• mcdoodle
    1.1k
    Here's an innocuous phrase I'm suddenly having tremendous difficulty with. 'Of the world'. Why do we use it so much? What are its bounds?

    It's started because I'm in a 'metaphysics of mind' class and I'm grappling with physicalism which makes claims 'about the world'. I began to worry that I'm a Wittgensteinian of the Philosophical Investigations phase, where we don't talk about 'worlds' at all, whereas even the Good Guys in Consciousness Studies strike me as adherents of 'The world is everything that is the case', secret Tractarians.

    Then I look about me and I see the problem everywhere. Possible worlds are an especial bother. What enormous claims people make.

    I'm an atheist and a former creative (and sometimes not-so-creative, nay hack) writer. I used to imagine and invent fictional worlds. Over here in philosophy I make no claims about worlds. I think such claims, even made on behalf of science, are dodgy.

    It seems to me that we are surer of the existence of conscious experience than we are of anything else in the world. — David Chalmers

    Hm. Which world is that?

    I find myself wanting to use the Wittgensteinian 'linguistic community' some of the time, instead of 'world'. Among those talking about physics, for instance, perhaps physics is causally closed. But is it among the rest of us?

    At other times I want to ask, as with 'The world is everything that is the case', are we to include in this world beliefs, feelings, emotions, territorial claims, ideas someone has just thought of that may turn out to be the next graphene or Hogwarts?

    What are good and bad ways of talking about worlds, and how should we constrain our talk?
  • Wosret
    3.4k
    We shouldn't. It doesn't matter. You should worry about what people mean, rather than ought to mean, or the "pure meaning" or some nonsense.
  • Wosret
    3.4k
    Personally, I just like the word "world". I use it in many contexts to mean a wide range of subtly different things, and I employ the word a lot because I like it. It sounds cool.
  • Wayfarer
    20.8k
    'Be in the world but not of it', says the Biblical verse. But what does it mean to be 'not of it'? What could that even be? I think that to understand that, requires becoming aware of the processes of sensation, intellection, and so on, which forms 'our world'. (Note the saying from Wittgenstein's notebook: 'I am my world'.) This requires a very deep kind of reflection which I think modern culture, with its assumed naturalism, generally lacks.

    I think both the Hebrews and the Greeks, in very different ways, saw 'the world' as being only one aspect of the totality. For the Hebrews, I suppose you could say, the world was the stage of which God was the director. For Platonists, 'the sensible realm' was deficient and treacherous, compared to the world of the eternal forms. But for modern naturalism 'the world is all that is the case'. Somehow, they insist, the world must contain its own explanation, or ground: that is pretty well what 'naturalism' consists of. But so far, precious little luck in finding what it might be.

    So really this becomes a metaphysical question, as much as we wish that metaphysics could be disposed of for once and for all. Philosophy, observed Etienne Gilson, has often been declared dead; but it usually ends up burying its undertakers.
  • Barry Etheridge
    349
    Be in the world but not of it', says the Biblical verse.Wayfarer

    There is no Biblical verse that says this so it really doesn't merit analysis. The closest Biblical verse would be ...

    Romans 12:2
    And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, so that you may prove what the will of God is, that which is good and acceptable and perfect.

    .. in which there is clearly no no ambiguity.
  • mcdoodle
    1.1k
    More likely John 17:16. 'They are not of the world, even as I am not of the world.'
  • Barry Etheridge
    349


    Two problems with that. Firstly it doesn't have the imperative but speaks of a situation which is already in place. In other words it is not a command(ment) but a description of the state of grace of the disciples. Second it's a very dodgy translation. in v. 15 ...

    I pray not that thou
    shouldest take them out of the
    world, but that thou shouldest
    keep them from the evil.

    the phrase 'ek tov kosmov' is rightly taken to mean 'out of the world', yet when it appears again in v. 16, the translators ignore 'ek' altogether. Consistency demands that the verse should read ...

    They are not out of the world,
    even as I am not out of the world.

