Materialistview's Blog


02.16.08 (12:18 am)   [edit]

Women Rights activists calling from prison: Our belief in Equality has not been changed

 

 

Aso Saleh, Member of Reporters without borders, Stockholm, Sweden

 

 Fatemeh Goftari, Ronak Safazade, and Hana Abdi, women

rights activists called us from Sasandaj prison and described their situation.

These three women were the members of Azarmehr Women's Association of Sanandaj, and they are detained since several months ago. They have spoken Ronak Safazade 

about their situation via a contact with the secretary of Azarmehr Association.

They have said that they have not done anything, but trying for the equality of human, the people who are discriminated just because of variation of nation and sex.

They also spoke about some women prisoners who have been forgotten for several years. These women have spoken about the catastrophic situation of the prison and the warders' ill-treatment and misuse of women in detention.

This very short contact has been ended with this sentence:

"Do not forget about us"

    

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02.14.08 (5:55 am)   [edit]

Arab Charter for Satelite TV: A Major Setback

ARTICLE 19 strongly condemns the adoption yesterday of the ‘Principles for Organising Satellite TV in the Arab World’ which attempt to muzzle independent news sources and constitute a major setback to freedom of the press in the Arab World.  More...

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02.14.08 (5:44 am)   [edit]

Sharia Delusions in Canterbury

Wednesday, February 13th, 2008

By Mona Eltahawy 

 

NEW YORK — When it comes to Islamic law, or Sharia, words certainly do come easy if you’re a man. You can marry four wives, receive double the inheritance a woman gets and you can end your marriage simply by saying “I divorce you” three times.

So why not pontificate?

Words are especially cheap if you’re the Archbishop of Canterbury, who ignited a social storm in the UK last week by saying that the adoption of some parts of Sharia alongside Britain’s legal system “seems unavoidable” in certain circumstances. [Continue]

 

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02.14.08 (5:25 am)   [edit]

An Introduction to the Theory of Everything

 

The Cognitive-Theoretic Model of the Universe:

A New Kind of Reality Theory

Christopher Michael Langan

 

 

Paper Published September 2002 in Progress in Complexity, Information and Design, the journal of the International Society for Complexity, Information, and Design.

Click here to view the entire paper (pdf) 
(large file - please be patient while the file downloads)

 

Introduction
.

Among the most exciting recent developments in science are Complexity Theory, the theory of self-organizing systems, and the modern incarnation of Intelligent Design Theory, which investigates the deep relationship between self-organization and evolutionary biology in a scientific context not preemptively closed to teleological causation.  Bucking the traditional physical reductionism of the hard sciences, complexity theory has given rise to a new trend, informational reductionism, which holds that the basis of reality is not matter and energy, but information.  Unfortunately, this new form of reductionism is as problematic as the old one.  As mathematician David Berlinski writes regarding the material and informational aspects of DNA: “We quite know what DNA is: it is a macromolecule and so a material object.  We quite know what it achieves: apparently everything.  Are the two sides of this equation in balance?”  More generally, Berlinski observes that since the information embodied in a string of DNA or protein cannot affect the material dynamic of reality without being read by a material transducer, information is meaningless without matter.

The relationship between physical and informational reductionism is a telling one, for it directly mirrors Cartesian mind-matter dualism, the source of several centuries of philosophical and scientific controversy regarding the nature of deep reality. As long as matter and information remain separate, with specialists treating one as primary while tacitly relegating the other to secondary status, dualism remains in effect.  To this extent, history is merely repeating itself; where mind and matter once vied with each other for primary status, concrete matter now vies with abstract information abstractly representing matter and its extended relationships.  But while the formal abstractness and concrete descriptiveness of information seem to make it a worthy compromise between mind and matter, Berlinski’s comment demonstrates its inadequacy as a conceptual substitute.  What is now required is thus what has been required all along: a conceptual framework in which the relationship between mind and matter, cognition and information, is made explicit.  This framework must not only permit the completion of the gradual ongoing dissolution of the Cartesian mind-matter divider, but the construction of a footworthy logical bridge across the resulting explanatory gap.

