Page 10 of 11 [ 166 posts ]  Go to page Previous  1 ... 7, 8, 9, 10, 11  Next

01001011
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 3 Mar 2010
Age: 43
Gender: Male
Posts: 991

09 Oct 2010, 4:44 am

AngelRho wrote:
Emotions are emotions, not chemical reactions. Chemical reactions are physical responses to feelings.


Baseless assertion.

Quote:
Without consciousness, a sense of self, or the soul, there is no guiding principle behind which chemical reactions have a guide.


The chemicals only follow the laws of chemistry. Do you really think they are subject to a mysterious force of the soul? Bend a spoon.

Quote:
Otherwise, emotions are unguided and chaotic. For example, without the human will, "falling in love" simply doesn't happen. Now, I think feelings of attraction can't be avoided unless a person outright avoids people. But the response to attraction is entirely under human control. Hence, we are not victims subject to the whims of attraction or the random releases of chemicals.


Is that simply what you feel, or because you are uncomfortable with this FACT?

Quote:
Further, not all responses are common to all human beings. The same thing that inspires rage in one person evokes indifference in another. We choose beforehand how we will respond to stimuli and act accordingly. The "chemical reactions" are servants to the will, not the other way around.


That is because the structure of different human brains are different.



Jookia
Velociraptor
Velociraptor

User avatar

Joined: 7 Jan 2007
Age: 28
Gender: Male
Posts: 410

09 Oct 2010, 7:05 am

I'm gonna pick up the book 'The Grand Design' and look at it, it seems great to explain how the universe came about and science and all that stuff.



Bethie
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 26 Jul 2010
Age: 36
Gender: Female
Posts: 2,817
Location: My World, Highview, Louisville, Kentucky, USA, Earth, The Milky Way, Local Group, Local Supercluster

09 Oct 2010, 9:36 am

AngelRho wrote:
Bethie wrote:
Tensu wrote:
Just because something hasn't yet been proven doesn't automatically make it a hoax, lie, or hallucination. that is a very close-minded way of thinking.


Science is not math and therefore does not deal in "proofs" at all.
From an empirical standpoint, a concept with not a shred of evidence supporting it is PRECISELY a hallucination.

Tensu wrote:
and lust is a matter of chemicals. love is something entirely different.


Um. No. Love is a matter of chemicals as well, as are ALL our emotions. Research oxytocin.


Emotions are emotions, not chemical reactions. Chemical reactions are physical responses to feelings. Without consciousness, a sense of self, or the soul, there is no guiding principle behind which chemical reactions have a guide. Otherwise, emotions are unguided and chaotic. For example, without the human will, "falling in love" simply doesn't happen. Now, I think feelings of attraction can't be avoided unless a person outright avoids people. But the response to attraction is entirely under human control. Hence, we are not victims subject to the whims of attraction or the random releases of chemicals. Further, not all responses are common to all human beings. The same thing that inspires rage in one person evokes indifference in another. We choose beforehand how we will respond to stimuli and act accordingly. The "chemical reactions" are servants to the will, not the other way around.


I'm sorry. Insist that feelings are somehow "magical" and divorced from the physiological processes that cause them if you wish, but that's not reality. You can't "choose" to have a sudden release of chemicals in certain situations, this is a physical response to stimuli. Someone who references "souls" as being part of our emotive response obviously has a mystical view of all things scientific. :roll:


_________________
For there is another kind of violence, slower but just as deadly, destructive as the shot or the bomb in the night. This is the violence of institutions; indifference and inaction and slow decay.


Jono
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 10 Jul 2008
Age: 43
Gender: Male
Posts: 5,606
Location: Johannesburg, South Africa

09 Oct 2010, 11:27 am

AngelRho wrote:
DentArthurDent wrote:
That would make sense if there were a few hundred thousand or even a couple of million planets in the universe, as we could quite feasibly check them all out. But this is not the case. As you are no doubt aware it is estimated that there are between 1 - 30 billion planets in our galaxy and approximately 100 billion galaxies in the universe. Your statement above is just a massive strawman aimed at the gullible. As Dawkins points out even given massively absurd odds of (for instance) a billion to one that life will arise on a planet you still get the probability of at least 1 billion planets having some form of life, and as he also says the chance of finding one of those life bearing planets in a universe the scale of ours if like looking for the proverbial needle in a haystack.


