I think it would be a mistake to claim to know that things are inherently unintelligible, because it is hard to see how one could obtain sufficient confidence in that opinion to call it knowledge. On the other hand I find it entirely reasonable to hold an opinion that things are inherently unintelligible. I would definitely not call an opinion knowledge, or even a claim. — andrewk
By the way, the first place I came across a suggestion that the universe was unintelligible was in Stella Gibbon' book "Cold Comfort Farm", in which Flora, the protagonist, reads a book by the Abbé Fausse-Maigre - a RC priest - which is described as proclaiming the fundamental unintelligibility of the world. Suggestions of unintelligibility are not particularly associated with atheists. — andrewk
Yes that is approximately my position, although (1) I would replace 'claiming' by 'speculating' and (2) it would be overly simplistic to describe me as an atheist tout court. But I do know people who strongly self-identify as atheists that, like me, expect reality is ultimately unintelligible to humans or to any finite being.
Perhaps we are not in disagreement then. — andrewk
1. An object that is describable as a logical contradiction is metaphysically impossible. (e.g. square circles are metaphysically impossible) — Relativist
I can see no logical connection between lacking a belief in God and believing that everything can be understood. I know know-it-all theists and mystical, I-know-nothing atheists, as well as know-it-all atheists and mystical, I-know-nothing theists. The two dimensions are orthogonal.
At best there could be a correlation but I don't even see any sign of that. Do you have any evidence for this claim other than a throwaway line here or there from a celebrity atheist? — andrewk
Courage is obviously not an external goal. — InternetStranger
The theist that agrees that God is unintelligible and we can say nothing meaningful about Her is a rare beast indeed - but all the more admirable for that. — andrewk
2. If x exists then x is metaphysically possible (converse of 1) — Relativist
Can you use the word "philosophy" for matters unknowable, un-assertable, un-arguable and indescribable? — Michael Ossipoff
That's why I limit what I call "metaphysics", and use the word "meta-metaphysics" for matters of what-is that are (or might be) unknowable, non-describable, non-assertable, non-arguable.. — Michael Ossipoff
OED gives: "A Traveller is not to imagine pleasure his object." 1665 — InternetStranger
This is somehow not what telos or even 'final cause' in Scholastic usage means. — InternetStranger
My experience is quite the contrary of this. Most theists I've encountered do not recognise that at all. Instead they write and speak at length about alleged properties of God - what She can do, what She wants, what She thinks, what She has said, what books She has dictated. — andrewk
I'd be pretty confident that Russell had read Aquinas and understood the claims of classical theism. — andrewk
The word objective is ambiguous. It can mean "bright line rules", things most people in a given society understand such as speed limits, it can also mean "independent of humans". — InternetStranger
So, if metaphysics is philosophy, then it's over-ambitious to say that metaphysics can be about Reality, unless you claim that words can accurately describe Reality. That's an issue that i don't want to debate, but if you say that metaphysics's range of applicability includes ultimate Reality, then you're implying an assertion that words accurately describe Reality. — Michael Ossipoff
I know it doesn't literally. — mcc1789
That the sun will rise and set is independent of my opinion. Whether or not I happen to agree with it, this will happen nonetheless. — mcc1789
1. Logical contradictions do not exist. — Relativist
If your understanding is not contradictory, your explanations certainly are. — Galuchat
So, Aquinas changed the meaning of "soul" from "form" to "mind" and separated it from "body" for theological reasons. — Galuchat
In my opinion, you have been presenting a view of Final Cause which Aristotle would not have endorsed. — Galuchat
If the soul (mind+form of the body) is the source of intentional activity, and we must look to something other than the mind as the source of intentional activity, then is it more accurate to say that the form of the body (and not the soul) is the source of intentional activity? — Galuchat
I'm just trying to determine whether (given Aristotle's avoidance of psychological terms such as "intent") the use of even "nonconscious intent" to describe final cause should be avoided in favour of another, such as "end" (telos). It seems to me that using "intent" with reference to final cause is equivocal, possibly serving an unnecessary theological (as opposed to strictly scientific) end (read: Thomist viewpoint superseding Aristotelian viewpoint). — Galuchat
