• In defence of the Principle of Sufficient Reason
    Mind or nous as the governing principle, arranging things according to what is best, is not the same as a world governed by reason.

    For Aristotle, the question of the intelligibility of the natural world faces two problems, the arche or source of the whole and tyche or chance. We have no knowledge of the source and what happens by chance or accident does not happen according to reason.
    Fooloso4

    Thanks, interesting distinctions. Tyche shows up as Pierce’s ‘tychism’ which I too believe is intrinsic to the order of things.
  • What's happening in South Korea?
    So the positive side here might be the democratic system in South Korea prevailed. At least for now.ssu

    It seems to have.
  • The Mind-Created World
    In other words, it is a claim that is compatible with some forms of realism.goremand

    Sure. That’s a very broad category. I’m not nihilist.
  • The Mind-Created World
    The one passage in that entire work that speaks to me is this one:

    6.41 The sense of the world must lie outside the world. In the world everything is as it is, and everything happens as it does happen: in it no value exists—and if it did exist, it would have no value.

    If there is any value that does have value, it must lie outside the whole sphere of what happens and is the case. For all that happens and is the case is accidental.

    What makes it non-accidental cannot lie within the world, since if it did it would itself be accidental.

    It must lie outside the world.

    As for the rest, I can take it or leave it, but generally the latter.
  • The Mind-Created World
    What I meant was, the famous last statement in Wittgenstein's Tractatus is often used to smother discussions of certain topics. It certainly is on this forum often enough. I recognise that 'mystical' is often a pejorative term but it's not only that. Discussing the limits of language and logic is a legitimate subject in philosophy, and I don't agree at all that ' the transcendent can mean nothing to us', although it's not an argument I necessarily want to re-open.
  • The Mind-Created World
    And repeated ad infinitum by the Vienna Circle.
  • The Mind-Created World
    The ancient skeptics were not polar opposites to mystics. Pyrrho of Elis famously sat with the Buddhists of Gandhara and brought back a version of Madhyamika which became Pyrrhonian skepticism. Hence also the resonances between Buddhist philosophy and phenomenology which was central to The Embodied Mind. Francisco Varela took a form of lay ordination in a Buddhist order just before his untimely death.
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    I think where you are confusing yourself is that you seem to think we cannot conceive that things have an existence of their own independently of us.Janus

    Name one!

    We can conceive of the in itself, but of course we cannot conceive itJanus

    Yet, somehow, I’m confused?
  • The Mind-Created World
    mysticism being just one more mind created realityTom Storm

    Insofar as it is mind-created it is delusory. Mysticism proper is seeing through what the mind creates. There’s a term for that in Buddhism, called ‘prapanca’, meaning ‘conceptual proliferation’, detailed in a text delightfully called the Honeyball Sutta.
  • The Mind-Created World
    Different thing. There’s also a sense in which modern culture normalises philosophical ignorance, lack of insight. I’m not referring to that.
  • The Mind-Created World
    Since we can't access reality, how do we know there is a reality beyond the reality we know? Perhaps it's perspectives all the way down. :wink:Tom Storm

    Well, consider the role of not knowing, of intellectual humility, of ‘all I know is that I know nothing’, of ‘he that knows it, knows it not.’ ‘Accessing reality’ sounds like something you need a swipe card for.
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    the actual existence of thingsJanus

    But belief in the 'actual existence of things' is precisely what is at stake in the meaning of metaphysical realism. It is exactly what is at issue: you can't know anything of the 'actual existence of things' apart from what your mind enables you to conceive or perceive. You have something in mind when you indicate 'actual things' but you can never actually say what that something is. Not that I want to start yet another of these arguments but I can't just let it go.
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    What if me and you both existed 8 million years ago and we saw these mountains but had no language. Incapable of it. But now we are: did the mountains exist 8 million years ago?Apustimelogist

    The existence of mountains 8 million years ago, for that matter the entire record of paleontology, comprises empirical facts, which I have no intention of calling into question.

    But there are two senses of 'mind-independent' in play. The first is the obvious, commonsense one - that there are all manner of things now and in the past which have existed independently of anyone's knowledge of them. Science and the fossil record tell us that. But the second is more subtle (or more philosophical if you like.) It is drawing attention to the fact that you and I both are possessed of the necessary concepts to understand paleontology, geology, and 'mountains', and '8 million years'. That ability includes, but is not limited to, language. When we gaze out at the external world, or back at the geologically ancient world, we are looking with and through that conceptual apparatus to understand and interpret what we see. That is the sense in which the mountains (or objects generally) are not mind independent. They're mind-independent in an empirical sense, but not in a philosophical sense.