    ... which speaks not at all to the meaning of 'of this world' as expressed in the OP.
  • Harry Hindu
    4.9k
    Here's an innocuous phrase I'm suddenly having tremendous difficulty with. 'Of the world'. Why do we use it so much? What are its bounds?mcdoodle
    To me, the world is all that is - the objective reality, which includes subjective perspectives of it. It is everything. So for someone to say the phrase, "Of the world" I take to mean that some thing is part of the world. This would also imply, to me, that they believe in things NOT of this world. For what would be the purpose of claiming that something is of the world IF the world is all there is because it would be logically deductive that all things are of this world, and therefore redundant to say this.

    If someone claims that the world isn't all there is, I would make the claim that they are misusing terms. The world is all there is, which includes their area of time and space that they claim isn't part of the world, especially if this other domain, not some other world, has a causal effect on the "world".
  • mcdoodle
    1.1k
    Well, I will leave Wayfarer to defend his own remark, I picked up on what he said as a common adage often quoted by people, and when so quoted, I believed it to be generally taken to be from that bit of John, even if the translation is in error.
  • mcdoodle
    1.1k
    So really this becomes a metaphysical question, as much as we wish that metaphysics could be disposed of for once and for all. Philosophy, observed Etienne Gilson, has often been declared dead; but it usually ends up burying its undertakers.Wayfarer

    Cosmos, the Greek word, is interesting in itself, for it implies an order, vis-vis chaos, and I gather was re-invented, as it were, by Humboldt in the 19th century. Again his implication is of unity. (Barry's reference to translation made me think about this)

    I think part of my difficulty is that the claims of 'science' are indeed metaphysical, but they often insinuate themselves into that sphere as if it were an innocuous development from scientific enquiry. I see that methodological naturalism will, in its methods, treat some 'world' as within its orbit. That's where the likes of me and you and Harry Hindu can agree about the details of science and enjoy its fruits and its follies. But beyond that, I can't follow them into the way things are in the world.

    There is a secondary issue, I realise, in the detail of what I'm studying, about whether physical scientists can imagine that 'social science' has validity. For instance:

    It is a remarkable fact that in most areas of science, all we ultimately need to take for granted are the laws of physics and perhaps some boundary conditions. — Chalmers, Conscious Mind p 214

    Here the 'world' of physical science is insisting on jurisdiction over the 'world' of psychology, society and economics, as if there wasn't already some perfectly good scientific work going on over there.
  • mcdoodle
    1.1k
    If someone claims that the world isn't all there is, I would make the claim that they are misusing terms. The world is all there is, which includes their area of time and space that they claim isn't part of the world, especially if this other domain, not some other world, has a causal effect on the "world"Harry Hindu

    Thanks, Harry. This word domain can sometimes stand for a subsidiary zone and might be useful to me. I don't claim that the world isn't all there is, myself. I just allege we don't even need to ask and answer that sort of question to get on with our scientific enquiries, our art and our lives.
  • mcdoodle
    1.1k
    Personally, I just like the word "world". I use it in many contexts to mean a wide range of subtly different things, and I employ the word a lot because I like it. It sounds cool.Wosret

    It is the relish for the word 'world' that I'm fretting at, in part. The word does seem wonderfully all-encompassing, while conveniently glossing over, if one wants to, what's included and what isn't.
  • wuliheron
    440
    Stephen Pepper is a famous Contextualist author in the line of Wittgenstein who wrote "World Hypothesis" describing four rudimentary worldviews. Treating every word as a variable with no intrinsic meaning or value empowers Contextualism to do a complete end run around metaphysics altogether because the greater evolving context is always sufficient to describe everything observable. Its a bit like staring into infinity and seeing the same four patterns repeating until they're lost in the distance and can be equally well described as pattern matching ruling the universe. Four fold symmetry reflects the convergence of infinite dimensions within the intrinsic mathematics or what is known in physics as supersymmetry.

    There must be a four fold symmetry applicable to everything if there are such things as higher dimensions or even if the universe is to keep that a mystery and this can be described as part of the metaphoric logic of existence itself. In a metaphorical universe every dimension or universe would inevitably transform into its complimentary-opposite of nonexistence and everything would appear to organize around what apparently does not exist such as the future. Among other things, in physics it would explain the mass of the Higgs Boson as reflecting the fact that symmetry and asymmetry are so fundamental it will require cosmic ray energy levels to observe symmetry vanishing into indeterminacy. It also means, if you prefer, you can describe philosophy as concerned with Metaphorical Fuzzy Factual Metaethical Bullshit Values because analog yin-yang logic rules the universe.

