Total Members Voted: 33
Quote from: eggsalad on October 12, 2015, 10:37:50 PMI want an actual answer here.What is the value of a conversation where all positions and assertions are fundamentally equal? A discussion where Einsteinian gravity is of equal merit as me smashing my keyboard devalues the idea of communication.For me the value lies in seeing why people are committed to their beliefs about one form of afterlife, or the lack of any continued perceived existence whatsoever. I honestly do not hold the view that death is the end, and that's part of why I'm excited for it. Knowing that others do not feel the same way is somewhat saddening, in some ways, and conversation is a way to become closer over the matter.
I want an actual answer here.What is the value of a conversation where all positions and assertions are fundamentally equal? A discussion where Einsteinian gravity is of equal merit as me smashing my keyboard devalues the idea of communication.
I didn't feel anything before I was born, there's no compelling evidence suggesting I'll feel after, and a lot of sound reasoning suggesting it's the end.
Quote from: Winy on October 12, 2015, 10:51:35 PM I didn't feel anything before I was born, there's no compelling evidence suggesting I'll feel after, and a lot of sound reasoning suggesting it's the end. One could assert that you just had no mechanism of memory before being born. After all none of us can describe the experience of being <2 yet we know we experienced that. Of course it's impossible to describe how experience can be had with no tangible object, I'm just playing devil's advocate for the argument of "I didn't feel being alive before this."
How is it saddening? Everything that makes me alive stops when I die. My brain shuts off, my heart stops, and my blood stops flowing. To me, there's no logical conclusion that can be made from this other than your sensations stop in all ways. I didn't feel anything before I was born, there's no compelling evidence suggesting I'll feel after, and a lot of sound reasoning suggesting it's the end. I can understand people who want to use faith as a means to justify this belief, but I don't understand how someone can try to reason it.
I'm not sure what sound reason you are referring to. I know there have been times in my life when I have been fully functional as a human that may not have even happened as far as I'm concerned because of the anesthetic drugs I was made to use. Like, knowing that I was conscious, speaking, and performing normally, but not being able to remember it . . . that is what I liken the possibility of death between life to.
would everything you've been through ever be justified in this life? Like, would anything ever make it all worth it for you?
Quote from: Lotus on October 12, 2015, 11:40:09 PMwould everything you've been through ever be justified in this life? Like, would anything ever make it all worth it for you?I don't live my life with the intention of eternal salvation or damnation. Why would I need to justify my existence in the first place? I didn't really ask to be born in the first place, why is it my job to come up with a reason for it?Life is what you make it. If life's down, it's because you've failed your ambitions or goals for yourself, not because you didn't live up to a book's definition of being a good person.And I don't think being fertilizer really counts as an "experience"; you wouldn't even be unconsciously aware of it, much less consciously. Because you're dead.
For those of you that say there's probably nothing, or don't expect anything afterwards.......ask yourself, would everything you've been through ever be justified in this life? Like, would anything ever make it all worth it for you?
Quote from: Prime Megaten on October 12, 2015, 11:55:08 PMQuote from: Lotus on October 12, 2015, 11:40:09 PMwould everything you've been through ever be justified in this life? Like, would anything ever make it all worth it for you?I don't live my life with the intention of eternal salvation or damnation. Why would I need to justify my existence in the first place? I didn't really ask to be born in the first place, why is it my job to come up with a reason for it?Life is what you make it. If life's down, it's because you've failed your ambitions or goals for yourself, not because you didn't live up to a book's definition of being a good person.And I don't think being fertilizer really counts as an "experience"; you wouldn't even be unconsciously aware of it, much less consciously. Because you're dead.No, not justify your existence, I was referring to justifying all the trouble a person will go through. Some people might be inclined to think that nothing in this life will ever make up for all the trouble they've experienced.Uhm, sure, I don't disagree with that.And I never said conscious, did I? That's what makes the whole thing interesting.
Actually I sometimes wonder if it's possible to "exist" as a rock. Could you have that metaphysical/whatever-explanation interface into such an object such that you could "perceive" its being? Obviously as humans we are, in some ways, just rocks, and our interface is somehow aware of the changes in state within the brain, which themselves can be indicative of changes in state of the body as a whole. So asking what it's like to be fertilizer isn't too far outside my personal scope, but it's not exactly the easiest thing to conceive of/relate to considering.
Quote from: Lotus on October 12, 2015, 11:40:09 PMFor those of you that say there's probably nothing, or don't expect anything afterwards.......ask yourself, would everything you've been through ever be justified in this life? Like, would anything ever make it all worth it for you?Former question: no. I can solidly say that I'd prefer to never have been bored. Latter question: well to me I think a lot of sexual satisfaction could hold me distract me from assessing that so yeah.