    Why is that important? It's important because in a scientific age, what exists independently of any mind, is presumed to be what is real. Philip K. Dick 'reality is what continues to exist when you stop believing in it.' But that overlooks the fact that scientific hypotheses and theories are themselves a web of belief, through which we see the world. (Not just belief, also enormous amounts of data, but that is not relevant to this point.) That doesn't invalidate science or question it's efficacy but it does call into question the instinctive sense that reality is 'mind-independent' in the scientific sense. I say that sense of 'scientific realism' over-values empiricism by imbuing it with a kind of metaphysical certitude that it doesn't possess. And that's what I think 'metaphysical realism', as defined in the reference article, means.
  • In defence of the Principle of Sufficient Reason
    What is the reason for thinking that there must be a reason for what is?Fooloso4

    In Greek philosophy, wasn't that simply a presumption that the world was governed by reason? A kind of intuitive sense that there is a reason for everything as well as every thing - one of the meanings of 'logos' from which we derive logic, and all the other -logies. I don't think it dawned on any philosopher, before the advent of modernity, that the Cosmos - a word meaning 'an ordered whole' - could be anything other than rational. Of course the scientific revolution introduces a wholly different conception of reason as mechanical causation. With the banishing of teleological reasoning the idea of reason in that classical sense fell out of favour.

    In the pre-modern vision of things, the cosmos had been seen as an inherently purposive structure of diverse but integrally inseparable rational relations — for instance, the Aristotelian aitia, which are conventionally translated as “causes,” but which are nothing like the uniform material “causes” of the mechanistic philosophy. And so the natural order was seen as a reality already akin to intellect. Hence the mind, rather than an anomalous tenant of an alien universe, was instead the most concentrated and luminous expression of nature’s deepest essence. This is why it could pass with such wanton liberty through the “veil of Isis” and ever deeper into nature’s inner mysteries. — David Bentley Hart

    I think the OP, being grounded in Christian philosophy, assumes a similar view. Although it's also interesting that the atheist Schopenhauer grounded his entire philosophy on the 'fourfold root of sufficient reason' and refers to it continually in his writing. Itv was Neitszche who foresaw the sense in which the acid of modernity dissolved the whole idea of cosmic reason.
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    the fact that language didn't exist 8 million years ago doesn't affect the fact that mountains existed 8 million years ago, because the what is the case does not depend on the incidental existence or non-existence of languageApustimelogist

    This has already been mentioned several times but it might help to revisit (comments in italics).

    According to metaphysical realism, the world is as it is independent of how humans...take it to be. The objects the world contains, together with their properties and the relations they enter into, fix the world’s nature and these objects [together with the properties they have and the relations they enter into] exist independently of our ability to discover they do. Unless this is so, metaphysical realists argue, none of our beliefs about our world could be objectively true since true beliefs tell us how things are and beliefs are objective when true or false, independently of what anyone might think.

    Many philosophers believe metaphysical realism is just plain common sense ( the majority view in my opinion). Others believe it to be a direct implication of modern science, which paints humans as fallible creatures adrift in an inhospitable world not of their making (science as a corrective to fallible ordinary perception, also a majority view)

    Nonetheless, metaphysical realism is controversial. Besides the analytic question of what it means to assert that objects exist independently of the mind, metaphysical realism also raises epistemological problems: how can we obtain knowledge of a mind-independent world? There are also prior semantic problems, such as how links are set up between our beliefs and the mind-independent states of affairs they allegedly represent. This is the Representation Problem.

    Anti-realists deny the world is mind-independent. Believing the epistemological and semantic problems to be insoluble, they conclude realism must be false. The first anti-realist arguments based on explicitly semantic considerations were advanced by Michael Dummett and Hilary Putnam.
    SEP, Challenges to Metaphysical Realism

    The position I was arguing for is similar to (although not the same as) Hilary Putnam's 'conceptual relativism': 'Putnam’s Conceptual Relativity Argument: it is senseless to ask what the world contains independently of how we conceive of it, since the objects that exist depend on the conceptual scheme used to classify them.' There's a paper on this here (a Uni of Sydney Honours Thesis.)