Mathematically, the theoretical framework of Intelligent Design consists of certain definitive principles governing the application of complexity and probability to the analysis of two key attributes of evolutionary phenomena, irreducible complexity. On one hand, because the mathematics of probability must be causally interpreted to be scientifically meaningful, and because probabilities are therefore expressly relativized to specific causal scenarios, it is difficult to assign definite probabilities to evolutionary states in any model not supporting the detailed reconstruction and analysis of specific causal pathways.  On the other hand, positing the “absolute improbability” of an evolutionary state ultimately entails the specification of an absolute (intrinsic global) model with respect to which absolute probabilistic deviations can be determined.  A little reflection suffices to inform us of some of its properties: it must be rationally derivable from a priori principles and essentially tautological in nature, it must on some level identify matter and information, and it must eliminate the explanatory gap between the mental and physical aspects of reality.  Furthermore, in keeping with the name of that to be modeled, it must meaningfully incorporate the intelligence and design concepts, describing the universe as an intelligently self-designed, self-organizing system.

How is this to be done?  In a word, with language.  This does not mean merely that language should be used as a tool to analyze reality, for this has already been done countless times with varying degrees of success.  Nor does it mean that reality should be regarded as a machine language running in some kind of vast computer.  It means using language as a mathematical paradigm unto itself.  Of all mathematical structures, language is the most general, powerful and necessary.  Not only is every formal or working theory of science and mathematics by definition a language, but science and mathematics in whole and in sum are languages.  Everything that can be described or conceived, including every structure or process or law, is isomorphic to a description or definition and therefore qualifies as a language, and every sentient creature constantly affirms the linguistic structure of nature by exploiting syntactic isomorphism to perceive, conceptualize and refer to it.  Even cognition and perception are languages based on what Kant might have called “phenomenal syntax”.  With logic and mathematics counted among its most fundamental syntactic ingredients, language defines the very structure of information.  This is more than an empirical truth; it is a rational and scientific necessity.

Of particular interest to natural scientists is the fact that the laws of nature are a language.  To some extent, nature is regular; the basic patterns or general aspects of structure in terms of which it is apprehended, whether or not they have been categorically identified, are its “laws”.  The existence of these laws is given by the stability of perception.  Because these repetitive patterns or universal laws simultaneously describe multiple instances or states of nature, they can be regarded as distributed “instructions&rdquo ; from which self-instantiations of nature cannot deviate; thus, they form a “control language” through which nature regulates its self-instantiations.  This control language is not of the usual kind, for it is somehow built into the very fabric of reality and seems to override the known limitations of formal systems.  Moreover, it is profoundly reflexive and self-contained with respect to configuration, execution and read-write operations.  Only the few and the daring have been willing to consider how this might work…to ask where in reality the laws might reside, how they might be expressed and implemented, why and how they came to be, and how their consistency and universality are maintained.  Although these questions are clearly of great scientific interest, science alone is logically inadequate to answer them; a new explanatory framework is required.  This paper describes what the author considers to be the most promising framework in the simplest and most direct terms possible. [Source

[more...]

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02.14.08 (4:56 am)   [edit]

NEW PHYSICS AND THE MIND.

Some physicists think that Big Science has kidnapped physics and left the mind and consciousness behind.

What is the mind? And how can physicists, of all people, be the ones to explain consciousness and the mind?

PART ONE: ENTERING THE TWENTY-FIRST CENTURY. String theory dominates academic physics, but more and more physicists are questioning its validity.

PART TWO: PHYSICS AND THE MIND. The mind and consciousness have been part of physics since the earliest days of quantum physics. Roger Penrose’s 1989 The Emperor’s New Mind placed the mind and consciousness at the intersection of relativity and quantum physics, and proposed that the mind and consciousness are at the heart of physics’ theory of everything.

PART THREE: NEW PHYSICS. Physicists have continued to develop theories that intimately relate to the mind. The best of these theories of physics and the mind also incorporate phenomena of new physics—extra dimensions, entanglement, entropy and information, black holes, tunneling, Bose-Einstein condensates, chaos and complexity, dark matter and dark energy.

PART FOUR: SPECULATIONS. Count down the Top Ten Hidden Radical Theories of New Physics and the Mind.

Click here to look inside more of NEW PHYSICS AND THE MIND.