Unless, of course, we ARE the needle in the haystack.

And there is no straw man. Where is the evidence of a comparable system? The issue here is there is no empirical evidence of it as of yet. Last I checked, scientific reasoning tends to ignore that for which there is no evidence. Empirically speaking, it is not correct to say that life exists beyond our solar system. Moreover, it is not correct to say that even the CAPACITY for life exists. I think we're looking at the possibility of water beneath the the surface of a Jovian moon, which seems promising, but that's about it at the moment.


Actually, all possibilities are considered with regards to things that are testable but have not yet been tested. The first planets to have been discovered outside our solar system have been gas giants like Jupiter because our telescopes and equipment could not be sensitive enough to see planets the size of Earth. This will change however, since we now have techniques and telescopes in space, like Kepler, that can actually detect such planets. It is not correct to say that the capacity doesn't exist because it has not been ruled out.

Also, every single chemical element that makes up a living organism is also found in non-living matter and the rest of the universe. If Earth and it's life were a separate creation then why are we even made of the same matter as the rest of the Universe? The atoms that make us up were once forged in core of an exploding star. The Earth and every living thing that crawls on it is not separate from the rest of the universe but part of it.



AngelRho
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 4 Jan 2008
Age: 45
Gender: Male
Posts: 9,366
Location: The Landmass between N.O. and Mobile

09 Oct 2010, 12:05 pm

01001011 wrote:
AngelRho wrote:
Emotions are emotions, not chemical reactions. Chemical reactions are physical responses to feelings.


Baseless assertion.

Quote:
Without consciousness, a sense of self, or the soul, there is no guiding principle behind which chemical reactions have a guide.


The chemicals only follow the laws of chemistry. Do you really think they are subject to a mysterious force of the soul? Bend a spoon.


Anybody can bend a spoon with their hands. The mechanism exists, and any good anatomy/physiology textbook can explain that--this is high school stuff. What the anatomy/physiology CAN'T determine is from whence the decision comes to bend the spoon. Science doesn't ask those kinds of questions UNLESS it can be determined that there is some physically determining reason by which we should bend spoons at all--for example, a chemical imbalance as a determining cause for someone to obsessively or compulsively bend every spoon he sees. Science is simply not equipped to make determinations under normal operating circumstances as to the reasons why. I'm sure you could go around asking people why it is they bend spoons and show common causal relationship among spoon-benders, but the data gathered is anecdotal at best. This kind of data gathering is best left to psychological investigation, and whether psychology is a legit science is still occasionally debated (by the way, I was forced to study psychology as an integral part of my major, which was music education, and understanding book knowledge of psych and data collection didn't help me one bit with teaching. There is a wide gap between theory and practice, which in no way diminishes the value of psychology. My wife did complete a degree in psychology and has a little bit better knowledge of the subject than I do, and she can back me up on what psych is and isn't. Psych can seem hokey in its various approaches, but being a comparably "hokey" science will not preclude the men in white coats from picking you up and locking you up in a hospital if you express even the remotest hint of self-destructive thoughts. My wife would say "been there, done that," and the irony is, through no real fault of her own, she got to experience that whole side of her field from the perspective of an unwilling patient). The point is, spoon-bending is a decision that one can make for a number of reasons or perhaps no reason at all--simple boredom, even. There is no reason at all, no evidence at all to suggest that cognitive and physical behavioral patterns aren't subject to the decision-making processes of the psyche or soul. The process of thinking is generally an orderly process, not random, chaotic, or confused except when a flawed physical sensory interface feeds the mind misleading information. When everything is functioning normally, most people in general tend to make sensible decisions and act accordingly. The CNS obeys the will of the person who occupies it and provides a physical interface with the natural world. No need for me to stare endlessly at a spoon to get it to bend. If I want to bend a spoon, there is a sensible way to make that happen.

01001011 wrote:
Quote:
Otherwise, emotions are unguided and chaotic. For example, without the human will, "falling in love" simply doesn't happen. Now, I think feelings of attraction can't be avoided unless a person outright avoids people. But the response to attraction is entirely under human control. Hence, we are not victims subject to the whims of attraction or the random releases of chemicals.


