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  4. This is disgusting [modified]

This is disgusting [modified]

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Back Room
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  • S Stan Shannon

    Oakman wrote:

    is that he (like me) does not claim to have T.H.E. A.N.S.W.E.R. But, unlike too many folks who think that everything there is to know has already been discovered, he does not let the fact that he does not know it, mean that he dismisses the question.

    Exactly. This all smacks too much of trying to keep the earth at the center of the universe so that the underlieing philosophical foundations that everyone is invested in won't be disturbed. We force things to conform to some predefined rationality. But there can be no true progress unless you are capable of stepping outside that box.

    Chaining ourselves to the moral high ground does not make us good guys. Aside from making us easy targets, it merely makes us idiotic prisoners of our own self loathing.

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    soap brain
    wrote on last edited by
    #87

    Stan Shannon wrote:

    Exactly. This all smacks too much of trying to keep the earth at the center of the universe so that the underlieing philosophical foundations that everyone is invested in won't be disturbed.

    Not at all. Everyone thinks that the scientific community is conspiring against them when it doesn't accept their ideas, but the fact is that if you had solid evidence and not just a garbled mess of ill-defined words, then men of science would happily cast Earth to the periphery of the great unknown.

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    • O Oakman

      Fisticuffs wrote:

      we prove a negative - that there is nothing beyond the physical processes that we understand

      There are, of course, many people who think that there are no physical processes we do not understand. The technical term for such a perion is "idiot." But I await your attempts to prove that there is nothing left to learn.

      Fisticuffs wrote:

      The simple fact is that based on a preponderance of existing evidence, the brain is the location where the emergent human mind arises.

      So? What does that have to do with the price of tea in China? Where was the mind - or soul- before there was a brain? Where does it go after the brain ceases to function? Don't make the mistake of thinking they are the same thing. They aren't, or at least don't have to be anymore than the house is the human. To believe that there is nothing in this universe than can be created or destroyed is not particularly unscientific. To assume, for some reason, that the human mind/soul is the only thing that can be destroyed, appears to me to be a belief-structure and not observation.

      Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface

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      Lost User
      wrote on last edited by
      #88

      Oakman wrote:

      Don't make the mistake of thinking they are the same thing. They aren't, or at least don't have to be anymore than the house is the human.

      Show me some evidence for that. (and you're right, i should have said 'that we _can_ understand,' not what we understand. Pedant. :P)

      - F

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      • S soap brain

        You're a biochemist, right?

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        Lost User
        wrote on last edited by
        #89

        Heh, not so much anymore - did my undergrad in biochem, now I'm about halfway through my MD. I've been in school forever! :~

        - F

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        • L Lost User

          Heh, not so much anymore - did my undergrad in biochem, now I'm about halfway through my MD. I've been in school forever! :~

          - F

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          soap brain
          wrote on last edited by
          #90

          MD...you're becoming a doctor? (Sorry if I'm wrong, I don't actually know anything)

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          • S soap brain

            MD...you're becoming a doctor? (Sorry if I'm wrong, I don't actually know anything)

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            Lost User
            wrote on last edited by
            #91

            Yep, as long as they don't kick me out :D.

            - F

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            • L Lost User

              Yep, as long as they don't kick me out :D.

              - F

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              soap brain
              wrote on last edited by
              #92

              Oh cool! :) What are you specialising in?

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              • S soap brain

                Oh cool! :) What are you specialising in?

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                Lost User
                wrote on last edited by
                #93

                Oh, I have no clue yet, hee. Edging more towards a medical specialty than surgical right now, but they tell us not to worry too much about it, we'll figure it out once we start full-time at the hospital next year. I'm just looking forward to getting out of the books :thumbsup:.

                - F

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                • L Lost User

                  Oh, I have no clue yet, hee. Edging more towards a medical specialty than surgical right now, but they tell us not to worry too much about it, we'll figure it out once we start full-time at the hospital next year. I'm just looking forward to getting out of the books :thumbsup:.

                  - F

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                  soap brain
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #94

                  Ohh, OK. Awesome. So, quick quiz: 1) How many layers does the pericardium have? 2) How many ATPs are produced by aerobic cellular respiration? 3) How many sacral vertebrae form the sacrum? ;P Good luck!

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                  • S soap brain

                    Butt out of this, dickface.

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                    Ilion
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #95

                    Ravel H. Joyce wrote:

                    Butt out of this, dickface.

                    Ah! The conjunction of your two favorite things.

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                    • I Ilion

                      Ravel H. Joyce wrote:

                      Butt out of this, dickface.

                      Ah! The conjunction of your two favorite things.

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                      soap brain
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #96

                      Ilíon wrote:

                      Ah! The conjunction of your two favorite things.

                      Ooh, clever. You should either join in the discussion or shut yer cake-hole. I know you feel valiant when you dart in and out calling people trolls and scattering asterisks all over the floor, but you actually just appear dick-in-butt retarded.

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                      • L Lost User

                        Oakman wrote:

                        Don't make the mistake of thinking they are the same thing. They aren't, or at least don't have to be anymore than the house is the human.

