• agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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    6 hours ago

    Incorrect. Robots have electrical heads, organizations have conceptual heads. You’re not making a scientific argument, you’re making semantic strawmen contrived to confirm your biases. Nothing could be further from science.

    • the_toast_is_gone@lemmy.world
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      6 hours ago

      First, what is your point?

      Second, does the sun fit any of the following definitions:

      • biological head
      • robotic head
      • head of an organization
      • spiritual head
      • head of a tool
      • match head
      • the head command
      • document head(er)
      • the headless horseman’s head If so, can you explain how with direct evidence or argumentation rather than simply “we can’t say for sure that it doesn’t”? Again, that argument would make it eligible to fit any and all possible definitions.

      Third, if it doesn’t fit any of the above definitions, can you explain which definition of head that it does, what that definition is, and why it’s relevant?

      • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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        5 hours ago

        My point is you’re torturing a non-scientific argument to try to pass it off as scientific. No one benefits my pretending achieve is something it isn’t. You’re trying to use it to determine reality, when it’s just a tool to develop consistent models. It does not work when considering a phenomenon outside of testable hypotheses.

        Again, the sun could be the head, the sensory and processing unit, of an unknown nuclear being. We have no way to test this, so it cannot be scientifically “disproved”. That does not dictate reality. You’re trying to apply scientific reasoning to phenomena outside its preview.

        • the_toast_is_gone@lemmy.world
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          4 hours ago

          Your claim doesn’t have anything to do with my original point other than semantic sports over whether the sun is a head. Philosophy and theology also don’t determine reality. We can only discover it through these means, the same way we can discover reality through science. The simple fact is that some philosophical, theological, and scientific hypotheses are closer to reality than others. The only way to dispute that would be to argue there is no objective truth, which is a self-defeating claim.

          Again, OP is making a meaningless argument.

          • agamemnonymous@sh.itjust.works
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            4 hours ago

            There is no objective truth. You wanting to project objective truth does not make it more real. Reality is a mystery, and using tools incorrectly to fool yourself into objective truth is a miscarriage of science.

            You’re trying to apply materialism to allegory. Evaluating religion this way is a meaningless argument.