So then why is he president? Why are so many more people being fooled? Is it only economic conditions? — Mikie
I explained myself in my next post, which you quoted in part. What era do you think MAGA supporters consider "great"? — Ecurb
I wonder whom philosopher man or women that do everything in the center of two political axes. A pope? — Gmak
Husserl would insist that even after the most radical phenomenological reduction, consciousness remains relational. It is always correlation, never an isolated substance. For Merleau-Ponty, consciousness is embodied, not secondarily but fundamentally. The self is not first and then related; it is constituted in relation, it is world-involving. There is no pure inward gaze that escapes the fleshly intertwining of body and world. — Joshs
Experience seems to be an interaction - do we ever have it without a relationship with an other of some kind? — Tom Storm
The notion that 'philosophical counselling'
empowers the 'patient' to own recognisable
symptoms and conquer the powers of the soul,
or form healthy relationships to
alleviate obsessive or vice like attachments is
a considerable leap over forms that are culturally operating through qualification and supervision.
Where then does such a term that professes
competencies and efficacies have its
justifications? — Alexander Hine
Would you be content to rent an office and
get a signwriter to place your name next to
the title, 'philosophical counsellor'? — Alexander Hine
The T Clark you see here on the forum is exactly the T Clark you would see if you were sitting here in my living room with me right now. No canyon. — T Clark
On the contrary, for some of us, at least, metaphysical questions are pressing. They're not idle or abstract - they matter. — Wayfarer
In any case, all of this is firmly in the ballpark of metaphysics, and it's a very difficult subject. — Wayfarer
not just the boundary but the very essence of your self-respect, — RadicalJoe
Or, at least, it's always appeared to me to be something like a mystery. To a point that I wonder if "conceptual confusion" is a possible answer, but that doesn't seem so to me. In a straightforward way we talk about the world, our talk about the world is about the world, and this aboutness -- insofar that language is real and not an illusory set of squeaks and squawks we don't really understand as much as feel like we understand -- is as real as the rest around us insofar that we are non-dualistic naturalists. — Moliere
That sounds like proving a negative. I suppose a theist is more likely to point to (demonstrate) the absence of physical evidence for mental phenomena in matter — Gnomon
So what I mean to say is that in terms of a basic analysis his argument checks out and makes sense -- which part doesn't make sense to you? — Moliere
I'm inclined to say that number (as an example) is a necessary and uniform structure within rational thought. When I ask what the sum of 1 + 3 is, the answer is constrainted by necessity to '4'. We are 'compelled by reason' to give that answer. But in what sense does '4' exist? This is the question sorrounding platonic realism which has generated centuries of argument. The implication is, if abstractions exist, in what sense do they exist?
A strong empiricist or reductionist naturalism inclines us to accept only those things that exist as phenomena as real - numbers and logical rules are, then, seen as being in the mind or the product of the mind, 'human inventions', and the like, 'projected' onto the world. But that belies the whole concept of mathematical necessity! — Wayfarer
Where I see the resistance to Platonic realism is the suggestion that numbers arereal but not material.. As soon as you say that, you're into metaphysics, like it or not, and most don't. We have a hardwired tendency to believe that what is real must be 'out there somewhere', literally existing in time and space. — Wayfarer
I can't help you with Hart's reasoning*1, except to note that it is based on theology, and argues against Naturalism/Materialism. If you are committed to Materialism, his arguments won't make sense — Gnomon
Give it a try. What vocabulary can you come up with to talk about the objective pole that doesn’t already imply a contribution from the subjective pole? — Joshs
But does each thing (or, what is equivalent here: does any thing at all) have such an essence of its own in the first place? Or is the thing, as it were, always underway, not at all graspable therefore in pure Objectivity, but rather, in virtue of its relation to subjectivity, in principle only a relatively identical something, which does not have its essence in advance or graspable once and for all, but instead has an open essence, one that can always take on new properties according to the constitutive circumstances of givenness? But this is precisely the problem, to determine more exactly the sense of this openness, as regards, specifically, the "Objectivity" of natural science.”(Husserl, Ideas II)
(This is also why I make frequent reference to Charles Pinter's 2022 book 'Mind and the Cosmic Order'. He shows in great detail how the mind structures experience through the formation of gestalts, meaningful wholes, which are the basic units of cognition (and not only human cognition). We 'pick out' specific 'things' and identify them as shapes and forms against backgrounds. Without this cognitive activity there would be no conscious awareness as such - that is what 'the world' is for us. The difficulty is becoming aware of those activities, as it is largely reflexive and unconscious.) — Wayfarer
