Would a falling tree still make a noise if no one was around to hear it?
Yes. — Qurious
Is metaphysical realism equivalent to belief in objective reality, or is there something more to it? — T Clark
Metaphysical realism also seems to require that the kinds and categories that the things in experience belong to are also the kinds and categories that those mind-independent things belong to, but I think there's a case to argue that this isn't the case. — Michael
The philosophical error here is to mistake a question of grammar for a question of ontology. — Banno
What counts as a simple is utterly dependent on what we are saying.
The rest of this thread is confusion. — Banno
But we only ever experience our experience, ie the model. — Agustino
Yet the abstract mind can see the ultimate futility of all plans. There is no future, or (apparently) no stable and ultimate future. So our best laid plans are haunted by absurdity. — ff0
Vanity of vanities, says the Preacher, vanity of vanities! All is vanity.
What does man gain by all the toil at which he toils under the sun? — Ecclesiastes
This narrow prejudice ignores the fact that as embodied we feel the forces involves in causal efficacy; we feel ourselves being pulled, pushed, impacted and generally acted upon by natural forces in phenomena such as sunlight, wind and water, and also we experience pulling, pushing, impacting and generally acting upon other things. The bodily feeling of these forces is the source of the concept of force which distinguishes causation from mere impotent correlation. — Janus
To doubt, you need a reason to doubt, not just a contextless wondering whether things might be different than you think they are. — gurugeorge
Beyond that, I think very few people actually have world views that you would consider "realist." In the US, something like 45% of adults do not believe in evolution. More than 80% believe in God. — T Clark
Hence to say that "B necessarily follows A" is in some sense compatible with saying "B doesn't necessarily follow A". — sime
Presumably not so much for someone who actually believes it. — Wayfarer
Do you expect an answer? I don't know. I don't know what you mean. — T Clark
That's definitely a metaphysical question. — T Clark
Hume says we are creatures of passion primarily not rationality; don't expect him to derive shit, he's busy pointing out how underivable it is. — unenlightened
There is a passion to find a pattern, a passion to predict. — unenlightened
But the way it is interpreted has considerable metaphysical implications. I have no doubt at all about the facts of the matter, but considerable doubts about what they are taken to mean. — Wayfarer
Darwin's theory of evolution by natural selection is not metaphysics. Evolution is a fact in the world. The theory that natural selection is the primary mechanism of evolution is well supported by factual evidence and is believed by a consensus of those with a strong understanding of human biology, geology, and paleontology. — T Clark
As I've said many times on many threads and I will say many times more - metaphysical systems, of which science is one, are not right or wrong, there are more or less useful in particular situations. — T Clark
I don't think what I have asked for is certainty at all. All I have asked for is that the Realist have some account, which he can at least convince himself is true, of how human beings can have any reliable basis at all for the belief that Realism is true. — PossibleAaran
whatever it is, sounds good to eat. — Wayfarer
Are these "priors" not temporally prior? If the "prior" is necessary for the existence of the thing, then isn't the prior necessarily temporally prior to the existence of the thing — Metaphysician Undercover
If you analyze "logical priority" you will see that the only valid way that something can be prior to another is that it is temporally prior. — Metaphysician Undercover
Are you saying that our experiences are objective? I'm not even sure what that means. I would have thought that personal experiences are the essence of subjectivity. — T Clark
Which is begging the question. Who says being in the world is primary (other than Heidegger)? — T Clark
Since we can't step outside of our perceptions, there's no reason to supposed we're inside an objective reality. It's merely a philosophical exercise in what sort of wild scenarios we can imagine which aren't incompatible with our experiences. — T Clark
You're asking this question by starting out saying objective reality exists. We're not in a situation were we can do that. We can only imagine the possibility. — T Clark
I think you are a victim of a failure of imagination. It is a common intellectual malady to believe that words and the world are the same thing. — T Clark
I studied Hume under David Stove. He was a great guy, and a terrific teacher. Very sympathetic to me, who was kind of a rebel without a clue. But I don't think Stove 'got' Kant at all. — Wayfarer
think what the realist does, and this is something Schopenhauer is explicit about, is that s/he forgets to take account of him or herself, the sense in which all of our knowledge of the world is mediated by the senses, assimilated by the understanding, and represented in the intellect. Realism, generally, doesn't critically reflect on the nature of experience, and the contribution the mind makes to it. — Wayfarer
But as far as I can see "synthetic a priori judgements" are just a long-winded way of saying "sentiments". — unenlightened
You can't get a will-be from a was, any more than you can get an ought from an is. The gaps are bridged by habit and sentiment. — unenlightened
For just as we cannot rationally infer causation, we cannot rationally infer correlation. — sime
Strange as Idealism is, we never found any reason to think that things exist unperceived. — PossibleAaran
Oh, it might be because causality really is a thing out there in the world, hmmm, I see... — Agustino
If I were to take the Idealist route, I would likely answer you like this. The Idealist view is not that nothing exists unperceived by me, but that nothing exists unperceived by some mind. The starving kids in Africa obviously perceive themselves and their starvation, so the Idealist need not say they don't exist. The same with terrorists. The rain forest being cut down is obviously being perceived by the people cutting it down. — PossibleAaran
The rain forest being cut down is obviously being perceived by the people cutting it down. — PossibleAaran