    Notably, on his deathbed, Wittgenstein's last regret was not formulating his philosophy as comedy.
  • Michael
    14.2k
    If someone claims that the world isn't all there is, I would make the claim that they are misusing terms. The world is all there is, which includes their area of time and space that they claim isn't part of the world, especially if this other domain, not some other world, has a causal effect on the "world".Harry Hindu

    People sometimes use the word "world" in a restricted sense. Plato distinguished between the world of substance and the world of the Forms. The religious distinguish the world from heaven (and other afterlives).

    To make a case that they're misusing the word "world" you'd first have to justify your claim that what you mean by it is the correct meaning.

    And, you know, the word is also used to refer to just the Earth (and everything on it), but I guess we're ignoring that meaning?
  • Punshhh
    2.6k
    For me "the world" is a realm which consists of where we find ourselves on the ocassion of our birth, including the interactive involvement in that world of the biosphere of biological beings we are a member of. This includes all that we access through our bodies including the universe and the ideas we have.

    I define it this way because it limits the world to what we encounter as incarnate beings. Thus allowing a myriad of other realms and things etc that may exist and which may constitute or interact with this world, but which we are not aware of as not being a part of this world, but due to our lack of capacity, or for some other reason, are veiled from us.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    We shouldn't. It doesn't matter. You should worry about what people mean, rather than ought to mean, or the "pure meaning" or some nonsense.Wosret
    This.

    And what people mean by it is different things in different contexts. In some contexts, it refers to extramental or objective facts.

    In other contexts, it refers to any phenomena whatsoever and maybe it's a bit redundant--for example, in the Chalmers quote you mention in your initial post in this thread. He could have just as well left off "in the world," but it does have some semantic utility, maybe, in that context via emphasizing that we're talking about everything. Kind of like "than we are of anything else, and I mean anything."

    Those two possibilities don't exhaust the usage of the term, but it becomes clear what people mean in context as you read more philosophy.
  • andrewk
    2.1k
    I would guess that Chalmers meant nothing by that 'in the world' and his inclusion of those words was just a vestigial habit for concluding certain sorts of sentences, like a Canadian's 'eh' or a Singaporean's 'la'. Certainly the sentence seems to me to be perfectly meaningful, and clearer, without the last three words.

    The word 'world' is useful as a way of setting a scope for one's comments. For instance the quoted references from the New Testament are set in a context of a metaphysical hypothesis that there are two types of beings - those with bodies and those without, and the 'not of this world' says that the speaker is usually the other type of being.

    Other metaphysical set-ups where the word 'world' has a specific local meaning are Everett's 'Many Worlds Interpretation' of quantum mechanics, and the 'Possible Worlds' approach to defining a semantics for modal logic.

    I think in each of those three cases - New Testament Theology, Many Worlds and Possible Worlds, the word has a different meaning.

    So perhaps where I'm ending up (for now at least) is that it's a bit of a portmanteau word that can be used to mean different things in different contexts, and does not have a meaning that transcends different metaphysical theories.
  • wuliheron
    440
    We are the world, we are the children of a greater truth,
    Our beautiful words hang in the air between us,
    Defying even unbalanced gravity herself.
    Rainbows of beautiful words that say what words cannot.
    Sparkling laughter that becomes infectious,
    Delightful giggles echo, rolling across the floor.
  • Wayfarer
    20.8k
    I will leave Wayfarer to defend his own remark — MacDoodle

    That is the reference I meant, although on reflection 'in the world but not of it', is more a saying than a quotation (albeit one with sound provenance). But throughout Christian doctrine there are frequent references to 'the world'. But, if you're exhorted to 'be not of this world', then what is the alternative? What other way could one be? I think the Christian answer is that to be 'one with the Father' is to align oneself to a different order, but the ability to do that, relies on being able to discern that order and conform oneself to it, which is the meaning of the teaching.