About The writer 

[Source]

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02.14.08 (4:47 am)   [edit]

A Review of The Demon-Haunted World - Science as a Candle in the Dark, by Carl Sagan [ The Carl Sagan Portal] [ Carl Sagan Quotation Book review]

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02.14.08 (4:34 am)   [edit]

Mind, Meaning, and Mental Disorder: The Nature of Causal Explanation in Psychology and Psychiatry

Derek Bolton and Jonathan Hill

Oxford University Press, USA | ISBN 019851560X | 2004-04-23 | PDF | 432 pages | 4.61 MB

Philosophical ideas about the mind, brain, and behaviour can seem theoretical and unimportant when placed alongside the urgent questions of mental distress and disorder. However, there is a need to give direction to attempts to answer these questions. On the one hand a substantial research effort is going into the investigation of brain processes and the development of drug treatments for psychiatric disorders, and on the other, a wide range of psychotherapies is becoming available to adults and children with mental health problems. These two strands reflect traditional distinctions between mind and body, and causal as opposed to meaningful explanations of behaviour. In this book, which has been written for psychiatrists, psychologists, philosophers, and others in related fields, the authors propose a radical re-interpretation of these traditional distinctions. Throughout the discussions philosophical theories are brought to bear on the particular questions of the explanation of behaviours, the nature of mental causation, and eventually the origins of major disorders including depression, anxiety disorders, schizophrenia, and personality disorder. First published in 1996, this volume played an important role in bridging the gap between philosophy and psychiatry, and introducing those in psychiatry to philosophical ideas somewhat neglected in their field. Completely updated, the new edition of this acclaimed volume draws on the strengths of the first edition, and will be a central text in the burgeoning field of philosophy of psychiatry. [Source]

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02.14.08 (3:47 am)   [edit]

Naturalizing the Mind

 

 

By Fred Dretske

 

A brief

 How can the baffling problems of phenomenal experience be accounted for? In this provocative book, Fred Dretske argues that to achieve an understanding of the mind it is not enough to understand the biological machinery by means of which the mind does its job. One must understand what the mind's job is and how this task can be performed by a physical system--the nervous system.

Naturalizing the Mind skillfully develops a representational theory of the qualitative, the phenomenal, the what-it-is-like aspects of the mind that have defied traditional forms of naturalism. Central to Dretske's approach is the claim that the phenomenal aspects of perceptual experiences are one and the same as external, real-world properties that experience represents objects as having. Combined with an evolutionary account of sensory representation, the result is a completely naturalistic account of phenomenal consciousness.

Table of Contents

Dretske's biography

 Born in 1932 is a philosopher noted for his contributions to epistemology and the philosophy of mind. Fred Dretske (Ph.D. Minnesota) joined the Duke faculty in 1999. He is the author of Seeing and Knowing, Knowledge and the Flow of Information, Explaining Behavior, and Naturalizing The Mind. A collection of his essays, Perception, Knowledge and Belief, appeared in 2000. Recent work centers on conscious experience and self-knowledge. He was awarded the Jean Nicod Prize in 1994. Dretske taught for a number of years at the University of Wisconsin-Madison before moving to Stanford University. After retiring from Stanford he moved to Duke University where he is now research professor of Philosophy.

Dretske holds externalist views about the mind, and thus he tries in various writings to show that by means of mere introspection one actually learns about his own mind less than might be expected. [Source: Wikipedia]

Buy it here.

 

You can see "An Interview with Fred Dretske"

You can study some of his Articles those are online:

1-    & nbsp; Knowing What You Think vs. Knowing That You Think It

2-    & nbsp; The Mind's Awareness of Itself

You may also study a description on this book here, which has been written by David Cole

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02.14.08 (3:35 am)   [edit]

Do Highly Improbable Events Ever Happen?

 

 

By Arthur S. Lodge

 

His Curriculum Vitae

Born in 20 November 1922, in Liverpool, England, was a prominent rheologist and the originator of the Lodge elastic liquid constitutive equation and inventor of the Lodge Stressmeter. Author of two important textbooks in rheology (Elastic Liquids and Body Tensor Fields in Continuum Mechanics) You can see a brief here, and refer here to buy it. he was one of the founding members of the Rheology Research Center at the University of Wisconsin-Madison, USA.

