Posted February 15, 2014
Vestin: In a nutshell:
People have minds, people think; androids don't (won't) have minds, androids can't think.
Why? This seems to be entirely based on circular definitions. People have minds, people think; androids don't (won't) have minds, androids can't think.
Vestin: Yeah, the world in general seemed "super trivial" to me in many regards before I've furthered my education in Philosophy ;).
Sunk cost fallacy. edit: you're attacking my people, me personally, and the very foundations of science. Specifically, you claim that two things which are apriori impossible to distinguish are not identical, that only real philosophers[tm] get to decide the truthfulness of that claim, and whoever strongly disagrees is not a real philosopher.
Vestin: At first this answer seemed completely unrelated to the entire discussion... then I've realized that you have difficulty separating mental processes from physical manifestations.
What. All "mental" processes are physical. Sometimes you can have a trace printout, sometimes you technically cannot. Sorry, I can't watch video.
Vestin: I think it was Descartes that understood emotions as "unclear thoughts", and that's about the only theory I can remember that brought these notions together so intimately.
I'm sorry, but a categorical difference between them is pretty... common sense.
Which is...? I'm sorry, but a categorical difference between them is pretty... common sense.
(I'm actually willing to concede I might not have emotions in the categorically different way from thoughts, and I'm therefore incapable of ever understanding the concept. Or I might be an android, in which case, someone, please reinstall my corrupted codecs, thankyou.)
Post edited February 15, 2014 by Starmaker