    Cosmos, the Greek word, is interesting in itself, for it implies an order — MacDoodle

    As I understand it, the precise meaning is 'an ordered whole' - which seems a remote possibility for current scientific cosmology at this time, what with the multifarious interpretations that are in play (per @andrewk's post .)

    To me, the world is all that is — Harry Hindu

    Carl Sagan's well-known saying is 'cosmos is all there is, or ever will be'.

    I think this type of philosophical naturalism has transposed the Cosmos into the place formerly assigned to God, and assigns science the role previously assigned to religion. Of course that's a lot to say in a short sentence, but there are numerous historical studies which make the case in detail; a notable example being M A Gillespie's The Theological Origins of Modernity.
  • Wayfarer
    20.8k
    Also, look at Tractatus Logico-Philosophicus 6.371:

    'At the basis of the whole modern view of the world lies the illusion that the so-called laws of nature are the explanations of natural phenomena.'

    Which must be the case if 'the world is all there is'.

    Whereas, a transcendental argument (of the style of Kant) will argue that such things as laws are in an important sense prior to experience, insofar as they provide the basis of any kind of scientific explanation of the world, i.e. they are predictive of what will be confirmed by experience (as 'observation').

    So 'the nature of order' - that is, whether scientific laws exist, or the sense in which they are or are not part of the world - is still a vexed question (as discussed in the Nancy Cartwright paper you have posted previously.)
  • Moliere
    4k
    I think it's often unexamined -- which is to say I share your uncertainty on what's being said in each case.

    I think, since you mentioned philosophy of mind, this is especially the case in philosophy of mind. The mind and the world sort of define one another, it often seems. Not always. Sometimes these are rendered explicitly -- such as in Descartes. But in other renditions it's a sort of taking for granted -- why, after all, are emotions generally situated within the mind? Or perceptions? Why not the world? Or vice-versa?

    That isn't to say that these are wrong categorizations, but the underlying reasons why I think are where we might be able to say our notion of "world" becomes examined.
  • Harry Hindu
    4.9k
    Thanks, Harry. This word domain can sometimes stand for a subsidiary zone and might be useful to me. I don't claim that the world isn't all there is, myself. I just allege we don't even need to ask and answer that sort of question to get on with our scientific enquiries, our art and our lives.mcdoodle
    But we do need to ask the question because if other domains have a causal relationship with our domain, then there are effects here in this domain caused by changes in the other domain(s). If there are any causal relationships between domains, then they are all integrated into one whole and it is the whole that science seeks to explain.
  • Harry Hindu
    4.9k
    People sometimes use the word "world" in a restricted sense. Plato distinguished between the world of substance and the world of the Forms. The religious distinguish the world from heaven (and other afterlives).

    To make a case that they're misusing the word "world" you'd first have to justify your claim that what you mean by it is the correct meaning.

    And, you know, the word is also used to refer to just the Earth (and everything on it), but I guess we're ignoring that meaning?
    Michael

    Yes, Earth is another meaning of "world" and many people can mean/refer to different things with a word that has a fluid meaning. But then fluid meanings of words just makes it harder to understand what someone is talking about or specifically referring to.

    My point in my post that you are responding to is that whatever term you want to use to refer to everything, must include these other domains that have a causal relationship with each other. If they can affect each other, then there is no difference between that domain vs. this domain, and our solar system (a domain) and another solar system (another domain). They all exist within the same whole and can affect each other given enough time.

    To claim that there are separate worlds, realities, or whatever, yet claim that these "separate" things have a cause and effect relationship is to be inconsistent in your use of terms, if by what you refer to when you say "reality" or "world" is "all there is".
  • Harry Hindu
    4.9k
    To me, the world is all that is — Harry Hindu


    Carl Sagan's well-known saying is 'cosmos is all there is, or ever will be'.

    I think this type of philosophical naturalism has transposed the Cosmos into the place formerly assigned to God, and assigns science the role previously assigned to religion. Of course that's a lot to say in a short sentence, but there are numerous historical studies which make the case in detail; a notable example being M A Gillespie's The Theological Origins of Modernity.
    Wayfarer

    Sigh...

