Wow, that's really retarded...
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Originally posted by Kidicious View PostYou may have to actually read a book. It's Predictably Irrational: The Hidden Forces That Shape Our Decision written by an economist who did the research by the name of Dan Ariely.
And if I have to wade through an entire book instead of a consise summary of the methodology and the results plus conclusions, it's probably not worth the effort.
In business, whenever anybody wants to show me "sound bites" from a research study, the first thing I ask for is the methodology, so that I can make my own opinion on whether the research should even be considered valid.Keep on Civin'
RIP rah, Tony Bogey & Baron O
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Well, if you just surveyed Christians and asked them if Christianity is the one true religion, the results are easy to predict. Ask a group of people from a different religion the same question, and the results are just as easy to predict. Both results would be different, but people could use sound bite summaries to back up their claims from either study, and say that their claims are backed up by researchKeep on Civin'
RIP rah, Tony Bogey & Baron O
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Originally posted by Kidicious View PostIn order to have free will we must have a mind which is something different than the brain.
Tha tmind is, however, sufficiently advanced to make us sentient.
Originally posted by Kidicious View PostThe evidence that we do have a mind and free will is that we can use it to alter the way the brain works.
Originally posted by Kidicious View PostThat is I can consciously use my mind to alter my brain.
http://bigthink.com/ideas/23943[/QUOTE]
Originally posted by Kidicious View PostBecause materialists have no idea whatsoever about how the mind works. It's very unlikely that science will ever help us understand this.Indifference is Bliss
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Questions for dualists:
1. Why does brain damage cause people to behave differently?
2. Please explain whether the following is an attribute of the mind or the brain:
a) intelligence
b) emotions
c) desires
d) sentience
e) decision-making
f) memories (how can brain damage make people lose memory?)
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Originally posted by Ming View PostWithout the technical appendix or methodology behind the research, who knows whether it's actually good research or not. I can do research that is rigged to prove any point I want... that doesn't make it a fact, just bad research and bad conclussions.
And if I have to wade through an entire book instead of a consise summary of the methodology and the results plus conclusions, it's probably not worth the effort.
In business, whenever anybody wants to show me "sound bites" from a research study, the first thing I ask for is the methodology, so that I can make my own opinion on whether the research should even be considered valid.I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
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Anyone on the internet that asks someone to read a book to prove a point they're trying to make is just rude. It's not worth it. Especially when you reference it with a page number which may not match if someone has a different printing or buys it on line. You couldn't have taken a couple of minutes to summarize it but you expect someone to read the entire book. Geeze.It's almost as if all his overconfident, absolutist assertions were spoonfed to him by a trusted website or subreddit. Sheeple
RIP Tony Bogey & Baron O
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Originally posted by N35t0r View PostDefine 'mind'. I think that what we call 'mind' is effectively the 'software' running in our brains, and as such is inherently limited by our brain's 'hardware'. I think that there isn't anything else to that mind and thus no foundation on which to base the possibility of free will.
It is not software as we do have free will. I can make a decision by myself to alter my brain and I can be successful.
Tha tmind is, however, sufficiently advanced to make us sentient.
I fail to see the logic in this argument. If a robot has software that can alter the way it's hardware works, it has free will?
Which goes back to what you think the 'mind' is. But it's nothing more than your opinion.I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
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Originally posted by gribbler View PostQuestions for dualists:
1. Why does brain damage cause people to behave differently?
2. Please explain whether the following is an attribute of the mind or the brain:
a) intelligence
b) emotions
c) desires
d) sentience
e) decision-making
f) memories (how can brain damage make people lose memory?)I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
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Originally posted by gribbler View PostQuestions for dualists:
1. Why does brain damage cause people to behave differently?
2. Please explain whether the following is an attribute of the mind or the brain:
a) intelligence
b) emotions
c) desires
d) sentience
e) decision-making
f) memories (how can brain damage make people lose memory?)
I am not sure if you understand the points of view on the subject.
Let me ask you this, what about those brain damaged people? Those who learn to walk or talk again. Those who lose the part that governs sight/etc, but learn to see/etc again?
Do you understand what dualism means? What monism means?
To help you out: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dualism_(philosophy_of_mind)
This doesn't really have much to do with this thread though... I know many dualists who are religious and many who are not.
JM
(I am for the most part a reductionist (and obviously a materialist, the one exception is God), but have serious doubts about it.)Jon Miller-
I AM.CANADIAN
GENERATION 35: The first time you see this, copy it into your sig on any forum and add 1 to the generation. Social experiment.
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Originally posted by Kidicious View PostWouldn't that be wonderfull if we had just one definition of the mind. Obviously we don't, but since I do believe in free will and disagree with materialism I call the mind what gives us free will and that which is different from the brain. There's an unconscious mind but that doesn't concern us right now.
Originally posted by Kidicious View PostIt is not software as we do have free will. I can make a decision by myself to alter my brain and I can be successful.
Your first sentence is just circular logic.
Originally posted by Kidicious View PostWhat does that mean?
Originally posted by Kidicious View PostNo that's what makes us different from computers. We don't run on software or anything like it.
Originally posted by Kidicious View PostIt's a lot of people's opinions, including neuroscientists and many others who have put a lot of thought and work into it. I think the materialist opinion is not compatable with the research and is not reasonable.Indifference is Bliss
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Originally posted by rah View PostAnyone on the internet that asks someone to read a book to prove a point they're trying to make is just rude. It's not worth it. Especially when you reference it with a page number which may not match if someone has a different printing or buys it on line. You couldn't have taken a couple of minutes to summarize it but you expect someone to read the entire book. Geeze.I drank beer. I like beer. I still like beer. ... Do you like beer Senator?
- Justice Brett Kavanaugh
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Originally posted by gribbler View PostQuestions for dualists:
1. Why does brain damage cause people to behave differently?
2. Please explain whether the following is an attribute of the mind or the brain:
a) intelligence
b) emotions
c) desires
d) sentience
e) decision-making
f) memories (how can brain damage make people lose memory?)
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