                        Show me some evidence for that. (and you're right, i should have said 'that we _can_ understand,' not what we understand. Pedant. :P)

                        - F

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                        Oakman
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #97

                        Fisticuffs wrote:

                        Oakman wrote: Don't make the mistake of thinking they are the same thing. They aren't, or at least don't have to be anymore than the house is the human. Show me some evidence for that.

                        Show that they don't have to be? Shall I understand that you think they are the same or are you indulging in rhetorical tricks?

                        Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface

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                        • O Oakman

                          Fisticuffs wrote:

                          Oakman wrote: Don't make the mistake of thinking they are the same thing. They aren't, or at least don't have to be anymore than the house is the human. Show me some evidence for that.

                          Show that they don't have to be? Shall I understand that you think they are the same or are you indulging in rhetorical tricks?

                          Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface

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                          Lost User
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #98

                          Yes. Show me some evidence that says there is a soul, a mind, something that is measurably distinct from the brain. Because right now the simplest and best supported hypotheses say that the workings of the brain is sufficient to explain the human experience. If you have evidence for a soul or a mind separate from that process, let's hear about it. It's absolutely a serious question.

                          - F

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                          • S soap brain

                            Stan Shannon wrote:

                            Exactly. This all smacks too much of trying to keep the earth at the center of the universe so that the underlieing philosophical foundations that everyone is invested in won't be disturbed.

                            Not at all. Everyone thinks that the scientific community is conspiring against them when it doesn't accept their ideas, but the fact is that if you had solid evidence and not just a garbled mess of ill-defined words, then men of science would happily cast Earth to the periphery of the great unknown.

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                            Stan Shannon
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #99

                            Ravel H. Joyce wrote:

                            Everyone thinks that the scientific community

                            I wasn't referring to the scientific community. I was refering to you, fisty, and the entire social movement that uses every otherwise unrelated bit of scientific research to give its political views some sort of phoney legitimacy. I realize that it might be difficult for you to accept, but you have no relationship at all to any entity that can be legitimately called 'the scientific community' and probably never will.

                            Chaining ourselves to the moral high ground does not make us good guys. Aside from making us easy targets, it merely makes us idiotic prisoners of our own self loathing.

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                            • S soap brain

                              Stan Shannon wrote:

                              Yes, you are. You are saying explicitely that consciousness is being generated by the brain, that it is a unique property of the universe which does not exist until some particular arrangment of matter just happens to occur. That it does not have any more basic physical reality than dancing around like a ghost on a 100 trillion neural connections, or what ever the magic number was.

                              It has the same physical reality as a traffic jam. It doesn't exist until you have traffic, and it depends on how many cars you have and how they're arranged.

                              Stan Shannon wrote:

                              All I'm saying is that that is a questionable assumption. I submit that it makes more sense to assume that the brain has evolved to adapt to some as yet mysterious property of the universe which we experience as consciousness. That, if consciousness exists, that there is no reason to suppose that it must exist in only one particular arrangment of matter and energy.

                              I think that that's extremely unlikely. Why would there be a completely undetectable 'mind field' extending throughout all of space and only interacting with a particular arrangement of matter? Why would people have separate consciousnesses if they were all interacting with the same field? And what 'property of reality' did the gallbladder adapt to?

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                              Stan Shannon
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #100

                              Ravel H. Joyce wrote:

                              It has the same physical reality as a traffic jam. It doesn't exist until you have traffic, and it depends on how many cars you have and how they're arranged.

                              That is actually a perfect example. The traffic jam consists of component parts, what does conscioiusness consist of?

                              Ravel H. Joyce wrote:

                              Why would there be a completely undetectable 'mind field' extending throughout all of space

                              Why would there be space itself?

                              Ravel H. Joyce wrote:

                              only interacting with a particular arrangement of matter

                              I never suggested that. Perhaps it pervades everything as a fundamental property of the universe. Perhpas the brain is merely adpated to provide observational properties to consciousness.

                              Ravel H. Joyce wrote:

                              Why would people have separate consciousnesses if they were all interacting with the same field?

                              Perhaps we don't - only different perspectives.

                              Ravel H. Joyce wrote:

                              And what 'property of reality' did the gallbladder adapt to?

                              I don't know, but my guess would be teenagers...

                              Chaining ourselves to the moral high ground does not make us good guys. Aside from making us easy targets, it merely makes us idiotic prisoners of our own self loathing.

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                              • L Lost User

                                Yes. Show me some evidence that says there is a soul, a mind, something that is measurably distinct from the brain. Because right now the simplest and best supported hypotheses say that the workings of the brain is sufficient to explain the human experience. If you have evidence for a soul or a mind separate from that process, let's hear about it. It's absolutely a serious question.

                                - F

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                                Stan Shannon
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #101

                                Fisticuffs wrote:

                                It's absolutely a serious question.

                                Thats all we've been saying...

                                Chaining ourselves to the moral high ground does not make us good guys. Aside from making us easy targets, it merely makes us idiotic prisoners of our own self loathing.