Arthur Scott Lodge was received his baccalaureate (1945) and doctoral degrees (1948) from Oxford University in mathematics and physics, respectively. In 1949, he took a position at the British Rayon Research Association, where his supervisor was Karl Weissenberg, inventor of the Weissenberg rheogoniometer. In 1961, Lodge joined the faculty of the University of Manchester Institute of Science and Technology (UMIST). In 1964, Lodge authored the text Elastic Liquids (Academic Press), and spent the academic year 1965-1966 in Madison, WI USA as a visiting professor; in 1968 the Lodge family moved to Madison permanently. On his arrival at UW-Madison, Lodge and colleagues Bob Bird, John Ferry, John Schrag, and Millard Johnson founded the Rheology Research Center (RRC). Lodge chaired the RRC Executive Committee for 23 years until his retirement in 1991.

Elastic Liquids introduced the Lodge rubberlike liquid constitutive equation, the foundation for contemporary nonlinear viscoelasticity. The Lodge rubberlike liquid managed to explain most of what could be reliably measured at the time (other than non-constant shear viscosity) and also anticipated nonlinear behavior not reliably measured until years later, such as the Lodge-Meissner relation. In 1974, Lodge followed up Elastic Liquids with his second text, Body Tensor Fields in Continuum Mechanics (Academic Press, 1974). Lodge was an inventor and entrepreneur, designing and marketing the on-line Lodge Stressmeter, a device for making accurate measurements of shear normal stress differences using pressure-driven slit flow.

See his reports and publications here.
    & nbsp;   &n bsp; 
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02.14.08 (2:37 am)   [edit]

This interesting article that is written by Mario Crocco is a reciprocal analysis of mind and its place in nature.

A Palindrome: Conscious Living Creatures as Instruments of Nature; Nature as an Instrument of Conscious Living Creatures [PDF]

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02.13.08 (4:10 am)   [edit]

Homosexuals' punishment In Iraq 

http://www.zandiq.com/fa/video/?p=115" title="http://www.zandiq.com/fa/video/?p=115" target="_blank"http://www.zandiq.com/fa/vide...

3 Comments
02.11.08 (5:05 am)   [edit]

Dementia: Mind, Meaning, and the Person (International Perspectives in Philosophy and Psychiatry)

Julian C. Hughes, Stephan J. louw, Steven R. Sabat

Oxford University Press, USA | ISBN 0198566158 | 2006-01-14 | PDF | 328 pages | 3.61 MB

Dementia is an illness that raises important questions about our own attitudes to illness and aging. It also raises very important issues beyond the bounds of dementia to do with how we think of ourselves as people - fundamental questions about personal identity. Is the person with dementia the same person he or she was before? Is the individual with dementia a person at all? In a striking way, dementia seems to threaten the very existence of the self. This book brings together philosophers and practitioners to explore the conceptual issues that arise in connection with this increasingly common illness. Drawing on a variety of philosophers such as Descartes, Locke, Hume, Wittgenstein, the authors explore the nature of personal identity in dementia. They also show how the lives and selfhood of people with dementia can be enhanced by attention to their psychosocial and spiritual environment. Throughout, the book conveys a strong ethical message, arguing in favour of treating people with dementia with all the dignity they deserve as human beings. The book covers a range of topics, stretching from talk of basic biology to talk of a spiritual understanding of people with dementia. Accessibly written by leading figures in psychiatry and philosophy, the book presents a unique and long overdue examination of an illness that features in so many of our lives. [Source]

 

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02.11.08 (3:40 am)   [edit]

Does The paranormal exist?


Susan Blackmore 
 
 
Susan Blackmore , psychologist, consultant to the journal Skeptical Inquirer When I was a student at Oxford in 1970, I became fascinated with occultism, mediumship and the paranormal. I did the experiments. I tested telepathy, precognition, and clairvoyance; I got only chance results. I trained fellow students in imagery techniques and tested them again; chance results. I tested twins in pairs; chance results. I worked in play groups and nursery schools with very young children (their naturally telepathic minds are not yet warped by education, you see); chance results. I trained as a Tarot reader and tested the readings; chance results. I was lying in the bath trying to fit my latest null results into paranormal theory, when it occurred to me for the very first time that I might have been completely wrong, and my tutors right. Perhaps there were no paranormal phenomena at all. I had hunted ghosts and poltergeists, trained as a witch, attended spiritualist churches, and stared into crystal balls. But all of that had to go. Once the decision was made it was actually quite easy.
 
 
 
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