Johnny Canuck2 said:If it will make you feel better, or will help concretise for you your sense of intellectual self-worth, then by all means, do it.
That sounds like a projection from where I'm sitting. It certainly wasn't asking nicely.
Johnny Canuck2 said:If it will make you feel better, or will help concretise for you your sense of intellectual self-worth, then by all means, do it.
Knotted said:That sounds like a projection from where I'm sitting. It certainly wasn't asking nicely.
Johnny Canuck2 said:It's not projection, since I couldn't explain the interrelationship between gravity and the second law of thermodynamics.
But even if I could, I wouldn't insert it holus bolus into a philosophical discussion about determinism.
Knotted said:Well if someone expresses increduility that our everyday world is predicted by ordinary physical laws stemming from unspecial initial conditions, then its nice for them to know that their increduility is not misplaced because according to cosmologists the initial conditions of the universe are mindbogglingly improbable because they were uniform.
Johnny Canuck2 said:Aside from the fact that the cosmologists are talking theory and therefore might be incorrect.
Knotted said:Well does it? If it does then I suggest that your definition of 'randomness' does not describe entropy and the definition of entropy I gave you might help your intuition - it helps mine.
Honestly, there is no conflict between the theory of gravity and the second law of thermodynamics. Admittedly its quite a complex matter mathematically. I might even go through it with you if you ask nicely enough. It would be good for me to concretise my understanding anyway.
muser said:Please allow me to ask nicely.
If you could harness the energy the energy of a black hole it would be far in excess of the system's energy before the creation of the black hole. Is this a spurious breaking of the second law of thermodynamics.
Knotted said:What you've actually described here is the breaking of the first law of thermodynamics - the conservation of (heat) energy. The second law describes how energy tends to be distributed over time - it passes from a warm body to a cold body.
However the question is still valid! The first law is still a law. The formation of a black hole converts a lot of matter into energy. Einsteins famous equation E=mc^2 describes this. Essentially you get a lot of energy for the quantity of matter.
Johnny Canuck2 said:What does this have to do with determinism?
Knotted said:What you've actually described here is the breaking of the first law of thermodynamics - the conservation of (heat) energy. The second law describes how energy tends to be distributed over time - it passes from a warm body to a cold body.
However the question is still valid! The first law is still a law. The formation of a black hole converts a lot of matter into energy. Einsteins famous equation E=mc^2 describes this. Essentially you get a lot of energy for the quantity of matter.
muser said:I knew cutting class would prove costly. Is it a 'pure' conversion, i.e. 100%. It fascinates me that there is energy everywhere, though no way of converting the majority of it. I think it was jonti, a few post back, who stated that to be free of the system you would have to be outside it. In a psychological sense that would be nibbana depending on your beliefs.
118118 said:I don't suppose someone could explain what a law is? JohnnyCannuck2 - you seem to be saying that we create laws, but they are mind-independent - I assume that you mean a "physical fact of the geometry of matter-energy in space-time". Could you explain why you are not saying that our thoughts determine the geometry of space time, here?
Cheers
muser said:I can't find the post, but someone made the observation about microtubules and whether determinism existed or didn't at the quantum level. If we interact with the quantum vacuum via our microtubules and that in turn play a part in our thought process, couldn't it be argued that the vacuum (although not always) is independent of deterministic forces (or at least as envisage by us).
I saw this link a year ago, and lost it and couldn't find it until now.
http://www.quantumconsciousness.org/
Johnny Canuck2 said:I know there must be a simple explanation for this, but if random events occur at the micro level, why don't they also occur at the macro, physical level, like a tree disappearing in front of your eyes?
If this microrandomness allegedly presages our free will, then it should also be demonstrable in the physical world as well.
Johnny Canuck2 said:Friend, it's the end of the day here, and my brain simply cannot be dragged into consideration of Kant's concepts of noumena and phenomena right at the moment. For the love of god....
But later....
muser said:JC2, 118 is pulling you up on earlier statement of yours. Do we create laws or are the laws there whether we acknowledge them or not. You opted for the former and are, now, contradicting that assertion.
This is very thought provoking stuff, and well worth taking seriously, imho. After all, who better than an Anesthesiologist to discuss the material grounds of consciousness?muser said:I can't find the post, but someone made the observation about microtubules and whether determinism existed or didn't at the quantum level. If we interact with the quantum vacuum via our microtubules and that in turn play a part in our thought process, couldn't it be argued that the vacuum (although not always) is independent of deterministic forces (or at least as envisage by us).
I saw this link a year ago, and lost it and couldn't find it until now.
http://www.quantumconsciousness.org/
... and ignorance is protection against projection, we are to assumeIt's not projection, since I couldn't explain the interrelationship between gravity and the second law of thermodynamics.
Unless one is doing Natural Philosophy, of courseKnotted said:I think I have broken one of the cardinal rules of philosophy. Never discuss actual physics when discussing metaphysics.
The thing is that I don't see how laws = human descriptions, and that laws are mind independent.Johnny Canuck2 said:No, what I said was that 'laws' are the human attempts at description of natural 9r physical processes. Go back and check my earlier post.
muser said:I knew cutting class would prove costly. Is it a 'pure' conversion, i.e. 100%. It fascinates me that there is energy everywhere, though no way of converting the majority of it. I think it was jonti, a few post back, who stated that to be free of the system you would have to be outside it. In a psychological sense that would be nibbana depending on your beliefs.
Jonti said:This is very thought provoking stuff, and well worth taking seriously, imho. After all, who better than an Anesthesiologist to discuss the material grounds of consciousness?
Jonti said:However, in terms of the debate between freewill and determinism, the theories of Hameroff and Penrose are determinist. Although they seek a physical explanation of consciousness, they do not seek to define and physically characterise freewill (qua the reality of choice).
muser said:I can't find the post, but someone made the observation about microtubules and whether determinism existed or didn't at the quantum level. If we interact with the quantum vacuum via our microtubules and that in turn play a part in our thought process, couldn't it be argued that the vacuum (although not always) is independent of deterministic forces (or at least as envisage by us).
Actually, it's not at all extraordinary. When one is dealing with interactions betwen molecules, one is (of course!) into things at the scale of quantum phenomena. Even quite large molecules exhibit quantum effects. And chemical bonds themselves are mediated by electrons taking up "orbits" which are described in terms of QM.Knotted said:If I remember rightly, one of the things that Hameroff claims is that anaesthetics works via quantum process rather than chemical processes. I've no idea whether this is true but it seems quite extraodinary if he's right.
Stunning stuff, eh?Hameroff said:The gas anesthetics are the most interesting because they work by very weak, purely physical, quantum-mechanical interactions. They don't form chemical or ionic bonds of any kind, they're not polar molecules, they don't bind to receptors and they can be inert. For example the inert gas xenon is an anesthetic.
What problem of nature is this interpretation or philosophy trying to solve? It seems to be trying to deal with the fact that many, many, many (for the largest possible value of many) futures can flow the QM description of, uhh, the now. Every possible one, they say.Knotted said:That's more or less the many worlds interpretation of quantum mechanics. It can be made consistent with scientific results from quantum mechanics, but I don't think it really explains very much. Its also quite an alarming idea in my view!
No, me neither. But they are118118 said:The thing is that I don't see how laws = human descriptions, and that laws are mind independent.
Jonti said:No, me neither. But they are
You are asking about the ontological status of natural law, and in asking that, you are also asking the fundamental epistemiological question "How is knowledge possible?". No one knows the answer, and delighted as I am to see JC2 cornered, I think it's only fair to cop to that.
Knowledge is something consciousness has, about the world. To understand knowledge one must first understand consciousness and its world.