What about mild transient ischemic attacks?
superluminal said:What about mild transient ischemic attacks?
1) God is a childs fantasy and therefore is not dead or alive. "god" is just a story.TimeTraveler said:My one enlightened statement. God is alive. I challenge all to prove the death of God, or that God is dead. We have the option, shall God be alive or dead? Life or death?
If you believe God is dead, you still believe in God. If you believe science is real, you still believe in truth. If you believe in love, you'll find God there, if you believe in hate, you'll find God there(or the Devil).
A human mind without God, is a human without a governing force. So God is real, or what is real?
samcdkey said:spiritual nourishment
TimeTraveler said:God is alive. I challenge all to prove the death of God, or that God is dead.
lightgigantic said:ED
Despite your insistence that I did mention it I still can't recall it - perhaps you will have to go back there and find out exactly where I did mention "avid church going"
lightgigantic said:So do you still disagree that there is a strong connection between correct process and correct material?
lightgigantic said:But you still didn't answer
And if it is perceivable to you but it is not perceivable to me does it still remain as proof? ”
lightgigantic said:thats part of the problem with quantum physics
and its your problem too if you want to work out of it
lightgigantic said:This is what I mean by dull matter - obviously you don't accept that term so here it is - to save a lot of confusion just tell us whether this is the scientific model you work out of to determine what qualifies as evidence or not - given your little foray into scientific example it seems to be ....
lightgigantic said:I am just cutting to the chase - I figured that if I type less you have less to get confused about
Sarkus said:Brain activity can clearly be seen to increase while dreaming.
Now please, answer the question that was put before you rather than try and sidestep.
superluminal said:Oh come on LG. You don't know a thing about science, and what physicists do or why. Lagrangian mechanics has been around since Lagrange - late 1700's and has nothing to do with your previous statements re Newton and Einstein. Smoke screens using technical (and inappropriate) terms don't help you.
superluminal said:
so in other words it is your idea not mineOriginally Posted by lightgigantic
ED
Despite your insistence that I did mention it I still can't recall it - perhaps you will have to go back there and find out exactly where I did mention "avid church going" ”
Lightee, of course you never used the words "avid churchgoing". I said that "avid churchgoing" meets your epistemology thread list criteria! What is so hard to understand about that?
well since you think that its all about merely avid church attendence and sitting on one's brains its understandable where you got the idea about ignorance from“ Originally Posted by lightgigantic
So do you still disagree that there is a strong connection between correct process and correct material? ”
Scientific process requires correct material. Faith process does not. Your epistemological process has no material. It requires listening and ignorance.
On the contary I am not operating on that premise - you are“ Originally Posted by lightgigantic
But you still didn't answer
And if it is perceivable to you but it is not perceivable to me does it still remain as proof? ” ”
The answer is, if it is provable, it is perceivable by anyone. Since you are operating from an unprovable premise, your result is therefore unperceivable. Outside of mass hysteria.
I'm not rejecting it - I am just establishing the paradigm that you are relying on - regardless of whether you know it or not“ Originally Posted by lightgigantic
thats part of the problem with quantum physics
and its your problem too if you want to work out of it ”
Point? Again, it is unreasonable to reject a field of study simply because the experts are not finished, in favor of a panacea organization that declares "god is all and absolute" with no proof, no evidence, requires blind faith and takes your money for it.
I'd have been glad to work on it had I continued with physics instead of I.T.
Firstly this does NOT answer the question.lightgigantic said:The essential argument regarding dreaming - brain scans aside - is that a person enters a comatose state which appears bereft of consciousness - the reason its called persistent is that they have not woekn out of it - so when a person is seen to recover from a vegetative state (just like a person is seen to recover from deep dreamless sleep) with a perfect in tact sense of "I", its obvious that the "I" was only in a dormant state, otherwise if it had well and truly disappeared there would be no question of it coming back.
If a person is alive and is seen to drift in and out of sleep or coma and recover with a sense of "I" (in the way that dead person is never seen to) then it seems straight forwardFirstly this does NOT answer the question.