If you remove all of the idealizations that minds impose on the world of appearances, there is not much to say about the nature of what is mind-independent. — Joshs
Our mathematical schemes depend on idealizations we construct that stabilize the world into convenient, standardized identities. — Joshs
I apologize, if you were offended by my interpretation of your OP : that you are not comfortable (OK) with the postulated explanations --- supernaturalistic or naturalistic --- for the Intelligibility of the universe — Gnomon
I don't think that "unintelligible structure" makes sense. So it would be better to say "co-create the structures we study". Then doesn't "study" suggests the structures exist independently of us? That's not inapt, so long as we don't forget that we co-create them. — Ludwig V
So you are not OK with metaphorical philosophical answers to the Intelligibility question on a philosophy forum? Do you think Math (logic), and other nonphysical aspects of the Cosmos, is not Real, simply because we can't see or touch it? If so, then it's Ideal, and physical science will not answer your question. — Gnomon
doubt you would be asking the OP question if you were satisfied with empirical science's physical mechanical description of how we see*1 (rods & cones, etc). — Gnomon
You say we ‘built’ mathematics to find patterns. But that gets causation backwards. We discovered mathematical patterns were already there, and then developed formal methods to study them more systematically. — Wayfarer
And the point about ‘cognitive frameworks’ actually supports my view, not yours. Why are our cognitive frameworks capable of grasping mind-independent mathematical truths? — Wayfarer
I think there is ample evidence that ghosts are real psychic phenomena. Do they have an independent existence? How would we know? Is that question very much different in the strictest sense from the question as to whether the world as it appears has an independent existence? — Janus
Because they enable discoveries about nature that would otherwise be completely imperceptible to us. They account for the discoveries which make the platform on which this conversation is being conducted possible, among many other things. — Wayfarer
Science is a combination of observations (of what appears to us, obviously) and inference to the best explanation for those observations. It says nothing, and can say nothing, about how things are in any absolute, non-contextual sense. There is no such sense―not for us anyway―how could there be? — Janus
I think you have answered your own question. The intelligibility of reality, and the "unreasonable effectiveness" of mathematics (Wigner), are not scientific questions. So we should not expect naturalistic answers. Also, any philosophical answers postulated will be limited to metaphysical and metaphorical conjectures. Are you OK with that? :wink: — Gnomon
The odd part there is that in studying philosophy one can also learn to do the opposite -- to defend one's viewpoint from all possible objections and prove oneself right. — Moliere
How about "Treat others as you, to the best of your understanding, think they would wish to be treated"? — Janus
Then there's the knowledge of the trades I think of: knowing the different types of switches you can install into a control panel is about reality but it's not really a scientific knowledge and it's not only know-that. It's technical knowledge. Plumbing, machining, electrical work seem to fit here as genuine kinds of truth that are even about the world but they're not doing the science thing. — Moliere
Philosophy! :D
At least I tend to think so. It's hard to characterize just what is learned by studying philosophy, but I can see that people who do are more able at thinking. It's not that they will not fall for traps but they'll be somewhat aware of possible traps and be open to error more than people who do not. — Moliere
I think the idea that is being circled around here without really being stated is metaphysical realism. Metaphysical realism is the philosophical position that a mind-independent world exists, holding that objects, their properties, and the structure of reality remain the same regardless of whether they are thought of, perceived, or experienced. — Wayfarer
I want to say that intelligibility, causation, and the idea of an ordered world can be metaphysical presuppositions, but I don't believe they must be a part of science as a whole. — Moliere
. I genuinely believe there's more to knowledge than science. — Moliere
Even philosophy counts here -- it's just seeking a different kind of truth than science seeks, by my lights, and due to the practices of science being made relatively free of metaphysical commitments (at least, necessary metaphysical commitments), which is evidenced by the wide interpretations of science even by scientific practitioners (i.e. a naturalist vs. an idealist, say) while the practice continues to be successful. — Moliere
Is science built upon philosophical axioms? Is "Reality can be understood" an axiomatic belief? — Moliere
And I'd say I'm not committed to positivism or scientism with this because I don't believe science is the end-all-be-all on reality. — Moliere
("We're interested specifically in intentionality. Have you found that yet?") — Srap Tasmaner