In the Physics, Aristotle builds on his general account of the four causes by developing explanatory principles that are specific to the study of nature. Here Aristotle insists that all four causes are involved in the explanation of natural phenomena, and that the job of “the student of nature is to bring the why-question back to them all in the way appropriate to the science of nature” (Phys. 198 a 21–23)." — Galuchat
The intellect (mind) and soul (form of the living body) of the human being are united as one (according to Aquinas, not Aristotle). — Galuchat
So, how is the human soul (mind+form) the source of intentional activity if "...we must look to something other than the mind as the source of purposeful, or intentional activity." (as above)? — Galuchat
Also, if Aristotle's final cause applies to all of nature, it may help if you could explain what the final cause of an inorganic object or process (e.g., a volcano or volcanic eruption) would be. — Galuchat
Yeah. I did. The spontaneous part of "spontaneous symmetry-breaking" refers to the fact that any old material nudge is going to tip everything in some collective symmetry-breaking direction. So it says, yes, you need some kind of material/efficient cause to get things going. But the very least imaginable fluctuation is going to do that. — apokrisis
It is a pure accident. Whatever happened, it would have resulted in the same effect. — apokrisis
A classic example of this is a ball balanced on top of a dome. It is going to roll off one way or another of its own accord. Well, it will need a nudge to get going. But there is always going to be some vibration or other that tips the balance. — apokrisis
They form membranes spontaneously. You forgot, or never understood, what was said. — apokrisis
Can purpose refer to function or reason instead of intent, and thereby to a strictly physical (as opposed to mental, or non-physical) process?
For example:
1) The purpose (function) of the heart is to pump blood.
2) The purpose of (reason for) photosynthesis is to convert light into chemical energy. — Galuchat
Did Aristotle define telos in terms of reason or intent? — Galuchat
Yes, the laws of nature are a human construct, but that does not change the fact that they are the best reference for whether or not some other claim is compatible with how nature works. — Read Parfit
"The reader's familiarity with the truth expressed in this proposition is proportional to his familiarity with the experience of thinking scientifically. In proportion as a man is thinking scientifically when he makes a statement, he knows that his statement is the answer to a question and he knows what the question is. In proportion as he is thinking unscientifically he does not know these things. In our least scientific moments we hardly know that the thoughts we fish up out of our minds are answers to questions at all, let alone what those questions are. It is only by analyzing the thought which I expressed by saying, "this is a clothes-line" that I realize it to have been an answer to the question, "what is that thing for?" and come to see that I must have been asking myself that question although at the time I did not know I was asking it. — tim wood
You don't seem to understand the scientific version of hylomorphism - the kind where global organisation can form "spontaneously" to meet some finality. The word spontaneous is used here to denote that there is no particular local material/efficient cause that produces the global organisation. Instead there is some generalised finality being served which does the trick. — apokrisis
In the case of lipids forming micelles, the finality is the usual one of entropy minimisation. The lipid molecules have no choice but to find the configuration which is the least energy-demanding possible. And any kind of nudge or fluctuation at all is going to be enough of a local material push to set that chain of dominoes falling to its inevitable conclusion - a micelle arrangement with all the hydrophobic tails tuck up inside, safely far from any surrounding water. — apokrisis
So for a modern biological Aristotelian, we have our notions of final/formal cause that make measurable sense. — apokrisis
Go read the book. — tim wood
I just find it interesting that the concept of time that is most appealing is when it's expressed through change. — TheMadFool
Of course the only way to judge the reasonableness of such speculation - which ran ahead of the experiments now being done by Lane and others - would be to actually read his book. — apokrisis
I don't know if movies represent the general conception of time correctly or not. — TheMadFool
Parfit argues that we can ask if claims are compatible with the laws of nature. — Read Parfit
And don't forget that what follows after a dichotomous separation or symmetry breaking is the arrival at the stable equilibrium of a triadic hierarchical state of order. You get an ending to the breaking when the two limits are in equilibrium with the contents they thus now contain.
