Total Members Voted: 25
Quote from: Prime Megaten on October 12, 2015, 01:10:33 AMQuote from: Carsonogen on October 12, 2015, 01:07:58 AMDepends how literally you take it. "I" in a basic sense would be the brain. Everything you see yourself as is exclusive to that organ, along with your consciousness and sentience. But if you take the statement literally, the first option would make more sense. You wouldn't be you if you were suddenly a quadriplegic.I think the question is asking which is the more honest answer; whether you believe that "I" means the brain itself and its thought, or yourself as a whole.Yeah, I definitely interpret "I" as meaning "my brain."I don't personally identify with my body at all.
Quote from: Carsonogen on October 12, 2015, 01:07:58 AMDepends how literally you take it. "I" in a basic sense would be the brain. Everything you see yourself as is exclusive to that organ, along with your consciousness and sentience. But if you take the statement literally, the first option would make more sense. You wouldn't be you if you were suddenly a quadriplegic.I think the question is asking which is the more honest answer; whether you believe that "I" means the brain itself and its thought, or yourself as a whole.
Depends how literally you take it. "I" in a basic sense would be the brain. Everything you see yourself as is exclusive to that organ, along with your consciousness and sentience. But if you take the statement literally, the first option would make more sense. You wouldn't be you if you were suddenly a quadriplegic.
I wouldn't say that has anything to do with being right or wrong, anyway; it's a question that is directly about your perceptions and interpretations.
Quote from: Prime Megaten on October 12, 2015, 01:14:21 AMI wouldn't say that has anything to do with being right or wrong, anyway; it's a question that is directly about your perceptions and interpretations.Right. Which only leaves one thing, really.SpoilerWhose interpretation is better?SpoilerMine. Spoiler:^)
I don't agree that our bodies are part of us. Our bodies are nothing. You could have a different body, and you'd still be the same person. You could have no body, and you'd still be the same person.You aren't a different person if you wear a different shirt.
The countless factors that create an ever layered individual personality from pre birth to the moment we die cannot be credited to the mind alone.
Quote from: Jocephalopod on October 12, 2015, 01:31:30 AMThe countless factors that create an ever layered individual personality from pre birth to the moment we die cannot be credited to the mind alone.Not if you exclude all those factors.
Quote from: Verbatim on October 12, 2015, 01:32:30 AMQuote from: Jocephalopod on October 12, 2015, 01:31:30 AMThe countless factors that create an ever layered individual personality from pre birth to the moment we die cannot be credited to the mind alone.Not if you exclude all those factors.That's a bit disingenuous tbh
Then you would be excluding the development of personality itself.
Quote from: Prime Megaten on October 12, 2015, 01:35:19 AMQuote from: Verbatim on October 12, 2015, 01:32:30 AMQuote from: Jocephalopod on October 12, 2015, 01:31:30 AMThe countless factors that create an ever layered individual personality from pre birth to the moment we die cannot be credited to the mind alone.Not if you exclude all those factors.That's a bit disingenuous tbhBut that's what I've been saying, though. If you cut your self down to its root, excluding all environmental factors, leaving only the very concept of your individuality intact, then... there you have it. That's the "I".
Quote from: Jocephalopod on October 12, 2015, 01:36:12 AMThen you would be excluding the development of personality itself.Sure. Are people not predisposed to certain personality traits anyway?
What I'm trying to say is that there is no root. There cannot be personality without interaction.And the very concept of individuality is based on the fact that we can interact with reality.
Quote from: Verbatim on October 12, 2015, 01:38:09 AMQuote from: Jocephalopod on October 12, 2015, 01:36:12 AMThen you would be excluding the development of personality itself.Sure. Are people not predisposed to certain personality traits anyway?Predisposition != inevitability. A predisposition toward alcoholism doesn't mean a confirmation that the person is guaranteed to become an alcohol, only that he or she should definitely abstain from it judging by family history.
Quote from: Jocephalopod on October 12, 2015, 01:40:49 AMWhat I'm trying to say is that there is no root. There cannot be personality without interaction.And the very concept of individuality is based on the fact that we can interact with reality.Then we fundamentally disagree. I say there IS a root.
We can't disagree, because what you're saying is biologically impossible.
Quote from: Prime Megaten on October 12, 2015, 01:42:02 AMQuote from: Verbatim on October 12, 2015, 01:38:09 AMQuote from: Jocephalopod on October 12, 2015, 01:36:12 AMThen you would be excluding the development of personality itself.Sure. Are people not predisposed to certain personality traits anyway?Predisposition != inevitability. A predisposition toward alcoholism doesn't mean a confirmation that the person is guaranteed to become an alcohol, only that he or she should definitely abstain from it judging by family history.I never said that. The predisposition is still there, regardless, lying dormant.
That doesn't mean that you'd be guaranteed the same evolution of responses, only that there's a possibility of some number of traits re-emerging.
Quote from: Prime Megaten on October 12, 2015, 01:45:49 AMThat doesn't mean that you'd be guaranteed the same evolution of responses, only that there's a possibility of some number of traits re-emerging.Exactly. So what's the problem?
