what account of the world do you give when talking to an average person with some philosophical interest? — Tom Storm
Albino ravens are apparently a thing. — Janus
What do you mean by "idealism – which flavor of it?" Why does this "consistency" with "advances in science" matter?All the advances in science are consistent with idealism. — RogueAI
"Science doesn't do" poetry or sports either, so what's your point, Rogue? And how are "all the advances in science", as you say, "consistent" with a metaphysics like "idealism" if "science doesn't do metaphysics"?Science doesn't do metaphysics.
To paraphrase W. Churchill:If you are a physicalist, what convinced you? — frank
Worth a mint too I imagine. I think I prefer albino blues guitarists. — Tom Storm
Of course you're now providing an opening for the ersatz mystics and fundamentalists. If physicalism can't account for our entire experince than this gap can immediately be plugged with magic or gods — Tom Storm
IME I've found that physicalism is the worst methological paradigm for explaining – modeling – aspects of the natural world except for all those other non-physical or anti-physical paradigms tried from time to time. — 180 Proof
the evidence points strongly to non-physical mental content driving these unfortunate conditions — Mark Nyquist
Brain processes, like ink marks, sound waves, the motion of water molecules, electrical current, and any other physical phenomenon you can think of, seem clearly devoid of any inherent meaning. By themselves they are simply meaningless patterns of electrochemical activity. Yet our thoughts do have inherent meaning – that’s how they are able to impart it to otherwise meaningless ink marks, sound waves, etc. In that case, though, it seems that our thoughts cannot possibly be identified with any physical processes in the brain. In short: Thoughts and the like possess inherent meaning or intentionality; brain processes, like ink marks, sound waves, and the like, are utterly devoid of any inherent meaning or intentionality; so thoughts and the like cannot possibly be identified with brain processes. — Ed Feser
Consider me as one of those physicalists that won’t deny that the world might contain, as you say, many items that at first glance don’t seem physical.
Can I be a metaphysical physicalist? At least until convinced I can’t be? — Mww
So it's just the grounding for your worldview, right? You don't need an argument for it. — frank
Truthmaker theory (as explicated by David Armstrong, the patron saint of Physicalism) provides a grounding for logic.What about logical necessity? How is that 'necessitated by the physical'? — Wayfarer
A physicalist metaphysics is not dependent on what is known, or will be known. It is based on the axiom that everything that exists is physical. Physicalists accept this axiom because it is indeed all that's needed to account for everything known to exist - i.e. it's the most parsimonious ontology.If we define "physical" as what is currently understood by physics, the dilemma arises because our current understanding of physics is likely incomplete and may change in the future. As a result, the claim that the mind (for example) is 'physical' might be false simply because our current physics does not fully capture all physical aspects of the universe. And If we define "physical" as whatever a future, complete physics will include, the dilemma arises because this definition is too vague and open-ended. We cannot currently know what the future physics will encompass, making it difficult to make meaningful claims about the mind being physical based on this definition. — Wayfarer
…..just the grounding for your worldview, right?
— frank
I agree with Mww, but add that it's grounded by the fact that (IMO) physicalism is an inference to the best explanation for the known facts of the world. — Relativist
But, this would need proof of existence before it became anything more than speculation.
Physicalists accept this axiom because it is indeed all that's needed to account for everything known to exist - i.e. it's the most parsimonious ontology.
I'm not sure if that solves the issue though. — Count Timothy von Icarus
So, by way of an instance, we can count, but there is no purely physical explanation of how or what counting is. hence physical explanations are useless here. Hence there are things that are not explained by physics. Some claim that somehow counting emerges from the physics of the brain, but it remains that so far no account can be found of how this happens, still less how it is that this counting enables international credit ratings and so on.If we're physical, how can we "do" things that none of our more basic, better understood physical components can do? — Count Timothy von Icarus
smallism — Count Timothy von Icarus
I think I was misreading you. — Count Timothy von Icarus
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