    All of that is necessary context, in my view, to make sense of why question are being asked about meaning, sentences, propositions and objective facts.
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    Jerrold Katz's Metaphysics of Meaning offers a critique of semantic theories that reduce meaning to empirical and psychological factors. Katz argues that such theories fail to account for the objectivity and normativity of meaning, proposing instead that meaning is rooted in an abstract, non-empirical domain. He draws on the Platonic tradition to frame his argument, suggesting that meanings are akin to abstract objects—like numbers or geometrical shapes—that exist independently of human cognition but are accessible through intellectual apprehension.

    Katz's central thesis is that linguistic meaning is a sui generis metaphysical category, irreducible to physical or mental phenomena. He critiques various reductionist approaches, including behaviorism, functionalism, and computational theories of mind, for conflating the properties of meaning with the contingent processes of language use. Instead, Katz advocates for a "realist" theory of meaning, where meanings are intrinsic properties of linguistic expressions and part of an objective semantic reality.

    The book also addresses the epistemological implications of this metaphysical stance, arguing that our knowledge of meanings comes through rational intuition rather than sensory perception or introspection. Katz defends this view against charges of metaphysical extravagance, contending that recognizing an abstract domain of meanings is necessary to explain linguistic phenomena like synonymy, ambiguity, and the systematic structure of language.

    In essence, Metaphysics of Meaning seeks to establish a rigorous, non-reductive foundation for semantics, challenging contemporary theories that treat meaning as contingent on empirical or psychological processes. Katz's work aligns linguistic theory with a broader philosophical tradition that regards abstract entities as fundamental to understanding reality.
  • How to account for subjectivity in an objective world?
    Given this, we find it impossible to construct a world that is true in any given scenario from all points of view.bizso09

    we place a great deal of emphasis, ordinarily, on the concept of a "fact" as being objective, something independent of individual viewpoints.J

    The whole idea of an absolute objective truth has been radically undermined by science itself. See Ethan Siegel (a popular and hard-headed physics writer):

    Space and time might be real, but they’re not objectively real; only real relative to each individual observer or measurer.Ethan Siegel

    He concludes:

    It isn’t the job of science, contrary to popular belief, to explain the Universe that we inhabit. Instead, science’s goal is to accurately describe the Universe that we inhabit, and in that it’s been remarkably successful. But the questions that most of us get excited about asking — and we do it by default, without any prompting — often involve figuring out why certain phenomena happen. ...

    One such question that we cannot answer is whether there is such a thing as an objective, observer-independent reality. Many of us assume that it does, and we build our interpretations of quantum physics in such ways that they admit an underlying, objective reality. Others don’t make that assumption, and build equally valid interpretations of quantum physics that don’t necessarily have one. All we have to guide us, for better or for worse, is what we can observe and measure. We can physically describe that, successfully, either with or without an objective, observer-independent reality. At this moment in time, it’s up to each of us to decide whether we’d rather add on the philosophically satisfying but physically extraneous notion that “objective reality” is meaningful.
  • The Mind-Created World
    when I look at your explanation in detail the term "reality" instead seems to refer to "our particular conception of reality", which is amounts to a rather humble claim, not really an attack at all.goremand

    How do you get outside the human conception of reality to see the world as it truly is? That is the probably the question underlying all philosophy. And one aim of the original post was for me to present idealism in a way that isn't understood to mean that the world is all in the mind or the product of the imagination. And it's not an attack on 'realism' per se. It's a criticism of the idea that the criterion for what is real, is what exists independently of the mind, which is a specific (and fallacious) form of realism.

    :up: The times certainly are a'changing.
  • The Mind-Created World
    To use Kastrup as an example again, I am convinced that he substantively disagrees with mainstream physicalism.goremand

    As do I, for reasons I have given in the original post, and defended in numerous subsequent entries.
  • How to account for subjectivity in an objective world?
    However, from my point of view, there is a significant difference in the two states. Namely, my identity has changed. In other words, my centre of perception has moved from one person to another. That means that my first person point of view is different, and my whole experience of the world is different, in the two scenarios. Therefore, for me the two scenarios and their respective states of the world are not identical.bizso09

    If, when you underwent this metamorphosis, you also inherited the memories of the new identity, then obviously you wouldn't know anything had happened. Peter would become Alexa, but as far as both are concerned, nothing has happened. If Peter becomes Alexa but retains Peter's memories, then Peter/Alexa would presumably suffer severe cognitive dissonance along the lines of 'who am I?!?' We are indeed differentiated only because our experiences, constitution, location and so on are unique to us. But the primitive sense of 'being a subject' is not unique to any individual. It's only the content associated with that sense which differs.