Is that simply what you feel, or because you are uncomfortable with this FACT?


Notice how I used the words "I think" in the quote you took from me. Even I can admit when I've drawn conclusions based on what I DO know about things I don't know. You're certainly under no obligation to agree. It remains, however, that we ARE responsible for our responses to emotions or "chemical processes," either way. Any criminal can certainly and legitimately make a case for being under the influence of "random chemical processes" in a court of law if this is true; but this kind of defense never holds up UNLESS it can actually be determined that there really is a physiological problem. People even in Biblical times had enough sense to tell the difference, even if they had no way to determine the actual physiological processes involved. We are self-trainable to decide beforehand how we will respond in various situations. Random chemical processes do not adequately explain why this is and actually cause more problems than they actually explain.

01001011 wrote:
Quote:
Further, not all responses are common to all human beings. The same thing that inspires rage in one person evokes indifference in another. We choose beforehand how we will respond to stimuli and act accordingly. The "chemical reactions" are servants to the will, not the other way around.


That is because the structure of different human brains are different.


Not true. The basic structure and function of the CNS is NOT fundamentally different from person to person. It is a known fact that certain areas of the brain respond to certain types of stimuli, plus it is known that certain types of mental functions are affected by corresponding areas. Neurons DO have a limited mechanism for regeneration, and often groups of brain cells adapt to handle the activities normally associated with disaffected areas of the brain. If the basic structure and function of the CNS is NOT remarkably different from human to human, why are we so different? Well, we are different PEOPLE. Possessing a soul gives us our spiritual sense of identity. The CNS only helps us interface with the physical world around us. Ultimately we are responsible as individuals for our decisions.



Jookia
Velociraptor
Velociraptor

User avatar

Joined: 7 Jan 2007
Age: 28
Gender: Male
Posts: 410

09 Oct 2010, 12:27 pm

Every one of your decisions is influenced by your personality, thoughts, your environment and intent. It's not as special as you think it is. If I want to prove free will exists, I can always raise my left arm and go 'there, I did that all by myself', lying as it was influenced by my intent of proving free will. I can push someone away from in front of a car because of my personality and environment. You replying to this post to prove me wrong is influenced by your personality, thoughts and intent.

All of this is done physically in your brain using chemicals and neurons. Note how depression is caused by chemicals.



MONKEY
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 3 Jan 2009
Age: 31
Gender: Female
Posts: 9,896
Location: Stoke, England (sometimes :P)

09 Oct 2010, 2:33 pm

BigK wrote:
waltur wrote:
danandlouie: my wife is a catholic and mocks the creation museum. that said, less than half of americans accept the theory of evolution.



http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/bigphotos/21329204.html

America must be a strange place. 8O


I'm glad I live in Britain, we seem to be at least a bit saner. As far as I know teaching evolution in science class has never really been much of an issue, not to mention Darwin's face is on every £10 note.


_________________
What film do atheists watch on Christmas?
Coincidence on 34th street.


waltur
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 4 May 2009
Age: 38
Gender: Male
Posts: 924
Location: california

09 Oct 2010, 5:16 pm

MONKEY wrote:
BigK wrote:
waltur wrote:
danandlouie: my wife is a catholic and mocks the creation museum. that said, less than half of americans accept the theory of evolution.



http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/bigphotos/21329204.html

America must be a strange place. 8O


I'm glad I live in Britain, we seem to be at least a bit saner. As far as I know teaching evolution in science class has never really been much of an issue, not to mention Darwin's face is on every £10 note.


and "in god we trust" is on all of our currency.

We're kind of a scary lot.


_________________
Waltur the Walrus Slayer,
Militant Asantist.
"BLASPHEMER!! !! !! !!" (according to AngelRho)


DarthMetaKnight
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 16 Feb 2010
Gender: Male
Posts: 6,105
Location: The Infodome

09 Oct 2010, 5:32 pm

Quote:
and "in god we trust" is on all of our currency.

We're kind of a scary lot.


"In God We Trust" first appeared on American money in 1864. Theodore Roosevelt considered it sacreligious to put the name of god on money.


