I get bored by long form discussions and gain a lot from seeing people discuss in person. There are lots of contextual cues that we lose if it's just blocks of text going back and forth. What's more, many of these discussions need some time pressure, otherwise they become self-indulgent and even longer.
I want to organise some zoom debates
But:
- Standard debate rules suck. They are about winning, not finding truth. If I run debates, each debater will get to lead the discussion in 10 minute chunks, rather than making speeches. My suggested debate format.
- I am not interested in vague questions. I want actual tangible questions with real answers.
With that in mind, what concrete questions would you like to see two people debate, in real time, in a format that encourages them to understand and engage with one another and that is time-boxed.
There are a couple of debate ideas I have, but I would most like to see a debate on whether ontological physicalism is the best view of the universe there is.
I would like to see someone like the theoretical physicist Sean Carroll represent physicalism, and someone like the professor Edward F. Kelly from the Division of Perceptual Studies at the University of Virginia represent anti-physicalism. The researchers at the Division of Perceptual Studies study near-death experiences, claimed past-life memories in children and other parapsychological phenomena, and Edward F. Kelly has written three long books on why he thinks physicalism is false, relying largely on case studies that he says don't fit well with the physicalistic worldview. Based on my understanding, the mainstream scientific community treats the research by the Division of Perceptual Studies as fringe science.
I'm personally agnostic, but I have thought about making an efforpost on steelmanning anti-physicalism based on Edward F. Kelly's works for LessWrong, but I have doubted whether there would be any kind of interest for it because the people at LessWrong seem to be very certain of physicalism and think lowly of other positions. If you think there would be interest for it, you can say so. Physicalism has very good arguments for it, and the anti-physicalist position relies on non-verifiable case studies being accurate.