    In conclusion, having both subjectivity and objectivity co-exist in the same world creates a logical contradiction.bizso09

    The claim that this creates a logical contradiction misunderstands the nature of subjectivity. Subjective and objective accounts are not commensurable in the way required to generate a formal contradiction. They operate in different domains of discourse. Objectivity concerns what can be described in third-person terms—facts that are invariant under changes in perspective. Subjectivity concerns the first-person experience, which is inherently tied to a particular point of view, for which perspective is an intrinsic characteristic.
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    I think that's near enough to a meaningful consensus. I don't know if I will repeat it, though. I'd like to find another tree to bark up.
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    But the word"empirical" has unnecessary baggage.Banno

    I myself didn't come up with the term 'empirical' nor how it is used in philosophical discourse. 'Empiricism is the philosophical view that all knowledge is based on experience, or that all rationally acceptable beliefs or propositions are justifiable or knowable only through experience.' Any fact of the matter, such as whether there is or is not gold in them thar hills, is an empirical matter which can be resolved by discovery.

    The part on which it seems we disagree is that since not just any understanding will do, there is something else that places restrictions on the understanding we construct.Banno

    Admirable clarification. I think the existential factor that I wish to take into account can be stated in a couple of different ways. First, that reality includes the observer. Or put another way, reality is not something we're outside of, or apart from. The reason that is significant, is because the realist view neglects to consider this fact (hence 'subject forgetting himself'). Hence the ever-present implication that the proposition is one thing, the fact another. That has to be embedded in the 'self-other' framework, doesn't it. But that is such an ubiquitous factor in the mind, that we don't see it.

    When we say that there is gold at Boorara, we are talking about gold and Boorara, not concept-of-gold and concept-of-Boorara. The very idea of a conceptual schema is problematic...Banno

    So: notice that this differentiation assumes a separation between the observer and the observed. We have the concept, it is in the mind, whereas the object is in the world. But that very distinction is a mental construct, it can only occur to a mind. Self and world, assertion and fact, as separable things. But we are not actually separate from or outside reality. Even Einstein, scientific realist, twigged this:

    A human being is a part of the whole, called by us "Universe", a part limited in time and space. He experiences himself, his thoughts and feelings as something separated from the rest — a kind of optical delusion of his consciousness. The striving to free oneself from this delusion is the one issue of true religion. Not to nourish the delusion but to try to overcome it is the way to reach the attainable measure of peace of mind.

    There is an historical background to this. The advent of modernity, and with it modern philosophy, is inextricably bound up with individualism. I read recently that prior to Descartes, 'ideas' were not something that were not even understood to be the prerogative of the individual mind. But with modern liberalism and individualism, the individual becomes as it were the fulcrum of judgement. With that comes the awareness of separation from the world and others. Hence the 'cartesian anxiety' which 'refers to the notion that, since René Descartes posited his influential form of body-mind dualism, Western civilization has suffered from a longing for ontological certainty, or feeling that scientific methods, and especially the study of the world as a thing separate from ourselves, should be able to lead us to a firm and unchanging knowledge of ourselves and the world around us. The term is named after Descartes because of his well-known emphasis on "mind" as different from "body", "self" as different from "other". (Bernstein Beyond Objectivism and Relativism. This became a theme in the influential book The Embodied MInd, although I encountered it separately through my own discovery.) The key point is, it's a fact about the human condition, not a matter of propositional knowledge as such. That's why I think it is better explored by (not to say explained by) phenomenology and existentialism than analytical philosophy. But I know the response of analytical philosophers is, generally, 'tosh'.

    From my perspective, this is because of something they don't see. From their perspective, its because I'm seeing something that isn't there.

    One of my now-standard quotations:

    From a phenomenological perspective, in everyday life, we see the objects of our experience such as physical objects, other people, and even ideas as simply real and straightforwardly existent. In other words, they are “just there.” We don’t question their existence; we view them as facts.

    When we leave our house in the morning, we take the objects we see around us as simply real, factual things—this tree, neighboring buildings, cars, etc. This attitude or perspective, which is usually unrecognized as a perspective, Edmund Husserl terms the “natural attitude” or the “natural theoretical attitude.”

    When Husserl uses the word “natural” to describe this attitude, he doesn’t mean that it is “good” (or bad), he means simply that this way of seeing reflects an “everyday” or “ordinary” way of being-in-the-world. When I see the world within this natural attitude, I am solely aware of what is factually present to me. My surrounding world, viewed naturally, is the familiar world, the domain of my everyday life. Why is this a problem?