    No, Wayfarer, science is in no way related to religion. They are different methods of seeking truth. One is based on authority and tradition, while the other is based on experiment and observation by your peers.
  • Michael
    14.2k
    To claim that there are separate worlds, realities, or whatever, yet claim that these "separate" things have a cause and effect relationship is to be inconsistent in your use of terms, if by what you refer to when you say "reality" or "world" is "all there is".Harry Hindu

    And the point I was making is that some people don't use the word "world" to refer to all there is. Plato distinguished between the world of substance and the world of Forms. The religious distinguish between the world and heaven.

    The thing I took issue with was your claim that "If someone claims that the world isn't all there is, I would make the claim that they are misusing terms". You're saying that it's wrong to not use the word "world" to refer to all this is. This assertion needs to be defended.
  • Cavacava
    2.4k
    I like the Sellarsian distinction between Manifest Image and Scientific Image as two distinct conceptual frameworks in which man conceives the world. The Manifest Image as “the framework in terms of which man came to be aware of himself as man-in-the-world”

    The scientific image grows out of and is methodologically posterior to the manifest image, which provides the initial framework in which science is nurtured, but Sellars claims that “the scientific image presents itself as a rival image. From its point of view the manifest image on which it rests is an ‘inadequate’ but pragmatically useful likeness of a reality which first finds its adequate (in principle) likeness in the scientific image” (PSIM, in SPR: 20; in ISR: 388).
    SEP
  • Barry Etheridge
    349
    science is in no way related to religion. They are different methods of seeking truth. One is based on authority and tradition, while the other is based on experiment and observation by your peers.Harry Hindu

    Are you seriously suggesting that there is as clear a dichotomy as that? There is no part of science based on authority and tradition? No part of religion based on experiment and observation by peers? I'm sure it is very comforting to live in this black and white world of yours but it is clearly a delusion.
  • BC
    13.2k
    In the world but not of the world...

    2 things. One, even if the phrase isn't in the NT, the problem of navigating through this world to the world to come exercised Christians early on and ever since. It's especially complicated because in Jesus the world to come entered into this world, and presumably this mixing has never ceased.

    Two, my impression of the OT is that this world is the only world there is. Even though I was dyed in the wool as a Christian, and despite the seductive attractions of a world to come, I came to prefer what I take to be the OT view -- this world is all there is of worlds. God doesn't exist in a "different world". God exists in this world--in the Cosmos.
  • BC
    13.2k
    I think this type of philosophical naturalism has transposed the Cosmos into the place formerly assigned to God, and assigns science the role previously assigned to religion.Wayfarer

    A few decades ago when I began to extricate myself from the Christian dye my virgin wool had been immersed in, I phrased it this way: "I want to live in a knowable world" -- basically replacing religion with science. I wanted to get rid of the magic god who mysteriously intervenes in this world to make things happen (all sorts of nano-managed events which many believers think happens).

    Making the transition by no means eliminated headaches. Instead of being irritated by claims of the magic god's nano-managing, there is now the irritation of determinism vs free will. I'm still working on that problem. I guess I agree with "Carl Sagan's well-known saying 'cosmos is all there is, or ever will be'".

    Even though billions sincerely believe in other worlds, I now have to know better them all of them, and conclude they are deluded, and must conclude that imagined other worlds are as substantial as the suggestive shapes of clouds. Fanciful cloud shapes are part of "this world".
  • Wayfarer
    20.8k
    science is in no way related to religion. They are different methods of seeking truth. One is based on authority and tradition, while the other is based on experiment and observation by your peers.

    I know all of that. However, science is now normative, with respect to what ought to be believed, in the way that religion once was. It takes itself as the 'arbiter of reality'.

    "I want to live in a knowable world" -- basically replacing religion with science. — BitterCrank

    That's positivism. It is one of the master-narratives of modernity. I think I also probably don't believe in the god that you don't believe in, but I am neither positivist nor atheist.
  • Wayfarer
    20.8k
    I want to live in a knowable world" -- basically replacing religion with science. I wanted to get rid of the magic god who mysteriously intervenes in this world to make things happen. — BitterCrank

    What I mean is this - I don't think I have ever believed in that kind of God - the film-director pulling the strings behind the scenes; I think that is a popular image, but I never imagined that such a God existed. However I don't think the non-belief in that kind of 'sky-father' image of God, necessarily entails atheism.
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.