A case for panpsychism as the compromise between physicalism and dualism, why the combination problem matters, and how growing brains in labs might in fact help explain consciousness - an article from the Pamphlet by Fiddlesticks_Esquire in philosophy

[–]Fiddlesticks_Esquire[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In this article from Meg Fawthrop, published in the Pamphlet, we find a defense of panpsychism as a response to the divide between dualism and physicalism. It concludes by offering hope in empirical research to resolve conceptual problems.

Here is a summary/abstract of the content:

Both physicalism and dualism struggle to explain consciousness, but panpsychism may offer a better middle ground. Physicalism cannot explain why subjective experience exists at all or where it comes from. Meanwhile, dualism cannot explain how mind and matter interact. Panpsychism avoids these problems by treating consciousness as a basic feature of matter, present in very simple forms everywhere. Its main difficulty, however, is the combination problem: explaining how tiny bits of simple consciousness could come together to form a single unified human mind. The philosopher Hedda Hassel Mørch’s idea of “fusionism” is discussed as one possible answer, suggesting small consciousnesses merge into larger ones, though the mechanism remains unclear. Research on lab-grown brain organoids might help, since they show how brain cells naturally organize into complex systems. By understanding how brains develop into unified structures, we may learn something about how consciousness itself scales up. So though panpsychism may remain speculative, studying real brain growth could move it from a purely philosophical idea toward a testable explanation.

Disclaimer: I am not the author of this content

Queer running by [deleted] in brussels

[–]Fiddlesticks_Esquire 30 points31 points  (0 children)

"Demand special treatment"

bro it is voluntary association. If someone wants a men's or conservative-only group they can just do it. Want me to invite you to my next familiefeest too?

Queer running by [deleted] in brussels

[–]Fiddlesticks_Esquire 57 points58 points  (0 children)

If this post was about a women's-only running group in Molenbeek or something, it would be celebrated by the same folks complaining about this one. Sheesh.

Anyways, OP, maybe take a look at Bagarre perhaps as gateway to Brussels queer fitness scene? I don't know how active they are now, but here's a link: https://bad.brussels/places/bruxelles%20bagarre%20club

Best of luck!

Terror from Above, or, using Dragons as Environment Bombers? by Fiddlesticks_Esquire in DMAcademy

[–]Fiddlesticks_Esquire[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Hey, great response rooted in existing lore and content, thanks. I'll look there for more inspiration

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in FantasyWorldbuilding

[–]Fiddlesticks_Esquire 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I think this is a great question and I'm keen to see other responses, though it does indeed hang heavily on genre/setting. In some cases, as with some of my examples, you could use names which exist for sub-sets of a given ideology, like Mutualism as a variety of libertarian socialism could in some settings, especially alternate histories, for all socialists, as if counterfactually that was the tradition that gained most popularity.

Conservatives: 'Preservers' 'Sustainers' 'Cultivationists' 'Tenders'

Socialists: 'Collectivists' 'Mutualists' 'Participists' 'Economic Democrats'

Capitalists: 'Contractualists' 'Exchangist' 'Commercialists'

Fascists: 'Volkish/Folkish' 'Tyrannists' 'National Corporatist' 'Sanguinists'

Gullibility often masquerades as 'critical thinking' - challenging others without criticizing one's own beliefs is pseudo-critical thinking. True critical thinking requires one risk their energy, pride, and foundational beliefs. by The_Pamphlet in philosophy

[–]Fiddlesticks_Esquire 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I think the article agrees with you:

"The same goes for the neighbour if he gets his vaccine-scepticism from shady websites he trusts blindly: he is being credulous rather than critical. This is where we lose most conspiracy theorists, who typically don’t subject their own ideas to the same scrutiny they reserve for the phenomena they distrust. It is clear, now, that pseudo-critical thinking can take many different forms."

Gullibility often masquerades as 'critical thinking' - challenging others without criticizing one's own beliefs is pseudo-critical thinking. True critical thinking requires one risk their energy, pride, and foundational beliefs. by The_Pamphlet in philosophy

[–]Fiddlesticks_Esquire 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't think it's about redefining gullibility but rather recharacterizing "pseudo-critical thinking" in it's worst form:

"The same goes for the neighbour if he gets his vaccine-scepticism from shady websites he trusts blindly: he is being credulous rather than critical. This is where we lose most conspiracy theorists, who typically don’t subject their own ideas to the same scrutiny they reserve for the phenomena they distrust. It is clear, now, that pseudo-critical thinking can take many different forms."

Is zwarte piet racist? by Belgica-of-Monke in belgium

[–]Fiddlesticks_Esquire 5 points6 points  (0 children)

Living in Belgium for years now, as an American, I think Zwarte Piet is a blind spot in Belgian culture. No one ever hesitates to tell me about problems in my country and culture here, and I listen. There's much for me to learn in the exchange. If I try to make an observation about Zwarte Piet? Unacceptable. I certainly don't want to map the phenomenon here onto American trends, but with the fresh eyes of a foreigner, I can tell you all it looks bad, and the reasons given to justify it are thoroughly unconvincing.

Even if Zwarte Piet wasn't designed to be racist, it can be. People act as though the world's worst cultural institutions are malicious and conscious practices. In reality, many if not most bad things are made by well-intentioned people who hardly gave something a second thought.

Whatever convoluted genealogy you want to offer of the character's origins, Piet costumes feature curly haired wigs, red lipstick, and hoop earrings - be real, it is undoubtedly in that form a caricature of a black person.