    From a phenomenological perspective, this naturalizing attitude conceals a profound naïveté. Husserl claimed that “being” can never be collapsed entirely into being in the empirical world: any instance of actual being, he argued, is necessarily encountered upon a horizon that encompasses facticity but is larger than facticity. Indeed, the very sense of facts of consciousness as such, from a phenomenological perspective, depends on a wider horizon of consciousness that usually remains unexamined.
    — The Natural Attitude

    Even though Husserl was critical of Kant, you can hear the echo of the Kantian point I keep making about the empirical and transcendental.

    Analytical and academic philosophy is not generally existential in that sense. It is professional, cool, detached, impartial. Whereas my attitude is more like this:

    Plato was clearly concerned not only with the state of his soul, but also with his relation to the universe at the deepest level. Plato’s metaphysics was not intended to produce merely a detached understanding of reality. His motivation in philosophy was in part to achieve a kind of understanding that would connect him (and therefore every human being) to the whole of reality – intelligibly and if possible satisfyingly. He even seems to have suffered from a version of the more characteristically Judaeo-Christian conviction that we are all miserable sinners, and to have hoped for some form of redemption from philosophy.

    The desire for such completion, whether or not one thinks it can be met, is a manifestation of what I am calling 'the religious temperament'. One way in which that desire can be satisfied is through religious belief. Religion plays many roles in human life, but this is one of them. I want to discuss what remains of the desire, or the question, if one believes that a religious response is not available, and whether philosophy can respond to it in another way.
    — Thomas Nagel, Secular Philosophy and the Religious Temperament
  • What's happening in South Korea?
    South Korea is also an electronics and automotive manufacturing powerhouse.

    My reading is, Soon had a very small majority in Parliament, and every move he tried was being blocked by the Opposition, so he basically tried to ride a tank over them, and failed.
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    When we say that there is gold at Boorara, we are talking about gold and Boorara, not concept-of-gold and concept-of-Boorara.Banno

    You will agree, though, that 'gold at Boorara' is shorthand for 'any empirical fact', right? All of your arguments contra idealism are question-begging, because they're pitched at the wrong level of meaning. You say that the idealist argument denies the reality of empirical fact when it does not. I am not disputing empirical facts.

    But there is no reason to suppose that language makes a difference to the gold at Boorara.Banno

    Which you are referring to, and relating to me, who understand what you mean by it, as I already acknowledged.

    Previously, you denied that you defend the position described in SEP as 'metaphysical realism'.

    According to metaphysical realism, the world is as it is independent of how humans or other inquiring agents take it to be. The objects the world contains, together with their properties and the relations they enter into, fix the world’s nature and these objects [together with the properties they have and the relations they enter into] exist independently of our ability to discover they do.

    Where do you disagree with that description? Because it seems to me to describe your view in a nutshell.

    The fact that idealism is not well supported in academic philosophy neither surprises nor impresses me. It is contra the zeitgeist, to quote a well-known idealist.
  • What's happening in South Korea?
    Well, I'm following it in the NY Times, to which I'm a subcriber. (Incidentally, a hint: I had been a full-paying subscriber, I can't recall how much it was, but when the sub fell due about three months ago, I wanted to cancel due to trying to reduce my subscriptions bills. The algorithm then said 'hey, don't cancel, how about a year at A$2.00 per month!' Which I took, and well worth the money.)

    Anyway - their analysis is that it definitely is a political crisis, and it's causing severe anxiety in the Western alliance, due to the volatility of the region and the nefarious Mr Kim. On the other hand, up until the 1980's, S. Korea had a long history of periods of marshall law and military government, so it's not totally unprecedented. The feeling today seems to be that Yoon severely overplayed his hand, and the opposition parties stood firm and were supported by the electorate, and Yoon will likely loose power as a consequence. But considering all the other hair-trigger situations going on the in the world right now, it's a worrying development.
  • The Mind-Created World
    But do you not make a distinction between disagreements about how the world ought to be conceptualized and disagreements about how the world actually is? When people speak of mind-independent objects is believe I understand and agree with their meaning, even if I realize their conceptualization of reality is not the be-all end-all.goremand

    That is a very perceptive question, and the precise point at issue in another current thread on metaphysical realism and anti-realism (there's a lot of crossover between the two threads). As I'm generally advocating an idealist approach, then I'm in the anti-realist camp, although the term bothers me, because I am still acutely aware of many real things that have to be dealt with on a daily basis. ('Life is like a movie, but with actual pain'.)

