SO explain, using only physics, why folk stop at the red light. — Banno
I would state that everything that we've discovered so far is physical in origin.
— Philosophim
On what basis? — Wayfarer
But, this would need proof of existence before it became anything more than speculation.
Well, that's what people believe they are demonstrating in their papers. In any event, the converse isn't decisively demonstrated. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Yeah, we have. Traffic laws.we have not discovered anything that exists apart from matter and energy. — Philosophim
we have not discovered anything that exists apart from matter and energy.
— Philosophim
Yeah, we have. Traffic laws. — Banno
Philosophim Are you going to argue that traffic laws are physical? Wouldn't that be a category error? — Banno
Are you going to answer my question with a question, or answer it? — Philosophim
It's your argument. I'll not put it together for you.Where do traffic laws come from Banno? — Philosophim
The starting point, for a physicalist, is the basic, innate belief in a world external to ourselves, one that we perceive a reflection of through our senses .. All the evidence that is used to support the claim that "everything that has been discovered to date is physical," could equally be used to support the claim that "everything discovered to date has been mental." — Count Timothy von Icarus
I guess for those untrained in philosophy the delineation of what is physical is difficult. — Tom Storm
It's an epistemological process.Inference to a best explanation is nothing if not a metaphysical process, right? — Mww
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.
This is exactly what idealists claim, in favor of their own position. No one has ever observed the noumena, it's impossible. Every empirical observation ever has been phenomenal. No one has ever had an experience outside of subjective first person experience. Not one datumn has informed a scientific paper anywhere that wasn't experienced in the mind.
Thus, everything is mental. This is equally parsimonious, perhaps more because it doesn't need to explain why there seems to be a different sorts of stuff, mental life and physical stuff. Science, so the claim goes, is our empirical study of how mental stuff, phenomena, works. Nothing that is not mental has ever been observed. Claiming otherwise would be to claim that one has perceived something without their mind, seen without their vision, yadda, yadda, yadda.
I don't see how that position is anymore ad hoc. All the evidence that is used to support the claim that "everything that has been discovered to date is physical," could equally be used to support the claim that "everything discovered to date has been mental." What such evidence actually amounts to seems to be more a refutation of dualism than support for either position.
But the fact that such evidence can't decide the issue makes me question how useful the distinction is in the first place. — Count Timothy von Icarus
we have not discovered anything that exists apart from matter and energy. — Philosophim
↪Philosophim So you dismiss all the arguments against physicalism in the source article? Or is it more that you think we can safely assume they’re wrong? Or you haven’t considered them? — Wayfarer
I would just modify one thing. I would state that everything that we've discovered so far is physical in origin. It does not mean that everything is physical, as we have not looked at everything yet. I also wouldn't even say this is a philosophy, this is just the fact of the known universe at this time. Finally, this does not preclude the use of terms such as metaphysics, ideas, or words that are not necessarily associated with 'the physical'. The point is to understand that the origin of everything so far known is physical, and shouldn't imply more than that. — Philosophim
Sherlock Holmes? The Pythagorean Theorem? — RogueAI
Could the alien figure out, from that purely physical description of my rage-induced red-light running behavior, that I am not a p-zombie? — RogueAI
If you don't believe these things are physical in origin, then what are they made of? Where did they come from? In what space do they reside? — Philosophim
Let's say you describe all that rage and red-light running in purely physical terms and then showed it to an alien who didn't know if humans were p-zombies or not. Could the alien figure out, from that purely physical description of my rage-induced red-light running behavior, that I am not a p-zombie? — RogueAI
Picture Holmes in your mind right now. — RogueAI
Fictional characters and mathematical theorems and numbers are mental objects. — RogueAI
You could turn that around and say that given a physicalist understanding of human beings, the alien would conclude that you are a p-zombie, and it would be correct in doing so. — goremand
Accounting for your phenomenology would be not just impossible but also redundant. — goremand
Yes, these are physical in origin too. Sherlock Holmes does not reside in a separate subspace or as a separate material from matter and/or energy. It was created by the physical brain of Arthur Conan Doyle. It was then written with physical ink on physical paper. Printed by a physical machine, and read by physical eyes and brains.
It would be wrong in doing so, since I'm not a p-zombie. — RogueAI
Possibly, but only if it doesn't have mental states of its own. If the alien is not a zombie, it would know mental states cannot be expressed in purely physical terms. — RogueAI
↪Philosophim I was indoctrinated in materialism for almost all my life. It's only recently that I've discovered it's incoherent. Materialism claims that we could be in a simulation. That would entail that all our feelings and imaginings and dreams and the essence of who we are are a collection of electronic switches. Doesn't that strike you as completely absurd? That the joy of playing with your children can emerge if you take some switches, run some current through them, and turn them on and off in a certain way? Why on Earth should I believe such nonsense? — RogueAI
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