
EDIT:Where's Waldo?

Moderators: Tunnelcat, Jeff250
Psychology is directly affected by biology. Mind you Ferno was referring to himself in his last post.flip wrote: Psychology by the way Ferno, not biological.
But not impossible either.flip wrote:Like you said, total accident is betting way against the odds.
Looks like you haven't changed since then...flip wrote:LOL, man that reminds me of how i used to torment my little sister when I was a kid. Everytime she would try and say something, I'd plug my ears and holler "Ican't hear you, I can't HEar you......etc" ★■◆● was hilarious and by the end of it she would be pissed as hell. Good memories
flip wrote:Slick, in your opinion, how has the elite managed to control the masses till this date?
1) WTF?flip wrote:It's there. it's consistent, I have no idea what is so hard about the concept of "conditioning" which is the point of "Pavlovs" studies. Psychology by the way Ferno, not biological. Also not worth my time because I expect a little bit of respect in a conversation. In real life people try to make the conversation keep going by trying to understand each other. From my first post About Pavlov's Dog's I have consistently re-iterated and used others here to demonstrate conditioning, as it applies to that experiment.
EDIT: Cuda, Your right of course, that is best initially until you realize exactly how insignificant you are.
Exactly, but once you realize that it loses it's power no?Holy crap, flip...you do realize that religious beliefs in general are one of the most blatant examples of "conditioning" out there, right? And I say that as a religious person myself. The "taught from birth," the "peer pressure"...for most religious people, that's exactly how things start out. You may come to your own independent take on your beliefs eventually, but even then, you have a very strong positive bias for the belief system you were brought up in. If I had to ask myself if I would have wound up Catholic had I not been raised that way from birth, I honestly wouldn't know either way. For better or worse, there are many things about my faith that I've been conditioned to accept.
Again, I have not argued anything about evolution. We are talking about morality and how it is inherent after being conditioned. This is what is being demonstrated over and again. Can we stay on topic?And I'm sorry to break it to you, man, but evolution via natural selection is a real thing. We have reams of physical evidence from the past, and we can see it actively occurring in the present. I'm not "conditioned" to believe this...I've taken an informed look at the evidence, and at what a bunch of very smart people have done with that evidence, and it holds up. It's true. You can deny that it's true, that's fine, you have every right to do so...but by doing so, you're sticking your head in the sand. And you should fully expect the people you aren't to not place any stock in your opinions about the subject.
Then long before I'd even consider biological changes, I'd wonder how we gained the choice. That seems most important to me. Why only consider physical appearance when the most intriguing thing is the consciousness we gained?We are talking about morality and how it is inherent after being conditioned.
Not really. Simply knowing that you've been preconditioned towards a certain viewpoint doesn't change the fact of said conditioning. It's still going to affect your thought processes, unless you make a prolonged conscious effort to try to mitigate it.flip wrote:Exactly, but once you realize that it loses it's power no?
...you literally just mentioned evolution in your last post. That's what I was responding to.Again, I have not argued anything about evolution. We are talking about morality and how it is inherent after being conditioned. This is what is being demonstrated over and again. Can we stay on topic?
Uhm, we are not "empty slates" when born. Did you read my link and followed up on it by chance ?flip wrote:Evolution does nothing to explain how we gained self-consciousness and the ability to discern right from wrong. Whereas all other animals seem to born pre-conditioned, humans seem to be with an empty slate.
As for explaining consciouseness w/in the framework of evolution -- there's a lot research out there. This should get you jump-started.Grendel wrote:Here's a start: God didn't make man; man made gods.
Huh ? Evolution explains the origin of species. Keep in mind that a species doesn't just appear from one day to another, the process takes a very long time. Even more so from the beginning of life to the present day. I don't know about you but I have a hard time imagining time frames greater than 100 years, let alone 13.000, 200.000, 2.5 million, 65 million, or the 3.5+ billion it took to get to today.CUDA wrote:You're arguing 2 different points here people. Evolution and origin of species are NOT the same thing. there is clear evidence for some forms of evolution. that cannot be denied. but there is WAY too little evidence to conclude that life started from nothing to evolve into its current state.
