Metaphysics, intelligence, God

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  • N.T.M.
    FFR Player
    • Dec 2007
    • 890

    #136
    Re: Metaphysics, intelligence, God

    Originally posted by MrRubix
    Alright, then you don't understand logic. It's not chance. It's determinism. It's not "implausible." It's "necessary." Read up on the concepts and try again before you bring up this creationist BS.
    lol I've read a lot on evolution. I also understand determinism very well. To dismiss chance as an irrelevant factor is erroneous logic.

    Originally posted by MrRubix
    It's not "implausible." It's "necessary."
    Thank you!!

    You just proved my point. It's putatively necessary because any explaining scenarios that are impossible must be ruled out and therefore whatever's left, no matter how improbable (implausible), is the logical (and only) explanation by default. So then, why embrace such a fallible theory?....


    Originally posted by MrRubix
    It's "necessary."
    YES!!! You got it right.

    lmao you completely inadvertently proved my point. Give yourself a high five.
    “Beware the irrational, however seductive. Shun the 'transcendent' and all who invite you to subordinate or annihilate yourself. Distrust compassion; prefer dignity for yourself and others. Don't be afraid to be thought arrogant or selfish... Suspect your own motives, and all excuses. Do not live for others any more than you would expect others to live for you.”

    Christopher Hitchens

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    • MrRubix
      FFR Player
      • May 2026
      • 8340

      #137
      Re: Metaphysics, intelligence, God

      No, you just misunderstood what I mean by "necessary" -- it is not "finding truth through the decay of untruth." A necessary condition means something has to be in place for something else to happen. You wouldn't be able to make any of these observations in the first place if you weren't, on some level, fairly complex to begin with, for instance. Also consider how many simultaneous trials (i.e. consider the size of the universe) we have for such a system. Once you realize this, you'll see why your argument falls flat on its face. Our planet is in the right place and composed of the right materials such that it was able to support life -- starting from the extremely simple, evolving to become more and more complex.

      And don't bring that chance crap in here (if you claim to understand determinism so well, you wouldn't even dare bring such a thing up). Seriously, get out of this thread.
      Last edited by MrRubix; 12-14-2009, 01:00 AM.
      https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0es0Mip1jWY

      Comment

      • MrRubix
        FFR Player
        • May 2026
        • 8340

        #138
        Re: Metaphysics, intelligence, God

        mhs1992, new xkcd comic -- funny yet relevant:

        Last edited by MrRubix; 12-14-2009, 12:58 AM.
        https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0es0Mip1jWY

        Comment

        • Arch0wl
          Banned
          FFR Simfile Author
          • Dec 2002
          • 6344

          #139
          Re: Metaphysics, intelligence, God

          I'm amused by the joke and repulsed by the presumption that a student of philosophy would use the "you just don't like that..." structure for a retort. :P

          Comment

          • devonin
            Very Grave Indeed
            Event Staff
            FFR Simfile Author
            • Apr 2004
            • 10120

            #140
            Re: Metaphysics, intelligence, God

            Because Randall isn't possibly suggesting that the philosopher in question is a BAD philosopher, if they are thinking that they've overturned special relativity with a thought experiment involving a racecar on a train.

            Comment

            • mhss1992
              FFR Player
              • Sep 2007
              • 788

              #141
              Re: Metaphysics, intelligence, God

              Originally posted by MrRubix
              mhs, you can't say I "haven't solved all the problems" when I *have* answered every single thought experiment you've thrown at me. The solution *is* obvious, and the physical explanation *does* explain these things. The reason you may not find it obvious is because you're holding onto a concept that has already been shown to be worthy of non-acceptance. If you keep trying to mold that concept around everything, then yes, it will just confuse you. Approach it physically, and it all makes sense.
              I still have a lot to say about that thought experiment. I still don't feel like you've "directly" answered to everything. Instead of saying "I did answer to everything", let's just proceed until I have finished.

              Don't you wonder why I still think that there is a conflict? Don't you consider the possibility that I noticed something that you didn't, in this thought experiment? Wait, don't answer now, I'll still reply to your final answer.

              Originally posted by MrRubix
              It's fine to continue questioning something until you are satisfied, but you need to make sure you understand the other arguments first.

              Also, if you had actual proof of an afterlife, then I would obviously have to consider it. But, right now, all proof points against it. I'm not arguing corrosively against the concept of an afterlife/God because "I simply find it BS" -- but because there's absolutely no evidence for such things, but plenty of evidence to suggest other alternatives. If there were evidence of an afterlife, I would no longer find it BS. But what I do find BS is to base an entire faith off a "maybe" and hold it to be true. If someone wants to test a "maybe," there's a method for it. If someone still wants to have "hope" for something, then that's another thing. What's silly to me is to "know something to be true/to believe in something strongly" with no real truth behind it at all. That's BS to me.
              Alright. I know that if I tell you "that's not what I'm doing", it'll be pointless.

