Philosophy

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ubersoldat666

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Feb 3, 2009
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Just something for you all to think about. Here are two thing a human (at least currently) cannot intuitively comprehend:

1) Something coming from nothing (Big Bang or God, you still hit the same wall)
2) Ceasing to exist (the attempt to comprehend non-existence is an affirmation of your conscience)

Number one is the most fun, since there is not a logical answer. It's the base of our existence, and yet it is completely illogical. To say the universe is entirely logical stops when you get the beginning of it.
 

ubersoldat666

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Feb 3, 2009
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Also, as someone mentioned earlier, there's always the idea of things unobserved will stay in some uncollapsed quantum state (as per Schrödinger's cat). Of course it depends how observation is defined (by a conscience, or by a photon), but it's still interesting to think about. A whole forest (with nothing moving in or out of it) could possibly stay in a quantum state until someone walks into it and it collapses.

Now I don't believe that's what happens, but like I said, it's an interesting thought.
 

vede

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Cucumber said:
You might consider looking at the question from another perspective:

Usually, humans consider something to be non-existing until you or someone else have seen it and can confirm it. It's just like religion.

Did someone ever hear the tree fall? No.
But did the sound exist? Apparently, yes?

Try and apply this logic to another case:

Have someone seen God before? No.
But does god then exist? Apparently, yes?

It does not work kinda right...

We wouldn't say god existed, but the sound from the tree did. Why do we think like this? It might be because of we're used to the idea of a falling tree producing a sound, because we've experienced it before. God doesn't, because we've never seen him before?

To draw a little conclusion from this one, I'd say that;

For something to exist, there must be someone else to confirm it's existence. If no one is there to acknowledge that 'something', it simply wouldn't exist in human eyes.

How do we know about... for example... that the big bang ever happened? We actually don't know, but we think it as possible because of we acknowledge that theory.
That logic is appalling.

For something to exist, someone has to observe it? So you're saying that if a person doesn't see or hear something happen, it never happened? I generally avoid saying things like this to people here, but that's just fucking stupid.

I mean, by that logic, one could reasonably conclude that the human species has discovered everything in the Universe and have discovered every species on the planet and know everything that is possible to know, because if they haven't seen it, it doesn't exist.
 

edinflames

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Dec 21, 2007
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Tree? Log? Falling? Who the f*ck cares? That bullsh*t doesn't even register on the sane radar of significance.

Humanity is the reassembled atoms of a star that exploded and after billions of years has turned, looked back over its metaphorical shoulder and consciously sought to discover its origins. The odds of life even occurring at any point in the universe are incomprehensibly slim, the chances that a living being might develop to the point that we have even slimmer. The sum of our understanding and knowledge has only scratched the surface of the true nature of existence; but that's OK because all knowledge is emergent, our ideas will be improved upon and replaced with answers slightly closer to the truth.

Contemporary physics reveals that in fact everything is one, we are the illusion of ourselves; there is no other, there is only one, only us. Contemporary ecology further demonstrates the completely symbiotic nature of all life on earth, and even with the earth itself.

We are star stuff harvesting star light.


Hows that for scientific philosophy in action eh?

(Carl Sagan, you are sorely missed)
 

falcontwin

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Aug 10, 2008
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Dirkie said:
theklng said:
what is the sound of a falling tree?
*trimmed for entertainment value*
The sound you're looking for is "boom!" [http://translate.google.com/translate_t?hl=en#nl|en|boom]
In this case it represents a funny coincidence of being able to translate a phonetic sound as a word to a suitable word in another language

Back on philosophy.
I usually break it down to smaller bits because i'm too straigtforward to get it with thinking in circles.
My philosophy basic building blocks:

Facts (Safe)
Assumptions (Unsafe)
Common Sense (Extremely dangerous when applied)
Logic (Even more dangerous than Common Sense when applied)



Now, when dealing with facts, we make assumptions on how we percieve said facts. Based on those without the knowledge of cause and effect we end up with common sense that might pass for logic.

Fact: "being hit by a brick hurts"
Assumption: "bricks cause pain."
Common sense: "a brick is an object that transfers pain to a target when it makes contact."

Now i dare you, try Logic!
LOGIC : If I hit someone with a brick it will hurt them!.

How is that absurd?

Common sence is what the world lacks so I'm not sure what point you think your making.
 

Yog Sothoth

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Dec 6, 2008
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iain62a said:
John_Doe_Damnit said:
Rational thinking > Philosophy
Why can't rational thinking be part of philosophy?
But your right. I'll take hard evidence over metaphysical ramblings any day of the week.
Nicola Tesla > Friedrich Nietzsche

...
you're both kidding, right? critical reasoning is central to philosophy... the word itself roughly translates to "the pursuit of wisdom" from Latin...

philosophy is not about "metaphysical ramblings" but the quest for knowledge and meaning in our existence... trying to say that science is more important is really narrow minded in my view... philosophy must be informed by science in order to be relevant; it shouldn't be viewed as opposed to the scientific process...
 

