Cognitive psychologists generally make better predicitons about human behavior than neuroscientists.
I grant you that; my assertion was one of type, not of degree. A predictive explanation will generally (yes, I am retracting my ‘almost always’ quantifier) be reductionist, but this a very different statement than the most reductionist explanation will be the best.
Here it seems to me like you think about philosophy as distinct from empirical reality.
Less ‘distinct’ and more ‘abstracted’. The put it as pithy (and oversimplified) as possible, empiricism is about what is (probably) true, philosophy is about about what is (probably) necessarily true.
I could be more precise and accurate about my own thoughts here, but philosophy is one of those terms where if you ask ten different people you’ll get twelve different answers. The relation between philosophy and empirical reality depends on what ‘philosophy’ is.
To me your post didn’t feel inaccurate but confused.
I think confusion is inaccuracy at the meta level.
And besides that, I actually felt when writing that post that I was repeating ‘I was confused’ to the point of parody. Illusion of transparency, I suppose.
A mix of saying trival things and throwing around terms where I don’t know exactly what you mean
I’m for being ambiguous, but you’ll have be more precise about what I’m being ambiguous about. I can’t be clear about my terminology without knowing where I’m being unclear.
I’m not sure whether you have thought about what you mean exactly either.
I don’t think it’s worth debating what I meant when I don’t mean it anymore.
You can also make great predicions on believes that the function of the heart is pumping blood even if there are no “function-atoms” around.
It’s not clear what you’re saying here. If you’re talking about why the heart pumps blood instead of doing something else, that requires a historical explanation, a ‘why is it like this instead of like that’ and presumes the heart was optimized for something, and would have been optimized for something else if something had willed it.
If this is what you’re saying then yeah, the explanation will not be reductionist.
If you’re saying you can predict the broad strokes of what the heart will do without reducing all the way to the level of ‘function atoms’ then I completely agree. The space of explanations of reality at the level of atoms is large enough that even if most of them don’t even vaguely resemble reality there still isn’t enough motivation or information to exhaust the search space. Incomplete reductions are fine until there’s motivations for deeper explanations.
If you weren’t saying either of these things, then I’ve misunderstood you.
Edit: I dug through OP’s post history and found this thread. The thread gives better context to what /u/reguru is trying to say.
A tip: very little is gained by couching your ideas in this self-aggrandizing, condescending tone. Your over-reliance on second person is also an annoying tic, though some make it work. You don’t, however.
You come off as very arrogant and immature, and very few people will bother wading through this. The few that will do it only in hopes of correcting you.
If you’re at all interested in improving the quality of your writing, consider, at the very least, reading a few other top level, highly upvoted posts. They do not have these problems, and you’d be served by emulating them.
“Reality is arational.” is an easily defensible position, though it would take some work to make an idea worth entertaining out of it.
“Everything you do is arational.” is flatly solipsistic and useless. You must agree that words have meaning, if only subjunctively, by your usage of them. ‘Rational’ means something, and it describes behavior. Behavior is goal-directed, and be judged by how well it achieves those goals. That is what bare rationalism is. If you disagree with this, you’ll need better justifications.
Contradiction can be used for effect, but always err on the side of ‘don’t do it’. You’re work is better served rigorous than poetic.
Y’know, despite myself, I found this passage genuinely pleasing on a aesthetic level. It’s a mess of negation and recursion and strange loops that I can only compare to the bizarre logic of time travel, or perhaps the descriptive amalgams of cosmic horror. This is not a compliment.
You seem to be equating awareness with at least four different things, three if that was supposed to be a recursive definition.
1) awareness as total self-knowledge (“you will always lack awareness”) Since this is pure armchair speculation anyway, I’m sure the mere existence of quines) makes “You will never reach total awareness” false as a theorectical proposition.
2) awareness as consciousness/the self (“separating thoughts from awareness”)
3) awareness as noticing something (“You can become aware of thoughts,”)
4) your own definition
Solipsistic and useless.
Useless and solipsistic.
Do I need to say it?
I think this is false. Mathematics is interesting precisely because of its non-humanity. The joy of doing mathematics is incommensurate with an imagination of the joy of doing mathematics. The missing ingredient, of course, is the unknown, of discovering something outside yourself.
To call it a human projection is to miss the entire point of preforming these actions in the first place, which is curiosity, exploring the unknown.
The “map/territory” dichotomy is just another map, as you yourself said. In reality, there is only atoms and the void. Self/other, subject/object are all a part of reality itself, and the delineation is only useful, never necessary.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flow_(psychology)
you cannot
The arational has no perspective, because it is not the type of thing to have perspectives. Reality has no mind, no agency.
Reality is, however, patterned and models exploit this patterning.
Suppose one person (call her Alice) choose to act as if there exists models better than other models, while another person (call him Bob) chooses to not do this. One may object to using words like ‘true’ or ‘accurate’ to describe their approaches, but there is a certain quality the former would have that the latter does not. The former may make a habit ingesting certain objects, or preforming pointless tasks for useless trinkets. The other would object that ‘hunger’ and ‘money’ are just models and no model is better than another.
These approaches lead to certain outcomes. Again, one might not like describing one as ‘true’ and the other as ‘false’, but there is a certain pattern there to be found there.
While I’m sure there are many people here who enjoy puzzles, obscurantism is frowned upon.
The social contract of lesswrong is the opposite of your epigram: “What’s the point of this post?” You have to figure that out on your own. It’s not our job, but yours. I don’t doubt you have some insight here. I’m sure it could even be couched into a post fit for this community. But you have to do the job of filtering your thoughts, crafting your posts and hoping against hope you didn’t make an embarrassing mistake.
Finally, I apologize for combative tone of this post. This was written out of sympathy rather than disgust or disrespect. (at the very least, notice if being offensive was my aim, I could have done a better job of it)