              I did say that "people see what they want to see" because that's what I noticed so far.

              The ideal would be for people to seek the truth and believe in the truth because it is the truth, not because they "want" to believe in it. But, usually, there is something that makes people lean towards a side, even if they aren't truly aware of that.

              Are you an atheist only because of what you mentioned, or do you somehow connect the act of believing in God or afterlife, regardless of the reason, with ignorance? Well, I think that there are some cultural reasons for that. Usually, religious people are ignorant. After living with several ignorant and religious people, some people tend to dislike religion. Are you sure that it isn't one of the reasons?

              Originally posted by MrRubix
              Re: Your thought experiment, the clone will be entirely new. The one derived from the original atoms will be the original person.
              There IS a problem. Please, please, PLEASE read this carefully, try to be as impartial as you can, because I cannot *not* see a conflict. Assuming that your answer is true:

              *After* the structure was completely destroyed, after all the atoms were spread and there was no longer any connection between them, if I somehow find these specific atoms and recreate your body, *you* will feel like you've woken up. But this will NOT happen if I pick different atoms, because it will be a clone.

              You know this: the entity with different atoms will be identical to you, and will feel exactly like you. But *you* will still feel nothing.

              Just answer: WHY will you still be limited to those same atoms after they were spread around the world?

              Do you still think that there is a structure? Because there clearly isn't.
              Last edited by mhss1992; 12-14-2009, 05:43 PM.
              jnbidevniuhyb scores: Nomina Nuda Tenemus 1-0-0-0, Anti-Ares 1-0-0-0

              Best AAA: Frictional Nevada (Done while FFR was out, so it doesn't show in my level stats)

              Resting. I might restart playing FFR seriously someday.

              Comment

              • N.T.M.
                FFR Player
                • Dec 2007
                • 890

                #142
                Re: Metaphysics, intelligence, God

                Originally posted by MrRubix
                A necessary condition means something has to be in place for something else to happen.
                lol That's exactly what I said.

                Originally posted by N.T.M.
                It's putatively necessary because any explaining scenarios that are impossible must be ruled out and therefore whatever's left, no matter how improbable (implausible), is the logical (and only) explanation by default.
                You disappoint me being unable to see this. It's rudimentary reasoning. IMO you just seriously damaged your credibility.

                Originally posted by MrRubix
                Once you realize this, you'll see why your argument falls flat on its face.
                lol That's hardly compelling. I'm reading a few books on nutrition/medicine atm, but once I'm done I'm gonna read a couple more on evolution.

                I'm considering Dawkin's book. What do you think?

                Apparently the most compelling evidence for evolution aside from the process-of-elimination aspect deemed indelible by evolutionists like yourself, are the genetic and fossil similarities.

                Though this is intended to refute creationism the irony is that they're mutually inclusive aspects. So the argument is inherently flawed.

                I've read quite a bit on evolution, but again I'd like to read more. So, any other suggestions aside from Dawkin's book?
                Last edited by N.T.M.; 12-15-2009, 12:58 AM.
                “Beware the irrational, however seductive. Shun the 'transcendent' and all who invite you to subordinate or annihilate yourself. Distrust compassion; prefer dignity for yourself and others. Don't be afraid to be thought arrogant or selfish... Suspect your own motives, and all excuses. Do not live for others any more than you would expect others to live for you.”

                Christopher Hitchens

                Comment

                • MrRubix
                  FFR Player
                  • May 2026
                  • 8340

                  #143
                  Re: Metaphysics, intelligence, God

                  NTM, not even going to begin addressing your points as it's clear you're trolling (and no, wrt necessary conditions, that is not what you said). You cannot always arrive at truth by decay of untruth. So, if you want to say my credibility is damaged as a result of saying that, then all I have to say is LOL l2logic.

                  Creationism is an absolutely retarded argument for a variety of reasons, and I fully understand why Dawkins doesn't even bother to debate people who believe in it, and have almost come to the point of taking a similar stance.



                  The most compelling evidence for evolution is that it's consistent with everything else we've discovered and solves multiple problems of complexity in one fell swoop -- it IS extremely compelling if you actually LOOK at the evidence. It isn't just "well we have nothing better." Evolution SOLVES the problem.
                  Last edited by MrRubix; 12-15-2009, 02:34 AM.
                  https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0es0Mip1jWY

                  Comment

                  • MrRubix
                    FFR Player
                    • May 2026
                    • 8340

                    #144
                    Re: Metaphysics, intelligence, God

                    mhss1992:

                    -There is a side people lean to when evidence points to it. If there's evidence of a contrary, then obviously people need to consider it. The "want" to believe in something without compelling evidence is what we call "magical thinking" aka what most religions imply.
                    -I am atheist because of everything I've mentioned, yes. I used to believe in God until I questioned why. Why don't you believe in Santa Claus? Well, there's overwhelming evidence to suggest that there isn't a magical man who delivers presents to everyone in a night. Likewise with God, there's a ton of evidence to suggest that no such being needs to exist, much like we don't need Santa to explain how we got presents under the tree as kids. The difference is that the evidence is a bit harder to understand with respect to God.