Fearzone

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Dec 3, 2008
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Chapper said:
Yes it will, it'll still cause vibrations in the air which will make sound, even though noone's there.
Do air vibrations = sound?
 

kdragon1010

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Jan 17, 2009
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falcontwin said:
Dirkie said:
theklng said:
what is the sound of a falling tree?
*trimmed for entertainment value*
The sound you're looking for is "boom!" [http://translate.google.com/translate_t?hl=en#nl|en|boom]
In this case it represents a funny coincidence of being able to translate a phonetic sound as a word to a suitable word in another language

Back on philosophy.
I usually break it down to smaller bits because i'm too straigtforward to get it with thinking in circles.
My philosophy basic building blocks:

Facts (Safe)
Assumptions (Unsafe)
Common Sense (Extremely dangerous when applied)
Logic (Even more dangerous than Common Sense when applied)



Now, when dealing with facts, we make assumptions on how we percieve said facts. Based on those without the knowledge of cause and effect we end up with common sense that might pass for logic.

Fact: "being hit by a brick hurts"
Assumption: "bricks cause pain."
Common sense: "a brick is an object that transfers pain to a target when it makes contact."

Now i dare you, try Logic!
LOGIC : If I hit someone with a brick it will hurt them!.

How is that absurd?

Common sence is what the world lacks so I'm not sure what point you think your making.
Actually its not necessarily a fact there are people with medical conditions that cause them to not feel any pain at all.
 

Fearzone

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Dec 3, 2008
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jsd379 said:
By the that resonining if you are in a room alone, does anything behind you exists, since there is nothing to witness it? I would say yes, but since, it's philosophy there is probablyno right answer
I think that's a different question. Nobody doubts that when the tree falls air vibrations are produced whether anyone is around or not. I don't doubt that the counter right behind me is still there even though I am not looking at it at the moment.

But, do air vibrations equal sound? I would say the answer is no, and the logic is straightfoward: air vibrations are necessary for sound, but not sufficient.

Sorry Plato, case closed. No further discussion needed. The tree falling in the forest with no one there does NOT make a sound.
 

Whobajube

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Mar 25, 2008
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Sound is the way our own brains interpret the vibrations in the air. Without our brains interpretations of the vibrations, sound wouldn't really exist. It takes at least some kind of auditory sensory device to create the interpretation of sound.
 

Axolotl

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Chapper said:
Yes it will, it'll still cause vibrations in the air which will make sound, even though noone's there.
Not necessarily quantum mechanics has noted that matter behaves differently when it isn't being observed.
 

Fearzone

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Dec 3, 2008
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How about this one:

What if a dog whistle is blown, and a human is there and a dog is there. Does the dog whistle make a sound?
 

asiepshtain

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Apr 28, 2008
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PSYCHOxDRAGON said:
"If a tree falls in a forest, and there is no-one there to hear it, does it make a sound"

Let's talk people. Share your honest thoughts on the subject and don't just blow it off. It'll be interesting to see what a bit of debating can do for the forums.
I love philosophy but this is a bit of a problem.

The question you pose is an kōan ( http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Koan ) and as such is not a so much a philosophical question, more of a meditation aid.

Like all zen kōan it is meant for you to meditate on, to embrace the subtle differences between awareness and knowing, and nothingness. My favorite kōan is this:
"Without thinking of good or evil, show me your original face before your mother and father were born"

think about it...
 

Whobajube

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Mar 25, 2008
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Fearzone said:
How about this one:

What if a dog whistle is blown, and a human is there and a dog is there. Does the dog whistle make a sound?
Exactly. To humans, the sound wouldn't exist... but it certainly exists to the dog! Our ears can't pick up on the vibrations at the frequency, thus they will never reach our brain, and it will not interpret them as sound.
 

tthor

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Apr 9, 2008
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this question brings to mind the question- is what we experience truly reality, or is it some strange sort of dream or maybe even a 'matrix'(or some other idea along those lines)

if we exist in this reality, then the tree will in fact make a sound, whether we are there to hear it or not.

but, if this reality we perceive merely exists in our mind, then the tree would not make a sound, because if this reality we perceive only exists in our mind, then the only things that would exist in this reality are what we 'see' and perceive (i do not believe this idea to be true, tho it still is an interesting concept)
 

GRoXERs

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Feb 4, 2009
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Axolotl said:
Chapper said:
Yes it will, it'll still cause vibrations in the air which will make sound, even though noone's there.
Not necessarily quantum mechanics has noted that matter behaves differently when it isn't being observed.
/facepalm
Go read Brian Greene's The Elegant Universe, or the wikipedia article on Schrödinger's Cat. Since the prevailing theory of quantum mechanics is probabalistic (and therefore may be generalized by logic), if we see something happen a certain way every time we observe it, we can make an excellent guess as to what's going to happen if we observe it again, and since this doesn't really involve any collapsing probabalistic waveforms (as in Schrödinger's Cat) because we KNOW what happens whenever it is observed, we can say with some certainty that it does indeed make a sound.
EDIT: Or at least a vibration. The difference is only semantics, anyway...
 

talon92

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Apr 30, 2008
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Until you can prove to me otherwise, I acknowledge nothing but my own existence.

Everything other statement has a chance of being false.

Rational philosophy > Emotional (humanist) philosophy
imho
 

Rolling Thunder

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Dec 23, 2007
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All things being subjective, I must disagree. And in response to the tree- If there was no-one there to witness it, how do we know the tree fell down at all?