You originally posited:
"...as long as one is alive they still have a sense of "I" "
You are now qualifying that statement to those people who subsequently wake up and retain a sense of "I".
Already didThirdly, Persistent Vegetative State is not the same as a coma. I suggest you look up the terms before responding.
you are yet to provide evidence of someone being alive who doesn't have a sense of "I"As I said before - you are offering NO EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT YOUR CLAIM.
You need to provide evidence that being alive always equates to having a sense of "I", regardless of the condition of life.
As for merely waking up from unconsciousness and having a sense of "I" again - I can happily turn off my PC at night. And when I wake up and switch it on again it has exactly the same memory (albeit ROM) as it had when I switched it on - and operates in the same way. If that memory and that operation can be picked up so easily after being "dead" for a long time - I hardly find the same thing occurring in humans, where brain activity is continual (i.e. not even fully switched off) evidence that this sense of "I" is anything other than an emergent property of the complexity of the brain
But you have done nothing more than provide as evidence of this fact the very results you are trying to prove. Begging the question.lightgigantic said:If a person is alive and is seen to drift in and out of sleep or coma and recover with a sense of "I" (in the way that dead person is never seen to) then it seems straight forward
I've as yet made no claims.you are yet to provide evidence of someone being alive who doesn't have a sense of "I"
In what way are we not merely an advanced form of computer - albeit a self-sustaining one that can not switch itself on and off without permanent degradation of the hardware. This is what you advocate and yet provide no evidence for other than that which can be more simply and rationally explained as an emergent property or our own complexity.Erm .... hate to break it to you, but we are not computers
lightgigantic said:ED
so in other words it is your idea not mine
lightgigantic said:well since you think that its all about merely avid church attendence and sitting on one's brains its understandable where you got the idea about ignorance from
lightgigantic said:On the contary I am not operating on that premise - you are
lightgigantic said:I'm not rejecting it - I am just establishing the paradigm that you are relying on - regardless of whether you know it or not
The problem is that I don't see the connection between attending a place or worship and what I gave - its just like saying it is sufficient to learn higher education by attending university - obviously a serious discussion of learning requires a discussion of curriculum and not institution“ Originally Posted by lightgigantic
ED
so in other words it is your idea not mine ”
I'm simply alluding that avid churchgoing matches and conforms to your list to perceive god; merely hiding behind "i didn't say it, you did" won't disguise the parallels of your list and attending church. I am also prompting you to try and prove me wrong. Stop sidestepping. We all know that either way... (ctd)
Your two point responses contradict each other“ Originally Posted by lightgigantic
If a person is alive and is seen to drift in and out of sleep or coma and recover with a sense of "I" (in the way that dead person is never seen to) then it seems straight forward ”
But you have done nothing more than provide as evidence of this fact the very results you are trying to prove. Begging the question.
As I said - you are saying "X is true... in the cases where X is true"
“ you are yet to provide evidence of someone being alive who doesn't have a sense of "I" ”
I've as yet made no claims.
there's your answer“ Erm .... hate to break it to you, but we are not computers ”
In what way are we not merely an advanced form of computer - albeit a self-sustaining one that can not switch itself on and off without permanent degradation of the hardware. This is what you advocate and yet provide no evidence for other than that which can be more simply and rationally explained as an emergent property or our own complexity.
Ok lets take this nice and slow
where is it when one recovers from a coma?Whre the hell is one's sense of "I" when they are comotosed?
Where the hell is the sense of "I" for a fully gone Alzheimer's patient?
There are gone, there's no sense of I that can survive severe brain damage.
Where was Schiavo's sense of self LG?
click
You are saying nothing other than "There is a sense of 'I' for those that have a sense of 'I'."lightgigantic said:I am talking about the loss of self as it pertains to one's perception of one's consicous self - for instance if a person is thinking, feeling and willing they have not lost the sense of self, since it is "I" think, "I" feel etcetc[/I]