Burden of proof error, those claiming it is supernatural must prove it. "not supernatural" is the null hypothesis and is backed by mountains of evidence in the field of neuroscience.
"Burden of proof error, those claiming the NSA is spying on somebody must prove it. Not spying is the null hypothesis and backed by mountains of evidence"
The problem is that I wasn't making a claim either way. I only requested proof of a definitive statement made by OP.
> Burden of proof error, those claiming the NSA is spying on somebody must prove it.
Which would also be the correct burden of proof. Burden of proof isn't about who's making the claim, it's about whether the claim is positive or negative. You can't logically prove a negative, i.e. you can't prove the NSA isn't spying on you, you can only prove they are. It only takes one example to prove they are, but no number of checks of their equipment can prove they aren't because you might not have seen them all and they could be hiding some. The same applies to claims of anything, regardless of which side is making a claim, the claim itself can be looked to, and phrased in the positive and that's where the burden of proof lies. So whichever side is on the side of "X is true" suffers the burden of proof, never the side that says "X is false".
If I say God doesn't exist for example, the burden of proof still lies upon those who believe he does despite my poor stating of my side of the argument because God exists is still the positive claim and thus the only one that's provable.
> You can't logically prove a negative, i.e. you can't prove the NSA isn't spying on you, you can only prove they are.
That's simply not true. You can prove a negative, it just takes a lot more effort.
Imagine if computer scientists took the same approach:
"Hey everybody use our new crypto, there are absolutely no flaws in the design"
"Prove it"
"Nope, the burden of proof is on you to demonstrate that there is a flaw"
That type of "burden of proof" argument is not helpful or productive in real life, which is why algorithm/hardware designers go to great lengths to mathematically prove there are no flaws in their design. It's called Formal Verification. If you toss the burden of proof on your customers, you'll have no customers.
I can certainly challenge any claim that anyone makes, positive or negative, and I have no obligation to spend time and energy proving or disproving anything. It all comes down to who wants the other party to change more.
Outside of math, the only place where proofs exist, you're simply mistaken. In the real world, there's no such thing as proof, only evidence, and in the world of evidence only [1]positive and thus verifiable claims suffer the burden of proof. This isn't debatable, this is a fact that you either understand or you do not, it isn't a matter of opinion.
> I can certainly challenge any claim that anyone makes, positive or negative
Yes you can, but it doesn't make your challenge logical. If you challenge someone to prove a negative claim, you are logically wrong and are demanding the impossible. Yes, they may have made a negative claim, the correct response is to say the claim itself is invalid and rephrase it to a valid form and then determine where burden of proof lies.
If you say "Fish definitely don't have dreams", I'll say that can't ever be proven, there may be one mutant fish somewhere that does dream and you can't examine them all and thus the claim is simply logically invalid. So the claim should be rephrased as "fish dream" and whoever is on that side suffers the burden of proof. However, just because it hasn't been proved that fish dream doesn't mean it's true that they don't, what it does mean is lacking evidence that they do, the answer is unknown.
This whole argument is silly. Apparently the burden of proof is on whomever you want it to be on. The burden of proof is on you? Simply rephrase the argument and suddenly it's on the other person.
OP's original claim was "Consciousness is not supernatural." Here, I'll define supernatural as "beyond our understanding of the laws of nature". Thus, OP's claim rephrased is:
"Consciousness is within our current understanding of the laws of nature."
Now we have a positive claim, and the burden of proof is back on OP.
> Apparently the burden of proof is on whomever you want it to be on
No, I've been very clear how to deterministically determine it, you're not listening or responding to anything or any point made; You're having the same argument with several people yet are unable to admit you're wrong; so we're done, you don't know how to converse or the capacity to change your mind when shown your mistakes.
> So whichever side is on the side of "X is true" suffers the burden of proof, never the side that says "X is false".
Fish definitely don't have dreams.
Dark Matter isn't real
There are no undiscovered artifacts left in the amazon jungles.
There are no sunken ships in the seas that we are not aware of.
By your logic nobody can contest any of the above claims without the burden of proof being on them. That's great. It means I can say anything negative I want as truth and then everybody else has to do the work to disprove me.
Please review the HN guidelines, which include this:
When disagreeing, please reply to the argument instead of calling names. E.g. "That is idiotic; 1 + 1 is 2, not 3" can be shortened to "1 + 1 is 2, not 3.
I appreciate the concern, and I'm sorry, but I can't control my actions. Everything I do is deterministic. It doesn't matter what the "HN guidelines" say, my current actions have already been prescribed millions of years ago. I was destined to call OP's statement bullcrap since the beginning of time. Like the article says, I have no free will.
"The NSA is not spying on anybody"
"Prove it"
"Burden of proof error, those claiming the NSA is spying on somebody must prove it. Not spying is the null hypothesis and backed by mountains of evidence"
The problem is that I wasn't making a claim either way. I only requested proof of a definitive statement made by OP.