    My spontaneous response is that I think classical philosophy had the insight that we do not, by default, know what anything actually is. If you go back to Parmenides, his fragmentary prose-poem says outright that most human beings are ensnared in an illusory domain where they entertain opinions about unreal things. And come to think of it, in today's hyper-connected and social-media-dominated world, that really doesn't seem so far-fetched. Wisdom is not being deluded, but then, delusion is ubiquitous. Not necessarily to the point of gross delusion and actual mental illness, but in the middle of the bell curve of normality. So we tend to look to science and objective judgement as the arbiter of what is real and the antidote to delusion, but the problem with that is that science is largely quantitative and arms-length. Actual life is too close to bring such an approach to bear. But the effect of that belief is to form the notion that reality is what already exists, and we gradually expand and enhance our knowledge of it. That is what is generally understood by realism. So in that context, 'mind-independent' means objective, not a matter of opinion, the criterion of what is actually so. I copied some scrapbook lecture notes on Heidegger above which address this point.

    'Heidegger argues that scientific objectivity is grounded in a specific metaphysical framework: the Cartesian subject-object dichotomy. This framework presumes that the world is composed of objects existing independently of the observer, available for detached study and measurement. Consequently it overlooks the more fundamental ways in which humans encounter the world as being-in-the-world (Dasein). Scientific objectivity reduces things to mere "present-at-hand" (Vorhandenheit), stripping away their richer modes of existence as they are experienced in the lifeworld.

    Heidegger’s overarching concern is that science forgets or obscures the question of Being (Sein). By focusing only on what can be measured or quantified, science neglects the broader ontological context in which things appear as meaningful. This leads to an impoverished understanding of reality, where the richness of Being is replaced by a narrow focus on instrumental utility or efficiency.'

    I've only read a little of Heidegger, but that diagosis makes perfect sense to me.

    Although I know very little about medieval philosophy, I get the impression that the debate between Realism and Nominalism would be pertinent to the topic of a Mind-Created World vs whatever the alternative might be : a Self-Existent Material World?Gnomon

    In Aristotelian philosophy, the mind is united with the forms of particulars by the understanding. That prevents the sense of separateness or 'otherness' that haunts modern culture. That's a big topic.
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    So the claim is that when all life dies out there will be gold in Boorara but no truths or falsehoods because there will be no propositions.Michael

    'Gold in Boorara' is just shorthand for 'any empirical fact'. And the assertion of any empirical fact, even one that would be so in the absence of any mind, is dependent on many factors, linguistic, geographic, etc. Given that one is in possession of this manifold, then you can be sure that there must be many facts of which nobody is aware, or ever will be aware. Lasseter's Reef may well be out there somewhere. We know of vast areas of space and enormous periods of time in which there were no humans, so no human minds. Those are objective discoveries, no less certain than that there is gold in Boorara. But I still maintain that asserting those fact absent any perceiving mind still relies on an implicit perspective. Humans have the intellectual facility to measure and depict such facts, and to communicate them to others. When you talk of undiscovered gold and unseen planets, I will know what you mean because we share a common framework of understanding, language, concepts etc. But to really know the world as it would be without that conceptual framework is impossible, as it would mean abandoning or standing outside of conscious thought and language altogether. So 'the argument from unknown facts' is really an example of what Schopenhauer calls 'the subject forgetting himself':

    Since all imaginable characteristics of objects depend on the modes in which they are apprehended by perceiving subjects, then without at least tacitly assumed presuppositions possessed by the subject, no sense can be given to terms purporting to denote the object. In short, it is impossible to talk about material objects at all, and therefore even so much as to assert their existence, without the use of words the conditions of whose intelligibility derive from the experience of perceiving subjects — Magee, Schopenhauer's Philosophy

    Perusing the SEP entry that has been mentioned, Challenges to Metaphysical Realism, there are many convergences between this general style of argument and Hilary Putnam's 'conceptual relativism'. I'll do some more reading on that.
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    You know that analytic philosophy has its roots in critique of Hegel and Kant,Banno

    I think 'rejection' would be more like it. I think the European philosophers' (existentialism, phenomenology) is more of a critique. The latter drew explicitly on Kant, while also critiquing him. But then, I'm also sympathetic to the //criticism of the// daunting verbosity of idealism, especially German.