                    Re: your thought experiment again: Sure, if you find the same parts that initially composed me, and brought me back, I'd feel like I was brought back. If you used different atoms, you're bringing back a clone, because it's a clone. Not me. A clone by definition would technically be something exactly like us but ISN'T us. Obviously, any clone is not us, and we would never see or experience what a clone would. So it is intuitive that if we use the same parts, we get the same perspective. Different parts, different perspective (given that the parts in question are what compose a self-identified perspective).

                    Your question is a sort of tautology. You would be limited to those atoms after they were spread because you came from those atoms. It's why you're you and why you're not me, and vice-versa. I am the result of my specific atoms, and you are the result of your specific atoms. Going by this physical argument, then, the formation of MrRubix body parts results in a MrRubix perspective. A formation of mhs1992 body parts results in a mhs1992 perspective. It's like asking why is atom A atom A and not atom B? A is A because A is A and B is B. Separate things are separate things. There's no structure if you distribute the atoms, but that doesn't mean you can't recreate the structure by simply putting the atoms back together.
                    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0es0Mip1jWY

                    Comment

                    • Izzy
                      Snek
                      FFR Simfile Author
                      • Jan 2003
                      • 9195

                      #145
                      Re: Metaphysics, intelligence, God

                      I'm impressed rubix. How do you keep this up?

                      Comment

                      • mhss1992
                        FFR Player
                        • Sep 2007
                        • 788

                        #146
                        Re: Metaphysics, intelligence, God

                        Izzy is the kind of person who doesn't care about what's going on in a discussion, at all. His reactions depend entirely on the fact that I disagree with him.

                        He even answered different things than you did, but it seems like you didn't even notice. He said that different brains with the same composition have the same perspective, which shows that he clearly had no idea what he was talking about. But neither of you care, as long as you're on the same side.

                        It's annoying.

                        Originally posted by MrRubix
                        mhss1992:
                        Re: your thought experiment again: Sure, if you find the same parts that initially composed me, and brought me back, I'd feel like I was brought back. If you used different atoms, you're bringing back a clone, because it's a clone. Not me. A clone by definition would technically be something exactly like us but ISN'T us. Obviously, any clone is not us, and we would never see or experience what a clone would. So it is intuitive that if we use the same parts, we get the same perspective. Different parts, different perspective (given that the parts in question are what compose a self-identified perspective).
                        We are constantly switching between "individual atoms don't matter/different parts, different perspective". We will keep doing this until you try to see beyond the obvious. And seeing beyond the obvious doesn't mean "believing in a soul", it's just paying attention.

                        I ask you that you answer each topic separately, because I want to know your specific answers to each of them.



                        You didn't answer why the atoms that were spread and disconnected are still related with the original perspective. They are the same atoms... What of it? I thought we agreed that the perspective does not depend on individual atoms.
                        You said that we can swap the atoms in the ashes of a brain, recreate the brain, and it will bring back the same person. Why can't we directly swap the atoms that are no longer connected and do the same?

                        What is the difference? Is there some kind of drawn line between "continuous swap/discrete swap", even when the matter that composes something is completely disconnected?



                        Will your perspective get magically connected with new atoms as long as the atoms that formed your brain are together in the form of a pile of ash or some juice? Will your perspective NOT get magically connected with new atoms if I swap the disconnected individual, isolated atoms that originally formed your brain?

                        How do you explain this?

                        In both cases, I am not creating a brain with different atoms after I created a brain with the same atoms. Why is only the second case a clone?




                        There are just so many things I can ask.

                        If I swap the atoms in the ashes of your brain, spread them around the world, find them and put them in the form of ashes again, swap the atoms again... Do this a thousand times, will it still bring you back? It won't be a clone?

                        Well, you said that, if I swapped the atoms in the ashes, it would be a continuous swap and it would still make the same structure, and it WOULD bring the person back. It wouldn't be a clone. YOU said that.





                        And, guess what, you invented that. There's no physical evidence whatsoever saying that a person will be brought back if I swap the atoms of the ashes from their dead brain. We know it happens during our lifetime, but not necessarily in death. There can't be evidence, because we don't see the perspective of the other person. It's just faith. Other materialists could have answered different things. And it would also lead to conflicts.