Again, because you can't be bothered to study how all this works, you keep falling woefully short of any understanding. I have to keep explaining basic stuff again and again. — apokrisis
Exactly. You think it is a simple division. And the process view says it is irreducibly complex. Things only reach stability once the separating into polar opposites has arrived at a hierarchical balance where there is also now a connecting spectrum of concrete possibility. — apokrisis
Hardly. All things warm are now specified in concrete fashion because they are related to the extremes of a dichotomy. There is the hot in one direction, the cold in the other. So now the warm has its own definite and measurable location somewhere on the spectrum of possibility just established. — apokrisis
What do you understand about process philosophy? A big fat zero so far. — apokrisis
I find it a little embarrassing for you that you deny that lipids can spontaneously from in the right conditions — Read Parfit
Yes. Let's see if you can just remember the definition of a dichotomy as that which is "mutually exclusive and jointly exhaustive". So there is a process of separation towards reciprocally-matched limits. Two contrasting limits on "the real" emerge into view according to the distance each can each put between itself and its "other". — apokrisis
You make the right noises about dichotomies only then to collapse everything back to your happy simplicities of pairs of terms that are then neither mutual nor exhaustive anymore so far as you are concerned. — apokrisis
Then maybe you will have the logical wherewithal to take a next step. — apokrisis
It's an absolute presupposition of my political thinking, such as it is, that American style democracy, while at all times a work-in-progress, is the best form of government possible.
Simple enough and any number of people could have said it. Give it a "metaphysical' try. Remember, no presuppositions allowed! — tim wood
Really! Example? — tim wood
1) Every statement that anybody ever makes is made in answer to a question. — tim wood
I think the facts support my assertion that lipids spontaneously form in the right conditions like those that exist in a alkaline hydrothermal vent. — Read Parfit
What are you talking about. This is modelling. So to the extent that we know the thing-in-itself, the dichotomy of the discrete and the continuous is the conceptual division that would describe a separation of the real - whatever that is noumenally speaking - towards its "real" phenomenological limits. — apokrisis
Thus if we are talking about our ontic commitments, then containers and contents are both equally "real" in that modelling sense. Likewise our notions of the continuous and discrete as the limits on possible existence. — apokrisis
You are getting it ... by trying so hard to get it wrong! Spectacular. My job is done. — apokrisis
Here's the problem, or I think it's the problem. It seems to me you a) want to uncover and learn what presuppositions are actually being presupposed (which is one definition of Metaphysics), and b) then want to "prove" them. — tim wood
And when you manage to get to an "absolute" presupposition, which by definition never becomes a proposition in the thinking in which it operates but is instead like an axiom, then it's useless to try to "prove" it, because usually it's not provable, or, because its function (axiom-like) is to be presupposed. — tim wood
God for example, is an absolute presupposition of Christian faith. People who fail to understand this are forever worrying at the question of God's existence and any "proof" of that existence. That failure is held to be the flaw in Christianity. But Christians announce their creed as, "We believe...". Now what, as a "metaphysician," do you do with that presupposition? — tim wood
The understanding that I have of Metaphysics is that it is the historical science of determining the presuppositions held by different groups at different times, and nothing further. — tim wood
That might be your subject. And the only way you understand any subject. — apokrisis
So the mathematical debate seems to hinge on whether "the real" is discrete or continuous. — apokrisis
What's so difficult? Being reciprocal is why the discrete and the continuous would map naturally to a hierarchical story of the smallest vs the largest. That is the nature of the relation being describe. The bigger one gets, the smaller the other gets. — apokrisis
I thought it meant the space within which every possible number exists in bounded fashion. — apokrisis
It is a limit on any continuity - the least amount of continuity imaginable. Just as continuity is whatever is the least unbroken state of affairs that you can imagine. — apokrisis
As I say, your non-process view of metaphysics keeps crashing into paradoxes because it believes in ontological absolutes rather than a logic of relations. You keep demanding to be shown something fixed and concrete that answers to your mechanistic conviction that reality has to begin in counterfactual definiteness, rather than definiteness being a relative outcome. — apokrisis
