RAD4921
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The universe is self aware because WE are self aware. If anyone argues this then I would then question as to how self ware THEY are.
The discussion revolves around the concept of A-Consciousness, specifically whether the universe can be considered self-aware due to the self-awareness of its components, such as humans. Participants explore philosophical implications, definitions of self-awareness, and the validity of arguments surrounding this topic.
Participants generally express multiple competing views on the nature of self-awareness in relation to the universe, with no consensus reached on the validity of the arguments presented.
Participants highlight the limitations of definitions and the potential for logical fallacies in attributing self-awareness to the universe based on its components. The discussion remains open-ended with various assumptions and interpretations at play.
This discussion may be of interest to those exploring philosophical questions about consciousness, self-awareness, and the nature of the universe, particularly in the context of metaphysics and philosophy of mind.
Drayakir said:I think what he is trying to say is that the Universe is self-aware because some components of the Universe are self-aware.
Ivan Seeking said:it is aware "as" us.
Tom Mattson said:That would be the second of the two possibilities I mentioned. It still leaves me wondering: How does one establish such a notion, apart from simply defining it to be the case?
Ivan Seeking said:How can we be considered separate from the universe?
We are star stuff and all of that...
loseyourname said:I don't see how it does. You can say part of the universe is self-aware, but it is fallacious to assign an attribute to an entity simply because some of its constituent parts possesses that attribute.
Ivan Seeking said:How can we be considered separate from the universe?
Canute said:I suppose then we are committing a fallacy to say that human beings are self-aware. After all, our toes aren't conscious.
Tom Mattson said:I'd like to point out that this does not meet the quality standards for our Philosophy section. Please see the Guidelines and try to flesh out your argument.
Thank you,
Bartholomew said:Why would you assume your toes are not conscious? I assume my toes are conscious.
Is there a way I can omit the last sentence of my initial thread posting so that it does not sound so offenseive? I didn't realize how confrontation it sounds. ThanksKerrie said:thank you for clarifying your stand RAD4921...this forum has had it's share of crackpots, thus our reason for making guidelines...sometimes the context or tone isn't conveyed accurately through our posts too.
Canute said:I suppose then we are committing a fallacy to say that human beings are self-aware. After all, our toes aren't conscious. Instead we must say that human brains are self-aware. But then, we don't know if consciousness emerges from brains, so to be accurate we must say that some part of the universe is self-aware, but we don't yet know which part.
3mpathy said:can we say that? that there is a self aware part of the universe, but we don't know where is it? that sounds odd to me.