seen, felt, or touched a perfect circle, yet it can be known exactly by the equation: (x - h)^2 + (y - k)^2 = r^2, where “h” and “k” are the coordinates of the center of the circle, and “r” is the radius. We do not arrive at the notion of “perfect circle” by “abstracting” from actual circles (which are all imperfect). You can’t abstract from the imperfect to the perfect since the “perfect” does not exist except in the head of the mathematician.
No one has ever seen a golden mountain either, but I can imagine a golden mountain, because I've had other sensory experiences that enable me to conceive of one. I can conceive of a perfect circle as well, only because I've had certain sensory experiences that enable to me to form the appropriate abstraction.
If we suggest one should believe in what one cannot prove, it would suggest knowledge is subjective and the fanciful whims of the individual is as valid as cold hard logic and sensory evidence.

Knowledge ultimately rests on axioms that cannot be proven and need not be proven; they simply have to work. Axioms lie at the base of knowledge and at the base of further proof.
If we define proof as "the derivation of a conclusion from antecedent knowledge," then epistemological axioms cannot and need not be proved, but that doesn't mean that don't require validation. Validation is a broader concept than proof. As Professor Peikoff notes, validation "subsumes any process of establishing an idea's relationship to reality, whether deductive reasoning, inductive reasoning or perceptual self-evidence. In this sense, one can and must validate every item of knowledge, including axioms." (OPAR, p. 8) One validates axioms ultimately by a direct appeal to sensory evidence.

- Bill


(Edited by William Dwyer on 1/25, 9:47am)


Post 34

Friday, January 25, 2008 - 9:33amSanction this postReply
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William Dwyer writes:

Not true. Plants are living organisms that have no consciousness. What you intended to say, I take it, is that we don't find animal life without some degree of consciousness, which is true.

I respond:

Some plants have tropisms and they physically incline toward a light source to their photosynthesis process. Venus Fly Traps, detect the presence of insect prey and close their flower (think jaws here) to swallow them. That indicates some degree of reactivity with the external world. This may indicate a low degree of consciousness.

Bob Kolker


Post 35

Sunday, January 27, 2008 - 12:47amSanction this postReply
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In Post #3, I disproved the possibility of an after life, by showing that the idea is self-contradictory.

You asserted that it was self-contradictory. You never substantiated your assertion. You merely define consciousness in such a way that a contradiction follows if we assert its independent existence. Big deal.

Suppose I were to accuse you of murder without offering any evidence for it, either in terms of who the victim is, or how, where or when you were alleged to have committed the murder. And suppose I then demanded that you prove that you didn't commit a murder. Well, of course, you couldn't satisfy my demand, because you couldn't "prove a negative" in that sense of the terminology.

Nonsense. By definition: “Good people cannot commit murders” / “I am a good person” / Ergo, “I cannot commit murder”. That satisfies the condition “Prove that you did not commit the murder.” If you then ask “Well, prove that you really are good,” I will say, “Sure…but that’s a different condition and a different demand”, which is the same sort of infinite regress you can get with any sort of syllogism, including “All men mortal” / “Socrates is a man” / Ergo, “Socrates is mortal”. You could say “That doesn’t satisfy me; prove that all men actually are mortal; now prove that Socrates actually is a man”, etc. As long as we define our terms the way we wish, we can prove the non-existence or non-occurrence of something.

What Christopher is saying is relation to your example is that to believe in the actual existence of intelligent extraterrestrial life ought to require some proof. I assume that if the scientists you refer to have no proof whatsoever that intelligent extraterrestrial life exists, then they don't yet believe in its existence; at most, they believe in its likelihood, and are looking for evidence that it actually does exist.

Wrong. They believe that it actually exists. The “likelihood” is that they might be able to detect it.

we don’t find consciousness without a living biological organism; we don’t find living biological organisms without some degree of consciousness.

Not true. Plants are living organisms that have no consciousness. What you intended to say, I take it, is that we don't find animal life without some degree of consciousness, which is true.


Quite wrong. See below link:

Plant Consciousness

QUOTE: “To a growing number of biologists, the fact that plants are now known to challenge and exert power over other species is proof of a basic intellect.

‘If intelligence is the capacity to acquire and apply knowledge, then, absolutely, plants are intelligent,’ agrees Leslie Sieburth, a biologist at the University of Utah in Salt Lake City.” END QUOTE

Plants are not mere automatons; plants are not machines. They are living organisms that have awareness of their environment. Plants absolutely are conscious – even if they are not self-conscious or display feelings.