_________________
Synthetic carbo-polymers got em through man. They got em through mouse. They got through, and we're gonna get out.
-Roostre

READ THIS -> https://represent.us/


Sand
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 15 Sep 2007
Age: 98
Gender: Male
Posts: 11,484
Location: Finland

09 Oct 2010, 7:04 pm

DarthMetaKnight wrote:
Quote:
and "in god we trust" is on all of our currency.

We're kind of a scary lot.


"In God We Trust" first appeared on American money in 1864. Theodore Roosevelt considered it sacreligious to put the name of god on money.


With almost every member of the acting government up to his or her neck in some form or other of bribery it's obvious God is the only one left to trust and he took off centuries ago.



DentArthurDent
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 26 Jul 2008
Age: 59
Gender: Male
Posts: 3,884
Location: Victoria, Australia

10 Oct 2010, 4:35 am

AngelRho wrote:

Unless, of course, we ARE the needle in the haystack.


Exactly the earth proves that it is possible for life to begin given the correct circumstances, given the stats involved there is absolutely no rational reason to presume that this is the work of a supernatural force. The probability against life forming can be 'astronomical' and yet still highly plausible and as our existence shows most definitively probable



AngelRho wrote:
And there is no straw man. Where is the evidence of a comparable system?


Of course there is and in fact you have just invoked it again. ie 'we have not found a single planet capable of supporting the genesis of life as we know it or been contacted by any being from such a planet, therefore it does not exist.' this is in essence what you and the rest of your ilk are saying. The fact of the matter being the universe is - as you would be well aware- massive beyond human comprehension.Our knowledge of our own solar system is rudimentary in the extreme and yet you have the arrogance to assume that we are on the only planet which supports life in the WHOLE of the universe!! !! !! !


_________________
"I'd take the awe of understanding over the awe of ignorance anyday"
Douglas Adams

"Religion is the impotence of the human mind to deal with occurrences it cannot understand" Karl Marx


Last edited by DentArthurDent on 10 Oct 2010, 7:00 am, edited 2 times in total.

01001011
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 3 Mar 2010
Age: 43
Gender: Male
Posts: 991

10 Oct 2010, 5:35 am

AngelRho wrote:
The process of thinking is generally an orderly process, not random, chaotic, or confused except when a flawed physical sensory interface feeds the mind misleading information. When everything is functioning normally, most people in general tend to make sensible decisions and act accordingly.


Your first fundamental error is to think that chemical reactions are random. At macroscopic level, chemical reactions are deterministic. Understood?

Quote:
There is no reason at all, no evidence at all to suggest that cognitive and physical behavioral patterns aren't subject to the decision-making processes of the psyche or soul.
...
The CNS obeys the will of the person who occupies it and provides a physical interface with the natural world. No need for me to stare endlessly at a spoon to get it to bend. If I want to bend a spoon, there is a sensible way to make that happen.


How the Mars land rover 'decides' to turn at certain point? Its takes signal from its cameras, figure out its environment, and it turns if the conditions matches those set in its program. In this case, everything are electronic. In other words, the law of electrodynamics and the particular configuration of circuit explains the probe's 'decision'. No soul is needed. Likewise, there is no reason to think that a human cannot be explained similarly.

Here, you are having it backwards. There is no reason to think that the will, the psyche, or the soul exist at all. What you claim implies that chemicals in the brain behave differently from those outside, as only the former is affected by the soul. That is scientifically testable. Yet no evidence of this sort have been found.

Maybe you can give details on HOW the soul changes the chemical reaction within the brain?

Quote:
It remains, however, that we ARE responsible for our responses to emotions or "chemical processes," either way. Any criminal can certainly and legitimately make a case for being under the influence of "random chemical processes" in a court of law if this is true; but this kind of defense never holds up UNLESS it can actually be determined that there really is a physiological problem.


The court also considers legal responsibility of a company, which does not exist in th phyical universe. So how the issue is handled in the court is irrelevant to how a person actually works.