Quote from: Verbatim on October 12, 2015, 01:46:27 AMQuote from: Prime Megaten on October 12, 2015, 01:45:49 AMThat doesn't mean that you'd be guaranteed the same evolution of responses, only that there's a possibility of some number of traits re-emerging.Exactly. So what's the problem?Different circumstances, a same personality does not make.
Quote from: Prime Megaten on October 12, 2015, 01:47:52 AMQuote from: Verbatim on October 12, 2015, 01:46:27 AMQuote from: Prime Megaten on October 12, 2015, 01:45:49 AMThat doesn't mean that you'd be guaranteed the same evolution of responses, only that there's a possibility of some number of traits re-emerging.Exactly. So what's the problem?Different circumstances, a same personality does not make.I'm not saying it does, though. :-/ Refer to my edit.
It's not even a framework, they are simple yes or no questions like "do you like the color blue"? They mean something eventually, but they alone don't set any kind of foundation for your evolution. They just stake possible ground.
Quote from: Jocephalopod on October 12, 2015, 01:44:41 AMWe can't disagree, because what you're saying is biologically impossible.Got proof, or?...
Quote from: Prime Megaten on October 12, 2015, 01:47:52 AMIt's not even a framework, they are simple yes or no questions like "do you like the color blue"? They mean something eventually, but they alone don't set any kind of foundation for your evolution. They just stake possible ground.All right--then "I" = possible ground. Call it whatever you want.
Some fun stuff in here.https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personality_developmentAlong with the other wikipedia article I posted
That makes "I" incredibly vague; would that mean that evolutions from that initial plot are "I"s as well, or are they "you"s? At what point does an "I" become an "I"? The age at which memory begins, or with a solid understanding of self-awareness? When does it stop being "I", and start being something else? Is it always "I" so long as it started as one?
Quote from: Cadenza on October 12, 2015, 12:30:59 AMAre you really going to base the entire difference between us, the entire uniqueness of your existence, on the fact that you're having a conversation with someone who holds a different opinion? going up a level in abstraction, people talking to other people is not unique at all, everyone who can do so, does. Now while the specifics change from place to place and from time to time, the very nature of it all is just the same thing happening again and again. Think of it like molecules of water, regardless of whether or not it's in a cloud or a frozen comet or a pig's liver, it's always just two hydrogen's bonded to and oxygen. As long as you're a human, you're not terribly different from me or anyone else, and the differences that do exist are mostly superfluous.The key part of your description is "not terribly different"; that implies that there is a difference regardless of the size.People can act so similar that, just over text, it would be hard to distinguish them. Hatd, but possible, that is. If you add in the physical element, that completely changes the situation; you could tell two people who act a lot alike by simply seeing that they aren't the same person. "You" are the combination of memorable traits, whether they be physical or not. A combination, not one or the other.That's why we aren't the same person. Even if we looked exactly the same, there are discrepancies in our personalities that can be seen in common situations such as this debate. If we had the same personality, we'd still be different people; we don't look the same.That's my entire rational here; same != similar. If I had a different body, I might be similar, but I wouldn't be the same.
Are you really going to base the entire difference between us, the entire uniqueness of your existence, on the fact that you're having a conversation with someone who holds a different opinion? going up a level in abstraction, people talking to other people is not unique at all, everyone who can do so, does. Now while the specifics change from place to place and from time to time, the very nature of it all is just the same thing happening again and again. Think of it like molecules of water, regardless of whether or not it's in a cloud or a frozen comet or a pig's liver, it's always just two hydrogen's bonded to and oxygen. As long as you're a human, you're not terribly different from me or anyone else, and the differences that do exist are mostly superfluous.
Quote from: Prime Megaten on October 12, 2015, 01:54:12 AMThat makes "I" incredibly vague; would that mean that evolutions from that initial plot are "I"s as well, or are they "you"s? At what point does an "I" become an "I"? The age at which memory begins, or with a solid understanding of self-awareness? When does it stop being "I", and start being something else? Is it always "I" so long as it started as one?Of course it's vague--you're taking an individual and stripping him of everything that makes him him, leaving only his predispositions intact, because they're there from birth. It's gonna be pretty vague. I don't really know the answer to those questions, but I don't think they're necessary to understanding the concept of it.
That makes "I" incredibly vague; would that mean that evolutions from that initial plot are "I"s as well, or are they "you"s? At what point does an "I" become an "I"? The age at which memory begins, or with a solid understanding of self-awareness? When does it stop being "I", and start being something else? Is it always "I" so long as it started as one?I'm not arguing against you here, I just don't completely understand what you're saying.
I just don't understand how that can still be an "I", or "me", if it doesn't have anything to do with either of those things. It's a primordial playground, not an identifier of... identity.
Quote from: Jocephalopod on October 12, 2015, 01:53:55 AMSome fun stuff in here.https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Personality_developmentAlong with the other wikipedia article I postedI mean, like, proof proof. Some kind of research paper or something. I don't know if I really want to read a Wikipedia article on the subject, because Wikipedia isn't really great at the whole "concrete empirical evidence" thing.