You mean that consciousness is neither created nor destroyed? I don't think so. The evidence indicates that consciousness arose with the emergence of animal life, and did not exist before its emergence.

You have no evidence of that. You just have definitions.

And consciousness is certainly capable of being destroyed. It's destroyed whenever an animal dies.

I’m wondering at what point you’ll get tired of contradicting yourself. You’ve said elsewhere that “we know consciousness directly THROUGH INTROSPECTION” Right? Right! Can you know an animal’s consciousness through introspection? Yes or no? NO! You only know YOUR consciousness through introspection. Ergo, you have no idea what happens to an animal’s consciousness when its body dies. You will only have, one day, introspective knowledge of what happens to your consciousness when you die. That’s quite a different matter.

Yes, but consciousness still depends on matter; it cannot exist independently of it.

Question begging. You can’t assume as axiomatically true the very point that is in fact at issue. It’s also true that matter doesn’t exist independently of consciousness. You may attempt to provide proof if you believe it does.

Matter, by contrast, can exist independently of consciousness.

Question begging. How do you know matter can exist independently of consciousness?

The notion that consciousness is a “property” of the physical part of the organism implies that it is ultimately physical in nature and is ultimately reducible to and explainable by physical laws.

But it has to be a property of a physical organism, because it requires a physical organism in order to exist.


Already discussed, disputed, and disproved. You know nothing about what consciousness “requires.” No one does. All we know is that we always find it accompanying a living organism, and living organisms accompany it. That relationship doesn’t indicate a “requirement.”

I would characterize consciousness as the subjective manifestation of the operation of the brain and central nervous system.

“Subjective manifestation” is simply another phrase for “experience” or “consciousness”. Again, you’ve merely repeated a definition – this time in slightly different words – without providing any new information. Additionally, you were the one claiming that consciousness has a spatial location. The phrase, “Consciousness is the subjective manifestation of the brain + nervous system” does nothing to locate consciousness in a place.

Consciousness is known introspectively by direct experience,

Consciousness is experienced directly via introspection. “To experience” consciousness and “to know what it is” are two different things. We experience color subjectively; that doesn’t mean that we know what it is simply because we experience it. Same with consciousness.

such an intersection would imply a consciousness that could exist independently of an organism.

Question begging. No one knows what consciousness is – you merely have a definition for our experience of it. Not the same thing.

Again, a consciousness requires sense organs and a brain in order to exist and function.

Again, sense organs and a brain require some degree of consciousness in order to function – and actually, even to exist AS a sense organ and a brain. “Brain/consciousness” and “sense-organ/consciousness” are complementary pairs.

A consciousness without a physical organism is a consciousness without the preconditions for experiencing the external world

Concept stealing. “External World” presupposes the existence of consciousness. “External World” and “Internal World” come into existence together…that’s what “existence exists” means. It’s not a clarion call for the primacy of matter. You can’t have the “outside of a box” before you have the “inside of a box.” When you close a box, you simultaneously define an inside and an outside. An apt analogy for “subjective” and “objective.”

Without sensory evidence, one couldn't form concepts of any kind, including quantitative relationships.

No mathematician would agree with that. Neither would an ethicist.

No one has ever seen a golden mountain either

I have. But I know for a fact that you have never seen a perfect circle, because a perfect circle cannot exist in material reality (unlike a golden mountain, which, of course, can easily exist). Ergo, no one has ever perceived a perfect circle. You can THINK a perfect a circle; you cannot perceive one.

If we define proof as "the derivation of a conclusion from antecedent knowledge," then epistemological axioms cannot and need not be proved, but that doesn't mean that don't require validation. Validation is a broader concept than proof.

“Validation” and “proof” are rather muddy notions in Peikoff’s mind.

As Professor Peikoff notes, validation "subsumes any process of establishing an idea's relationship to reality, whether deductive reasoning, inductive reasoning or perceptual self-evidence. In this sense, one can and must validate every item of knowledge, including axioms." (OPAR, p. 8) One validates axioms ultimately by a direct appeal to sensory evidence.

I don’t know what you mean by “ultimately.” That sounds like logical positivism, which reduced all sentences to “protocol sentences” that had to be verified by the senses in order to be validated as “true.” The axiom “A is A” or “A cannot be both A and non-A at the same time and in the same respect” need not be confirmed by any appeal to sensory evidence. Same applies to all axioms of logic, mathematics, and ethics.

Most axioms are validated pragmatically: e.g., do the they work? do they help to organize the data in a consistent and convenient way? can I solve problems if I assume XYZ as my starting points?