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                                • S Stan Shannon

                                  Ravel H. Joyce wrote:

                                  It has the same physical reality as a traffic jam. It doesn't exist until you have traffic, and it depends on how many cars you have and how they're arranged.

                                  That is actually a perfect example. The traffic jam consists of component parts, what does conscioiusness consist of?

                                  Ravel H. Joyce wrote:

                                  Why would there be a completely undetectable 'mind field' extending throughout all of space

                                  Why would there be space itself?

                                  Ravel H. Joyce wrote:

                                  only interacting with a particular arrangement of matter

                                  I never suggested that. Perhaps it pervades everything as a fundamental property of the universe. Perhpas the brain is merely adpated to provide observational properties to consciousness.

                                  Ravel H. Joyce wrote:

                                  Why would people have separate consciousnesses if they were all interacting with the same field?

                                  Perhaps we don't - only different perspectives.

                                  Ravel H. Joyce wrote:

                                  And what 'property of reality' did the gallbladder adapt to?

                                  I don't know, but my guess would be teenagers...

                                  Chaining ourselves to the moral high ground does not make us good guys. Aside from making us easy targets, it merely makes us idiotic prisoners of our own self loathing.

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                                  Oakman
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #102

                                  Stan Shannon wrote:

                                  don't know, but my guess would be teenagers...

                                  :thumbsup::thumbsup:

                                  Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface

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                                  • L Lost User

                                    Yes. Show me some evidence that says there is a soul, a mind, something that is measurably distinct from the brain. Because right now the simplest and best supported hypotheses say that the workings of the brain is sufficient to explain the human experience. If you have evidence for a soul or a mind separate from that process, let's hear about it. It's absolutely a serious question.

                                    - F

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                                    O Offline
                                    Oakman
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #103

                                    Fisticuffs wrote:

                                    Because right now the simplest and best supported hypotheses say that the workings of the brain is sufficient to explain the human experience

                                    A hypothesis is not a natural law. Implicit in your question is proof that you are not necessarily right. I have never claimed - read what I wrote instead of the straw-man you wish you were arguing with - that there is a mind/soul only that there is no Scientific Law nor Theory so accepted by the Scientific Community that the matter can be regarded as proven. If you wish to believe as a matter of faith that there is no such critter as a mind or a soul, that is, of course, your right. We have freedom of religion here. But, please, stop asking me to genuflect in front of the altar you have built to a supposition,

                                    Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface

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                                    • S soap brain

                                      Ohh, OK. Awesome. So, quick quiz: 1) How many layers does the pericardium have? 2) How many ATPs are produced by aerobic cellular respiration? 3) How many sacral vertebrae form the sacrum? ;P Good luck!

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                                      Lost User
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #104

                                      Oh, gawd. 1) I saw this question and my brain yelled, "Three! Myo, epi, pericardium!" Which obviously wasn't right, so I had to Wiki it to find the real answer. No points for me. (If you're interested in a disease process involving the pericardium, check out cardiac tamponade.) 2) ~30 mol ATP/1 mol glucose, IIRC, mostly from the ETC. 4 from glucose-->2 pyruvate and 3NADH+1GTP for the Krebs cycle? I could actually draw the whole damn thing out at one point including enzymes. 3) Usually five, fused. How'd I do? :D

                                      - F

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                                      • O Oakman

                                        Fisticuffs wrote:

                                        Because right now the simplest and best supported hypotheses say that the workings of the brain is sufficient to explain the human experience

                                        A hypothesis is not a natural law. Implicit in your question is proof that you are not necessarily right. I have never claimed - read what I wrote instead of the straw-man you wish you were arguing with - that there is a mind/soul only that there is no Scientific Law nor Theory so accepted by the Scientific Community that the matter can be regarded as proven. If you wish to believe as a matter of faith that there is no such critter as a mind or a soul, that is, of course, your right. We have freedom of religion here. But, please, stop asking me to genuflect in front of the altar you have built to a supposition,

                                        Jon Smith & Wesson: The original point and click interface

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                                        Lost User
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #105

                                        OK, I'm getting a clearer picture of where you're coming from, so I can say I start from the philosophical position: 1) That it's reasonable to require evidence for any belief including the existence of a soul 2) That a simpler explanation not requiring appealing to magical forces is usually a better and more useful one If you'd prefer to start from a different philosophical position (i.e. the existence of the supernatural), then I guess that's fine, but I'd argue that my philosophical position has a better track record of improving the sum total of human knowledge and quality of life. My apologies if I did misrepresent your position.

                                        - F

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                                        • G Gary Kirkham

                                          Jesus loves you, why do you keep rejecting Him?

                                          Gary Kirkham Forever Forgiven and Alive in the Spirit "Truly, truly, I say to you, he who hears My word, and believes Him who sent Me, has eternal life, and does not come into judgment, but has passed out of death into life. Me blog, You read

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                                          Al Beback
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #106

                                          Gary Kirkham wrote:

                                          Jesus loves you, why do you keep rejecting Him?

                                          Because I'm not gay.

                                          ShamWow

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