                        Anyway, if, in the second case, where the atoms are disconnected, the perspective is still limited to those same atoms, how can it be, if the perspective doesn't exist anymore?
                        jnbidevniuhyb scores: Nomina Nuda Tenemus 1-0-0-0, Anti-Ares 1-0-0-0

                        Best AAA: Frictional Nevada (Done while FFR was out, so it doesn't show in my level stats)

                        Resting. I might restart playing FFR seriously someday.

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                        • Izzy
                          Snek
                          FFR Simfile Author
                          • Jan 2003
                          • 9195

                          #147
                          Re: Metaphysics, intelligence, God

                          If I recall I said something along the lines of them being the same perspective as long as we agree that we have the same perspective from one day to the next. We also have to assume we are in the same body.

                          You can make up whatever you want about me It doesn't really mean anything. As far as I'm concerned there hasn't been anything contributed to this thread in many pages.

                          Comment

                          • Reach
                            FFR Simfile Author
                            FFR Simfile Author
                            • Jun 2003
                            • 7471

                            #148
                            Re: Metaphysics, intelligence, God

                            Originally posted by N.T.M.
                            Been a while since I've reviewed abiogenesis. Lemme review it again and see what inaccuracies you're referring to.

                            *edit* Well I researched it a bit more and come across this:

                            evolution vs. creationism, talkorigins, darwin, darwinism, biology, talk.origins, trueorigin, trueorigins, abiogenesis, jerry bergman, crsq, creation research society quarterly


                            Interesting. Just consider that in lieu of my first paragraph.
                            You consider citing a ...hilariously inaccurate creationist website that is deceitfully attempting to discredit evolution as doing *research* ?

                            No wonder people are so confused about evolution. Garbage like this is all over the internet.

                            Evolution is a well established fact. With that said, abiogenesis isn't.

                            If you want some free information on evolution, you could start here: http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/comdesc/

                            An article on why some of the main arguments against abiogenesis are dead wrong: http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/abioprob/
                            Last edited by Reach; 12-15-2009, 11:52 AM.

                            Comment

                            • mhss1992
                              FFR Player
                              • Sep 2007
                              • 788

                              #149
                              Re: Metaphysics, intelligence, God

                              Originally posted by Izzy
                              If I recall I said something along the lines of them being the same perspective as long as we agree that we have the same perspective from one day to the next. We also have to assume we are in the same body.

                              You can make up whatever you want about me It doesn't really mean anything. As far as I'm concerned there hasn't been anything contributed to this thread in many pages.
                              1. You do disrespect me just because I don't agree with you. You've said that I am opinionated and that my arguments have fallacies, but you never explained why. The worst part is that you said it without even trying to understand what I was talking about. Respect me, and I'll respect you.

                              2. You did say the words "If you removed the brain of someone and replaced it with a brain of the exact same composition with memories and all then it is still the same perspective as before.". I'm sorry, but this affirmation makes absolutely no sense if you consider the context. We were talking about different things. Rubix understood that. He knew that if I took a brain and replaced it with a copy, the new brain would have it's own "perspective", even though it had exactly the same thoughts. But you didn't accept the fact that we were talking about different kinds of "perspectives" and complained even more. You just can't argue without understanding what the discussion is about, sorry.
                              jnbidevniuhyb scores: Nomina Nuda Tenemus 1-0-0-0, Anti-Ares 1-0-0-0

                              Best AAA: Frictional Nevada (Done while FFR was out, so it doesn't show in my level stats)

                              Resting. I might restart playing FFR seriously someday.

                              Comment

                              • MrRubix
                                FFR Player
                                • May 2026
                                • 8340

                                #150
                                Re: Metaphysics, intelligence, God

                                mhs1992, I think we're going to have to just agree to disagree. I've made my points very clear and you are free to take them as you wish. I think we're just going in circles at this point -- everything we're bringing up on this page has already been addressed, so I am going to have to echo Izzy on this point.

                                If it's any consolation mhs1992, I do think that you've brought up some great arguments to question the physical argument -- probably better than most theists I've ever spoken to -- but I do feel that all of your questions are adequately answered by the argument itself. Again, consider the simple truth that we do feel a continuous perspective/existence even though our atoms swap out. Clearly what is important are the *parts* and not the atoms themselves. This is not the same as making different parts with different atoms altogether, of course. There's a difference between destroying the original and pointing to a new clone, and replacing the original with new changes over time. This is not only consistent physically, but consistent empirically as well.

                                +1 to Reach -- I feel like there's so much crap out there such that people get the wrong ideas about evolution. If you understand evolution, it's very convincing -- and for good reason (the evidence is overwhelming). But when garbage gets perpetuated, it's easy to see how people can be misled.
                                https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0es0Mip1jWY

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