Quote:
Not true. The basic structure and function of the CNS is NOT fundamentally different from person to person. It is a known fact that certain areas of the brain respond to certain types of stimuli, plus it is known that certain types of mental functions are affected by corresponding areas. Neurons DO have a limited mechanism for regeneration, and often groups of brain cells adapt to handle the activities normally associated with disaffected areas of the brain. If the basic structure and function of the CNS is NOT remarkably different from human to human, why are we so different? Well, we are different PEOPLE. Possessing a soul gives us our spiritual sense of identity. The CNS only helps us interface with the physical world around us. Ultimately we are responsible as individuals for our decisions.


What you are saying is no different from saying people are not fundamentally different from each other because all have eyes, legs, etc. The difference in connections of individual neurons is likely to explain the difference.



Poke
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 15 May 2009
Age: 45
Gender: Male
Posts: 605

10 Oct 2010, 7:37 am

AngelRho wrote:
Not true. The basic structure and function of the CNS is NOT fundamentally different from person to person. It is a known fact that certain areas of the brain respond to certain types of stimuli, plus it is known that certain types of mental functions are affected by corresponding areas. Neurons DO have a limited mechanism for regeneration, and often groups of brain cells adapt to handle the activities normally associated with disaffected areas of the brain. If the basic structure and function of the CNS is NOT remarkably different from human to human, why are we so different? Well, we are different PEOPLE. Possessing a soul gives us our spiritual sense of identity. The CNS only helps us interface with the physical world around us. Ultimately we are responsible as individuals for our decisions.


Boy, what a load of ignorant garbage.



greenblue
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 25 Mar 2007
Age: 48
Gender: Male
Posts: 7,896
Location: Home

10 Oct 2010, 4:57 pm

AngelRho wrote:
Emotions are emotions, not chemical reactions. Chemical reactions are physical responses to feelings. Without consciousness, a sense of self, or the soul, there is no guiding principle behind which chemical reactions have a guide. Otherwise, emotions are unguided and chaotic. For example, without the human will, "falling in love" simply doesn't happen. Now, I think feelings of attraction can't be avoided unless a person outright avoids people. But the response to attraction is entirely under human control. Hence, we are not victims subject to the whims of attraction or the random releases of chemicals. Further, not all responses are common to all human beings. The same thing that inspires rage in one person evokes indifference in another. We choose beforehand how we will respond to stimuli and act accordingly. The "chemical reactions" are servants to the will, not the other way around.

No, we are "servants" to our chemical reactions actually, everything we feel, think and dream are products of neurochemical reactions as that is how we function, the "soul" is an abstract concept of that. You seem to be rejecting biology and neuroscience with ad hoc explanations. Bethie mentioned Oxytocin, which I repeat it here and supports that view, not only that, but it is evident that the "will" is not separated from our physical reactions, as you seem to suggest, I mean, mental disorders or conditions (however you want to call them) are clear evidence of that. Heck! can you say that your "will" is entirely independent from autism? Can your "will" not be affected by brain damage if caused by an accident or any other way?

The "fall in love" thing is sexual attraction anyway, so separating "lust" from "love" is meaningless within a biological context.


_________________
?Everything is perfect in the universe - even your desire to improve it.?


Last edited by greenblue on 10 Oct 2010, 5:05 pm, edited 2 times in total.

greenblue
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 25 Mar 2007
Age: 48
Gender: Male
Posts: 7,896
Location: Home

10 Oct 2010, 5:00 pm

iamnotaparakeet wrote:
To presuppose the universe had no creator is to say that the universe created itself. And then AG shall mention a philosophy of time in which causality is irrelevant.

You mean The God of the Gaps?


_________________
?Everything is perfect in the universe - even your desire to improve it.?


DarthMetaKnight
Veteran
Veteran

User avatar

Joined: 16 Feb 2010
Gender: Male
Posts: 6,105
Location: The Infodome

10 Oct 2010, 5:11 pm

greenblue wrote:
You mean The God of the Gaps?

I love how "god of the gaps" could be any god. It could even be the deist god I.E. the one that doesn't care what we say or do.

It could also be a magic. Why does nobody say that the "gaps" in science are proof of magic?

I believe the universe was created by Santa.


_________________
Synthetic carbo-polymers got em through man. They got em through mouse. They got through, and we're gonna get out.
-Roostre

READ THIS -> https://represent.us/