Finally (and for the record re Peikoff’s statement above), there is no such thing as “inductive reasoning.” All reasoning is deductive. Karl Popper proved that long ago, and he spent most of his life writing on the philosophy of logic and science. An inductive statement is an utterance that falls under the field of rhetoric, not logic. Induction is a form of “argument from analogy.”

Post 36

Sunday, January 27, 2008 - 5:47amSanction this postReply
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Mr. Shannon writes:

In Post #3, I disproved the possibility of an after life, by showing that the idea is self-contradictory. (from a prior poster)

You asserted that it was self-contradictory. You never substantiated your assertion. You merely define consciousness in such a way that a contradiction follows if we assert its independent existence. Big deal.

I write:

The matter of showing there is an after-life cannot be established empirically. As to disproving an after-life this devolved on the nature of life. If life is purely material then one the person is dead, his physical corpus decays. It is gone. Even if the decedent is cloned, the resulting entity is not -him-, since his experiences cannot be faithfully reproduced. If life is material, then death ends it forever. On the other hand if there is a non-material component to life (particularly to persona) then it might survive, it is logically possible. But the question of whether life has this non-material nature is a empirically undecidable as the original question.

Bottom line: Believe what you wish to believe. There is not evidence for the continuation of life (particularly persona) after the death.

I prefer to believe we only go around once. This ought to encourage us to use our limited time productively. We do not have an eternity for dawdling or procrastination. Carpe diam. Grab for the ring. Have children. That is as close to immortality as you come.

Bob Kolker





Post 37

Sunday, January 27, 2008 - 4:24pmSanction this postReply
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The matter of showing there is an after-life cannot be established empirically.

Let us say, rather, that it has never been established empirically.

As to disproving an after-life this devolved on the nature of life.

If "to prove the existence of X" cannot be done empirically, then "to disprove the existence of X" also cannot be done empirically. No reason to hold one side of the argument to a different standard.

If life is purely material

A big "if." We already know that the biochemistry of life is rather humdrum. What makes living things special is that special non-material ingredient: information. Living things function by means of a system of coded chemistry that exists nowhere else except in living biological organisms.

then one the person is dead, his physical corpus decays. It is gone.

"Decay" means that the matter changes its form. Aside from certain quantum processes, matter cannot be created or destroyed. I see no reason to deny to consciousness what we grant to matter.

If life is material, then death ends it forever. On the other hand if there is a non-material component to life (particularly to persona) then it might survive, it is logically possible. But the question of whether life has this non-material nature is a empirically undecidable as the original question.

Thank you for that addendum to your earlier statement above. I generally agree, except for the part about all of this being necessarily undecidable empirically.

Bottom line: Believe what you wish to believe. There is not evidence for the continuation of life (particularly persona) after the death.

There is no evidence of extraterrestrial life. Some scientists believe it exists based on other considerations -- "circumstantial evidence"; viz., number of earth-like planets in the universe; universality of carbon-based life; necessity of some sort of system of coded-chemistry such as DNA to ensure reproductive fidelity to the species, etc. Same with the question of consciousness. Nothing wrong with basing the argument on circumstantial evidence.

I prefer to believe we only go around once.

The question of the separate existence of consciousness is different from the question of a reincarnation. Belief in the former does not necessitate belief in the latter.

This ought to encourage us to use our limited time productively.

We ought to be productive whether we are here once or here an infinity of times. One might argue, for example, that we have a duty NOT to be productive, to live like pigs, to be nothing but libertines, precisely because our time here is limited and will inevitably end in death and dissolution. The "ought" you speak of is based on moral considerations of what it means specifically to be human; not metaphysical considerations of what it means to be mortal and finite.

Grab for the ring. Have children. That is as close to immortality as you come.

It was Woody Allen, I believe, who said "Some people want to achieve immortality by means of their work; some people want to achieve it by means of their children. I want to achieve immortality by not dying."

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Sunday, January 27, 2008 - 5:10pmSanction this postReply
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It was Woody Allen, I believe, who said "Some people want to achieve immortality by means of their work; some people want to achieve it by means of their children. I want to achieve immortality by not dying."

 

but to what end - without a reason for wanting it, the length of it  means nothing....


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Sunday, January 27, 2008 - 5:33pmSanction this postReply
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but to what end - without a reason for wanting it, the length of it means nothing....

Seems to me that "length of life," like "extent of wealth," is a value in and of itself. A person might desire great extent of wealth simply to acquire great extent of wealth. There's no central purpose; he simply likes making money, and enjoys ostentatious displays.

Similarly, a person might simply enjoy living moment to moment...and the more moments, the better.

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