What are you calling it? A screwdriver still? Because that word is specifically linked to the concept of screwing screws. A thing can't be called a screwdriver if it doesn't do what a screwdriver does, because all of our words come from concepts, or universals, we have about a certain thing. That thing doesn't follow the concept of screwdriverness therefore it can't be called a screwdriver.
I'm allowed to call it whatever the hell I want. Now, if I were to try to shove my definition of a "screwdriver" down your throat, you will probably have a problem with it. But I am not trying to shove my definition down your throat.
Let me spell this out for you then.
You think your definition is the absolute universal truth. You think your definition is right and everyone else's definition is wrong if they disagree with you. You are trying to force your definition down my throat. This makes you an arrogant and controlling person. Your opinion is not absolute truth, even if the majority of humans agree with you.Lets step away from humans and take simpler things as examples. How do you know when something is red? Am I correct in saying that you have this concept of "redness" in your mind to determine whether something is red? And this concept of redness comes from your experience of red. So in your mind, you define something as red because of this conceptual understanding of it. Do you agree with me on this?
Talking about qualia now, are we?
Okay, regarding your example of redness. I know that an object, i.e. a collection of elementary particles, is red if it reflects electromagnetic radiation of wavelength 620-740 nanometers into my eyes. I don't remember the exact mechanism I learned in chemistry class last year, but the electromagnetic radiation strikes certain cells in my eyeballs, which triggers the eyeballs to send electrical signals to my brain. Depending on where the signals came from (e.g. which photoreceptor cells), the brain then interprets the signals as "red". It's a biologically pre-programmed thing, having arisen from evolution.
True, here you may say that red is some kind of universal absolute. But as I've explained above, "red" actually means "electromagnetic radiation with wavelength of 620-740 nanometers". It is a physical part of the universe, not an abstract concept. Your "nature" does not apply here because as far as I can see, it's an abstract concept, arbitrarily defined by our conscious brains.
Before we go here, I would like to clear up the idea of nature, because I still think nature is universal, hence the name nature, not accidents (changes that can happen to a thing that do not change what it is; i.e. cutting off my finger does not change the fact that I am still human, and therefore it is an accidental change).
And I do not. You're not going to convince me by repeating your point over and over.
I didn't want to debate this here either, I agree that it doesn't matter right now.
I don't know how else to convince you if you don't want to believe evidence.
At least I'll accept evidence if it presents itself in sufficient quantity and quality (e.g. anecdotal "evidence" isn't enough). Doing so may make me uncomfortable, but pretending that the evidence isn't there doesn't make it go away.
2. The whole problem here is that you disagree with me about human nature. Are you saying that humans have a nature, but it is this arrangement of particles, or are you saying that they don't have a nature at all? This whole argument hinges on the basis of human nature. So before I can go to this, let's define nature.
The nature of a thing can't change. Because if the nature changes, it is no longer that thing. The things that can change without the nature changing are the accidents of a thing (philosophical definition of accident). So because the human genome can mutate, it can't be the nature.
I am saying that the closest thing we have to a "human nature" is the human genome, and even then that's an arbitrary piece of information defined by consensus. I do not think that there is anything like the sort of "human nature" you speak of.
The problem with your definition, I think, is that you keep saying "nature" is universal and cannot change. Not even an infinitesimal change? Let's say that through some feat of science, magic, or will of God, my body is transformed from that of a human to that of a wolf. The process is smooth and gradual. At which point did I stop being human? What if my mind is transformed too, in an equally gradual manner? You can say that I am human because I have a human soul, but I do not believe in souls.