Actually I sometimes wonder if it's possible to "exist" as a rock.
Quote from: Tsirist on October 13, 2015, 12:21:04 AMActually I sometimes wonder if it's possible to "exist" as a rock.Rocks don't have brains, or anything comparable to brains; they are just pieces of compacted sediment. You can't exist as a rock, no.
How does that precise firing of electrical signals contain that specific idea, or thought?
Quote from: Lotus on October 13, 2015, 12:10:06 AMQuote from: Prime Megaten on October 12, 2015, 11:55:08 PMQuote from: Lotus on October 12, 2015, 11:40:09 PMwould everything you've been through ever be justified in this life? Like, would anything ever make it all worth it for you?I don't live my life with the intention of eternal salvation or damnation. Why would I need to justify my existence in the first place? I didn't really ask to be born in the first place, why is it my job to come up with a reason for it?Life is what you make it. If life's down, it's because you've failed your ambitions or goals for yourself, not because you didn't live up to a book's definition of being a good person.And I don't think being fertilizer really counts as an "experience"; you wouldn't even be unconsciously aware of it, much less consciously. Because you're dead.No, not justify your existence, I was referring to justifying all the trouble a person will go through. Some people might be inclined to think that nothing in this life will ever make up for all the trouble they've experienced.Uhm, sure, I don't disagree with that.And I never said conscious, did I? That's what makes the whole thing interesting.you don't need to justify life, because it's not something that really can be.
Quote from: Prime Megaten on October 13, 2015, 12:23:46 AMQuote from: Tsirist on October 13, 2015, 12:21:04 AMActually I sometimes wonder if it's possible to "exist" as a rock.Rocks don't have brains, or anything comparable to brains; they are just pieces of compacted sediment. You can't exist as a rock, no.Rocks are made of the same things humans are, friend. So long as I cannot identify what "part" of me enables me to be here and experience this, I will conclude that such an interface may be more adaptable than that.
I don't know about you, but no, I am definitely not made of sediment or volcanic ash. This isn't about "interfaces", we aren't monitors or touchscreens; our consciousness is the result of the brain. No brain (or equivalent) means no ability to comprehend existence.
Quote from: Prime Megaten on October 13, 2015, 12:29:58 AMI don't know about you, but no, I am definitely not made of sediment or volcanic ash. This isn't about "interfaces", we aren't monitors or touchscreens; our consciousness is the result of the brain. No brain (or equivalent) means no ability to comprehend existence.When you break it all down it's all the same stuff; atoms, subatomic particles, oscillating fields. What I'm saying is that I believe that, while consciousness is the result of the brain, perceptual experience is a step beyond that and is not a result of the brain, but instead feeds out some data on the brain's state in the form of experience. I say this because while everything about my body and brain changes all the time, my experience and perception, as a thing unto itself, seems not to.
Quote from: Tsirist on October 13, 2015, 12:26:00 AMQuote from: Prime Megaten on October 13, 2015, 12:23:46 AMQuote from: Tsirist on October 13, 2015, 12:21:04 AMActually I sometimes wonder if it's possible to "exist" as a rock.Rocks don't have brains, or anything comparable to brains; they are just pieces of compacted sediment. You can't exist as a rock, no.Rocks are made of the same things humans are, friend. So long as I cannot identify what "part" of me enables me to be here and experience this, I will conclude that such an interface may be more adaptable than that.I don't know about you, but no, I am definitely not made of sediment or volcanic ash. This isn't about "interfaces", we aren't monitors or touchscreens; our consciousness is the result of the brain. No brain (or equivalent) means no ability to comprehend existence.
Quote from: Deadtrap on October 13, 2015, 12:22:08 AMHow does that precise firing of electrical signals contain that specific idea, or thought?My best explanation is that they don't carry "ideas", but your brain is hard coded to remember stimuli. "Muscle memory" is an example of that; you don't consciously know what you're doing, it's just an evolutionary response to adapt to your environment. If that means learning algebra, then your brain remembers the conditions in which it was stimulated in such a way that it sets a precedent for future encounters to be used and built upon.
A brain is no more than a system of receptors working in assembly as physics sees fit, how is that a fundamentally different process that produces the sensation of experience (note that this is distinct from simply responding to environmental stimuli)? Component A clicks into Component C and causes a reaction, that reaction is what we experience. However, how is that reaction fundamentally different from two rocks hitting each other? Both are just the same atomic particles interacting in ways that physics dictates.
Perception is a result of consciousness; consciousness doesn't occur without a brain-equivalent.And if your perceptions have never changed, you might want to get your noggin' checked. That sounds like a learning disability to me.