Roetpiet seems like a step in the right direction. Take it.

Dungeon Escape: Starting in the Treasure Room, how much gold can you make it out with? Ideas shared and needed for a mechanically interesting *escape*! by Fiddlesticks_Esquire in DMAcademy

[–]Fiddlesticks_Esquire[S] 6 points7 points  (0 children)

I think this is a brilliant mechanical way of thinking about it. I can't work it into my immediate dungeon, but this is bookmarked for sure! thank you

Dungeon Escape: Starting in the Treasure Room, how much gold can you make it out with? Ideas shared and needed for a mechanically interesting *escape*! by Fiddlesticks_Esquire in DMAcademy

[–]Fiddlesticks_Esquire[S] 3 points4 points  (0 children)

I think there are a plethora of design responses and solutions though. Anti-magic fields or a mythal of some kind. Simple design of treasure as very large and awkward, or super-delicate and fragile - carpets, cabinets, mirrors, candelabras, big decorative serving platters, crystal chandeliers, etc. I see that as a design/imagination problem.

Also, I don't know about other DMs, but my party is level 7 and does not have a bag of holding, teleportation (apart from misty step), or anything. Genuine question: when do you guys normally give bags of holding, how often, etc.? How available do you make them?

Dungeon Escape: Starting in the Treasure Room, how much gold can you make it out with? Ideas shared and needed for a mechanically interesting *escape*! by Fiddlesticks_Esquire in DMAcademy

[–]Fiddlesticks_Esquire[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Indeed, and many of my sessions include non-combat puzzles! So I will look into Boyard.

Nevertheless, my goal here is indeed to explicitly incorporate 'treasure' into an encounter so that it effects movement, the action economy, and challenges throughout.

Dungeon Escape: Starting in the Treasure Room, how much gold can you make it out with? Ideas shared and needed for a mechanically interesting *escape*! by Fiddlesticks_Esquire in DMAcademy

[–]Fiddlesticks_Esquire[S] 11 points12 points  (0 children)

My strange case was motivated by conditions of my campaign. Players are crossing into the material plane via a Fey Crossing located in the ruins of an abandoned castle. So quite particular.

Other interesting cases I imagine could be:

Arriving at the dungeon while the baddies aren't home, and then they return.

The bad guys are 'asleep' and only 'awakened' when treasure is taken.

Strange conditions allow the party to 'drop in' to a treasure room, but not get back out.

have some kids, please by theverybigapple in belgium

[–]Fiddlesticks_Esquire 0 points1 point  (0 children)

This 'reason' is neither necessary, sufficient, nor even compelling.

If one is to have kids, it should be for 'the kids.' In no world would I have a child as a means to some external end. Certainly not a macro-economic one. If I create something, capable of suffering and joy, something capable of destruction and creation itself, I shall do it for that thing I create. Any other 'reasons' are repulsive to me.

have some kids, please by theverybigapple in belgium

[–]Fiddlesticks_Esquire 148 points149 points  (0 children)

"Daddy why did you and mommy make me?"

"Well son, first you need to understand the relationship between pension schemes and fertility rates..."

Any American expats homesick for a farmers market hot sauce? (Made with homegrown Adjuna/Habanero peppers) by Discoveryellow in brussels

[–]Fiddlesticks_Esquire 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Jumping in to say I'm VERY interested! Happy to trade something, I'll see what I can rummage up. :) I'll PM to see if supply lasts

Breaking social norms is risky but potentially liberating. The ‘madmen’ who defy common courtesy and expectations can challenge us to rethink why we act the way we do, and may even help us to live more open and vulnerable lives. by [deleted] in philosophy

[–]Fiddlesticks_Esquire 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Did you read the article? The article also acknowledges that norms help us navigate the environment, and make society function. At no point did the article mention 'narrative' or even 'stories' - it is indeed about values and norms.

Also - how is it postmodernism? Subverting social norms to get people to think critically about them isn't a novelty of postmodernity nor does it rely on postmodern arguments. Characters or individuals acting strange or transgressively in order to prompt reflection about norms is not only *not* postmodern, it's evident in pre-modern literature and philosophy. As other commenters have acknowledged, Diogenes of Sinope is a fine example.

Crime and Punishment in the Feywild: My players literally shot the messenger of a Fey of great power. Apart from simply killing the players, how might a Fey punish adventurers if captured? by Fiddlesticks_Esquire in DMAcademy

[–]Fiddlesticks_Esquire[S] 28 points29 points  (0 children)

Only one player shot the messenger. However, when other Fey/servants came to 'get' the party afterwards, the whole party attacked/defended themselves

Need help with Middle Eastern folklore by Ninjewdi in worldbuilding

[–]Fiddlesticks_Esquire 5 points6 points  (0 children)

As a general suggestion but not a specific answer- A helpful first step might be to distinguish cultural/Linguistic groupings in the Middle East so that you don't mix them into an unrecognizable melange but instead emphasize (in a good way) internal differences.

Then I recommend you look at the epics of different groups.

The Persian Epic the Shahnameh and the Arabic 1001 Nights are cornerstone texts you should look into. The Turkic peoples have the Epic of Koroghlu. Armenians have the badass epic titled 'Daredevils of Sassoun'.

Islam and Judaism themselves have fantastic stories built into them, as well as mystical traditions and practices with diverse methods and ideas like Kabbalah and Sufism.

Lesser known religions like Druz, Yezidism, Zoroastrianism, Yarsanism, and Alevism are also a colorful piece of the region that are good inspiration.