    But there something I would like to spell out. I’m not saying the world is 'all in the mind', but rather that the world as we experience and understand it is always mediated by the structures of the mind. Kant’s insight was that we can be empirical realists, recognizing a shared and objective reality in the phenomenal world, and fully cognisant of natural science, while also being transcendental idealists, acknowledging that reality-as-we-know-it is inextricably bound up with the mind’s conditions of knowledge. The mind doesn’t invent the world but provides the framework within which it appears intelligibly to us. //and I think that is actually a gesture of intellectual humility, incongruous though that might seem.//

    Seems to me the European philosophers understand that in a way that the Anglo philosophers don't. I hope in saying that we can agree on what we disagree about.
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    I think 'ignore' would be more appropriate, but I'll let it go.
  • Evidence of Consciousness Surviving the Body
    Yes, me too. He's definitely on my current list.
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    I think what you say is more similar to logical positivists who are more stringent that meaning in scientific theories is tied to observability.Apustimelogist

    I've noticed some similarity with my position and positivism, but I hate positivism. They have no spirit, they're all logic-chopping automatons. It was when Neils Bohr lectured the Vienna Circle and none of them asked any questions, that he exclaimed 'if you're not shocked by quantum physics, then you can't have understood (the lecture).'

    You know, everything we know is true, some stuff we think we know is actually false, in which case we are mistaken about knowing it, there are truths we don't know, the usual stuff.Banno

    I've addressed those objections.

    My take: ordinary language philosophy rejected idealism, thereafter concerning itself wholly with what can be meaningfully said. Did I miss anything?

    By the way - have you encountered Jerrold Katz?

    Jerrold J. Katz offers a radical reappraisal of the "linguistic turn" in twentieth-century philosophy. He shows that the naturalism that emerged to become the dominant philosophical position was never adequately proved. Katz critiques the major arguments for contemporary naturalism and develops a new conception of the naturalistic fallacy. This conception, inspired by Moore, explains why attempts to naturalize linguistics and logic, and perhaps ethics, will fail. He offers a Platonist view of such disciplines, justifying it as the best explanation of their autonomy, their objectivity, and their normativity. — Metaphysics of Meaning

    I tried it, but I'm not familiar enough with what he's criticizing to make much headway.
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    It is the thesis that truth requires mind that seems to face a problem, for that theory entails that if no minds exist, there are no truths (yet it seems metaphysically for there to be no minds yet for there to be truths, for something can exist and not be a mind, and under such circumstances it would be true that it exists.Clearbury

    Thanks, that helps me understand what you're driving at. The problem is, I think it is far from clear what 'mind' is. I think we instinctively believe that minds are the attributes of persons, which is a reasonable thing to believe. It's certainly the naturalist view.

    ...self-subsistent truths floating independently of any minds.Leontiskos

    I take Banno to be advocating metaphysical realism as defined in SEP (article previously cited in this thread). I don't think it's a pejorative description, even though I don't agree with it. It's probably held by the majority of people.

    To some extent, we're all Platonists, considering that Plato is foundational to the culture. But the point which I would make is that truth statements (including true propositions) can only be known by minds. They're not the product of your or my mind but can only be grasped by a mind. Our minds are held together on the level of meaning by grasp of intelligible ideas - the 'ligatures of reason'. But they're not materially existent, so they can't be 'free floating' in the way that asteroids are. They're part of our 'meaning-world' through which asteroids and the like are interpreted.
  • The Mind-Created World
    You cite Schopenhauer and Berkeley. Are you agreeing with them in toto?Leontiskos

    Schopenhauer, more than Berkeley. Where I part company with Berkeley, is his dismissal of universals - his nominalism, in short. I think it leaves many gaps in his philosophy. But whenever I read his dialogues, I'm reminded of how ingenious a philosopher he was.

    Schopenhaeur likewise - I'm almost totally on-board with his 'world as Idea', but the major issue I see with his philosophy of will is that, if will is 'irrational and blind', then how come the unreasonable effectiveness of mathematics in the natural sciences? I think Schopenhauer has blind spots of his own, much of them attributable to his hatred of Christianity. But he's still brilliant in my view - 'the last great philosopher', I'm sometimes inclined to say.

    I will add, I've learned a ton of stuff about all manner of subjects since joining this forum, and including Husserl and Heidegger, about whom I knew next to nothing when I joined. I would like to think my overall approach is maybe nearer to a kind of phenonenology than to idealism per se.
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    But you can't split them. You're trying to divide or separate knowledge from what is real. I say it's because you're taking a view above or outside both the subject (you) and the object (world) - or trying to (cf Nagel's 'view from nowhere').