and you totally miss the point and latch on to my misuse of the words "empty slate". It should be obvious by this point in the discussion that I didn't mean "empty" entirely. I reject your work submitted unless you can establish at least one truth from it.Evolution does nothing to explain how we gained self-consciousness and the ability to discern right from wrong. Whereas all other animals seem to born pre-conditioned, humans seem not to be compared to animals. (edited for clarity)
HUH hardly. there is evolution. Macro not MicroGrendel wrote:Huh ? Evolution explains the origin of species. Keep in mind that a species doesn't just appear from one day to another, the process takes a very long time. Even more so from the beginning of life to the present day. I don't know about you but I have a hard time imagining time frames greater than 100 years, let alone 13.000, 200.000, 2.5 million, 65 million, or the 3.5+ billion it took to get to today.CUDA wrote:You're arguing 2 different points here people. Evolution and origin of species are NOT the same thing. there is clear evidence for some forms of evolution. that cannot be denied. but there is WAY too little evidence to conclude that life started from nothing to evolve into its current state.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cambrian_explosionGeologists as long ago as William Buckland (1784–1856) realised that a dramatic step-change in the fossil record occurred around the base of what we now call the Cambrian.[6] Charles Darwin considered this sudden appearance of many animal groups with few or no antecedents to be the greatest single objection to his theory of evolution. He had even devoted a substantial chapter of The Origin of Species to solving this problem.[7]
Charles Darwin admitted that his theory required the existence of "transitional forms." Darwin wrote: "So that the number of intermediate and transitional links, between all living and extinct species, must have been inconceivably great. But assuredly, if this theory be true, such have lived upon the earth."[78] However, Darwin wrote: "Why then is not every geological formation and every strata full of such intermediate links? Geology assuredly does not reveal any such finely-graduated organic chain; and this perhaps, is the most obvious and serious objection which can be urged against my theory."[79] Darwin thought the lack of transitional links in his time was because "only a small portion of the surface of the earth has been geologically explored and no part with sufficient care...".[80] As Charles Darwin grew older he became increasingly concerned about the lack of evidence for the theory of evolution in terms of the existence of transitional forms. Darwin wrote, "“When we descend to details, we cannot prove that a single species has changed; nor can we prove that the supposed changes are beneficial, which is the groundwork of the theory.”[81]
Scientist Dr. Michael Denton wrote regarding the fossil record:
“ "It is still, as it was in Darwin's day, overwhelmingly true that the first representatives of all the major classes of organisms known to biology are already highly characteristic of their class when they make their initial appearance in the fossil record. This phenomenon is particularly obvious in the case of the invertebrate fossil record. At its first appearance in the ancient Paleozoic seas, invertebrate life was already divided into practically all the major groups with which we are familiar today.[82]
I accept it because the evidence is physically there. Paleontologists have found a myriad of fossils, and these fossils physically display evidence of species diversity. Since when is opening one's eyes and looking at something considered having one's head in the clouds?flip wrote:Your gonna just wholesale accept it. Like I said "head in the clouds".
The commonly-cited figure is about 99%, although that apparently decreases a bit to 94% if you include differences in non-coding DNA. Either way, they are the most genetically-similar organisms to humans.flip wrote:Piss on it, since we're gonna debate evolution, I have a question. How close is the genetic makeup of a chimpanzee compared to a human?
This statement makes no sense by itself. The paper is full of truths about the physiology of the brain, and it reaches conclusions about how consciousness arose via evolutionary changes. What else do you want from it?flip wrote:I said I would accept part of the paper if one truth could be established from it, again that was overlooked. Otherwise it's a house of cards.
And your ready to stake everything on this basis? None of this is observable much less provable. I'd rather be ignorant than gullible. Where have I argued anything religiously? In fact, I'm pretty sure I established how biological responses are the result of psychological stimuli as a fact. This paper on the other hand is full of conjecture and is not reliable.ABSTRACT The hypothesis of the origin of consciousness
is built upon the unique properties of the mammalian neocortex. The apical dendrites of the pyramidal cells bundle together
as they ascend to lamina I to form neural receptor units of - 100
apical dendrites plus branches receiving hundreds of thousands
of excitatory synapses, the collective assemblage being called a
dendron. It is proposed that the whole world of consciousness,
the mental world, is microgranular, with mental units called
psychons, and that in mind-brain interaction one psychon is
linked to one dendron through quantum physics. The hypothesis is that in mammalian evolution dendrons evolved for more
effective integration of the increased complexity of sensory
inputs. These evolved dendrons had the capacity for interacting
with psychons that came to exist, so forming the mental world
and giving the mammal conscious experiences. In Darwinian
evolution, consciousness would have occurred initially some
200 million years ago in relation to the primitive cerebral
cortices of evolving mammals. It would give global experiences
of a surrounding world for guiding behavior beyond what is
given by the unconscious operation of sensory cortical areasper
se. So concious experiences would give mammals evolutionary
advantage ever the reptiles, which lack a neocortex giving
conscousness. The Wulst of the avian brain needs further
invstigation to discover how it could give birds the consciousness that they seem to have.