(2017-11-02, 02:07 PM)Silence Wrote: I'd be curious to hear Malf's response to this threshold question.
I feel like I sit somewhere on this continuum between Malf and those who feel confident/satisfied by the current "evidence" that physicalism/materialism is false.
I am unsatisfied with Malf's version of the creed. I have no real rational basis to be unsatisfied with it. Rather, I feel a strong need for there to be some grander meaning to "all this". That said, I don't find Sheldrake's morphic field theories and research of dogs barking before their owners get home as compelling.
So, I'm sympathetic to Malf (and also to the more aggressive sceptics).
As I used to hope for when I was very young when watching the old 10 Commandment movies: "If only I'd been there to see the Red Sea part; I'd have been convinced by THAT!".
Just goes to show what has always been clear to the proponents, if not to the self-described skeptics: that we are all skeptics. People I agree with about some things seem to me to be bat-shit bonkers about other things (CTs and Politics especially). I'm hugely skeptical about ET visitations, abductions and communications too but a term like "proponent" seems to lump me in with all that too. (For the record, I'm more comfortable with those who believe that inter-dimensional contact is a possible explanation rather than beings in spaceships.)
As for Sheldrake, I think he's followed his instincts by insisting that the orthodox scientific view falls short and he's had a good stab at an alternative theory. I'm not qualified to say whether history will look back at him more kindly but I doubt that Dawkins or Krauss will find a glorious place in history either. I will say, about the dogs, that I have long suspected they know what I'm intending while I'm only thinking it, not doing anything - especially if it involved feeding or walking them. And, while waiting at a former girlfriend's house, I have often witnessed her dogs and cats move to the gate 10 or so minutes before her return - no matter what time she decided to come home. I have asked several dog owners who concur.
I do not make any clear distinction between mind and God. God is what mind becomes when it has passed beyond the scale of our comprehension.
Freeman Dyson
Freeman Dyson