    I recall the name of that recent textbook on classic metaphysic - Knowing Being. I think the thrust of it is - and here I'm on both shaky ground and deep water, to mix metaphors - is that only what is real can be a valid object of knowledge. And that what is real is not a physical object per se, but that which is grasped by reason. Physical objects are always contingent or dependent, and knowledge of them likewise. They're not actually mind-independent, because knowledge of them is dependent on our senses and minds (which is where Kant comes into the picture). But that metaphysic is a very different perspective to today's empirical realism.

    In that case you would claim that <existence cannot be meaningfully affirmed or denied without the involvement of mind>, which does not seem like something you would say.Leontiskos

    But I am saying that. I'm arguing that things are mind-independent in an empirical sense, but in another sense, in that there must be a subject who recognises 'gold', etc, for any claim about it to be meaningful.

    Go back to here:

    As a classical theist I don't think things do exist in the absence of any minds (and particularly in the absence of the mind of God). I think the truth of creation is bound up in its intelligibility, which flows from its creator.

    The atheist perhaps wants to say that truth emerges with the emergence of minds and disappears with the disappearance of minds, such that mind is accidental vis-a-vis the natural, as is truth.
    Leontiskos

    Overall, this resonates with me, with the caveat that I think classical theism is not well understood or favoured. But it is true about naturalism - not that many here tend to consciously defend that view, but it's the assumed background to debate. The human mind is an evolved capacity reliant on the physical brain and evolution. That is the assumed background of scientific realism.

    So my line of attack on that is not an appeal to theism, but varieties of transcendental arguments along the lines of Kantian and phenomenological - about the irreducibility of reason etc.
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    It strikes me as uncontroversial that existence cannot "be meaningfully affirmed or denied without the involvement of mind."Leontiskos

    That I take as the point at issue.
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    And here, we are discussing the reality of unseen objects, against the claim you made above.

    I can't see how you could intelligibly disagree.
    Banno

    Argumentum ex auro.

    That passage, incidentally, was the abstract of the first chapter of an entire book. In itself it doesn't stack up to much of an argument. Pinter develops this argument:

    Objects in the unobserved universe have no shape, color or individual appearance, because shape and appearance are created by minds.

    Over the subsequent chapters, with respect to how the sensory apparatus of animals, up to and including humans, have developed in response to the requirements of adaptation.

    Now you come along at the end of that entire hundred million year process, knowing as you do about what 'gold' is, and where Boorara is, and much else besides. But your knowledge of that, and our discussion of it, is still dependent on those fundamental sensory operations that can make such distinctions and, yes, find and identify gold. Recall from the very outset of my presentation on this question, 'though we know that prior to the evolution of life there must have been a Universe with no intelligent beings in it, or that there are empty rooms with no inhabitants, or objects unseen by any eye — the existence of all such supposedly unseen realities still relies on an implicit perspective.' Because 'existence' is a manifold, comprising numerous elements, including those brought to bear by the subject.
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    One need not say that truth exists where there are no minds in order to say that a ball continues to roll when you look away from it.Leontiskos

    This is the same point we debated in the mind-created world thread, about the objective properties of boulders. It's another version of 'when a tree falls in the forest and nobody is around, does it make a sound?'

    The way I approach it is by asking: 'which ball (or tree) do you mean'? The point being that even to consider the reality of the unseen object brings the mind to bear on the question. That's the sense in which the supposedly unseen object is 'mind-dependent'. We can't really know whether an unseen object exists or not, but don't loose sight of why the question matters. Recall we're discussing the question of knowing what is real. One could argue that the whole question of the existence of unseen or unknown objects is a red herring. The very act of raising the question is already embedded in a mind-mediated framework, and it is this framework that gives the question its meaning.

    Which is why the existence of unseen objects—like the ball rolling after you look away—is a red herring. The key issue is not whether unseen objects exist but whether their existence can be meaningfully affirmed or denied without the involvement of mind. That is where metaphysical realism and idealism differ. The former assumes that unseen objects exist in a way that is entirely independent of any observer or consciousness - although that is a presumption. Idealism emphasizes that to consider or speak of existence, we must already bring mind to bear on it. There is no meaningful way to discuss the reality of the unseen object without that framework. That is the sense in which it is not 'mind-independent' - not that it stops rolling, or doesn't exist, or whatever, when it's not being looked at.

    (This is also represented by constructive empiricism, as advocated by Bas Van Fraassen, who argues that scientific theories do not assert the reality of unobservable entities but only their usefulness in explaining phenomena. Similarly, the status of unseen objects may be pragmatically assumed but cannot escape the fact that they are understood within the context of thought. It is a non-dogmatic attitude. )