Your short replies are wonderfully open-ended prompts. Though so far, in such few turns, they do more to stimulate my thinking than to give me a clear idea what you mean.You've written rather a lot, and unfortunately I don't have time for more than a short response. However, i think the salient point is that I don't think that aesthetic and religious beliefs are understandable as being able to be inter-subjectively assessed in terms of "correctness', as empirical beliefs are, and it was your apparent assertion that they are to be understood as such that I was responding to. Now, I have given my reasons for thinking that they are not; perhaps you could now offer your reasons for thinking they are. — Janus
Are you saying that I have apparently asserted that "aesthetic and religious beliefs are understandable as being able to be inter-subjectively assessed in terms of "correctness', as empirical beliefs are"? I'm not sure what such a claim means, so I suppose I can't tell whether I've asserted it. — Cabbage Farmer
The skeptic acknowledges that the appearance of his own faith, his own belief, his own expectations are not evidence of the correctness of his opinion. — Cabbage Farmer
A philosopher may also come to understand faith and belief as being entirely outside the context of "correctness of opinion". — Janus
Quite so. I keep coming back here. — Banno
Goals, at the very highest level, are irrational - I think we are agreeing on that. Rationality has to serve irrationality, Irrationality stops the recursive buck from being passed further - that's how I see it. — Jake Tarragon
The abstract logic of reproduction and survival doesn't inform us about the particular motives and impulses that drive each animal, or the particular purposes and reasons that guide the intentional action of each rational agent. Each of us lives and acts in his own peculiar way as the creature he happens to be, thanks in part to biological and cultural inheritance. Natural selection sorts us all out in its own way in its own time. The other animals haven't heard the news, and none of us is compelled to weave his feeble grasp of it into the fabric of his principles of action.There is indeed, but please let's not consider 'fitness' in Darwinian terms, and instead contemplate the fact that philosophy qua philosophy is not concerned with the propagation of the genome, but the understanding of lived existence as a plight - something quite out-of-scope for Darwinism. — Wayfarer
Is that passage from Bernstein's "Objectivism and Relativism"?I think the primary need of any philosophy nowadays is to provide a remedy for what philosopher Richard Bernstein referred to as our 'Cartesian anxiety': — Wayfarer
I agree that reflection on one's own position is a crucial feature of good philosophical practice.Because it illustrates the sense in which Dennett critiques philosophy of mind from an instinctive and unreflectively naturalist position. And what is 'a naturalist position'? Well, it assumes 'the subject in the world;' here, the intelligent subject, there, the object of analysis, be that some stellar object, or some form of nematode worm - or 'mind', the purported ghostly ethereal stuff of idealist philosophy! — Wayfarer
Do you suggest that being a naturalist or "treating mind as an object" can only follow from having some sort of take on Cartesianism? Can't one arrive at any of the relevant positions without ever having read Descartes? Do you suggest the only path to naturalism is through a misreading of Descartes? Did Lucretius read Descartes? Did ancient atheists read Descartes? Must we interpret the philosophy of Bacon and Gassendi primarily in light of Cartesianism?What I'm saying is that treating the mind as an object, is a consequence of taking Descartes' philosophy as something that it never was, namely, a scientific hypothesis. It's more like an economic model, a conceptual way of carving up the elements of experience. Interpreted literally, it is no less absurd than creation mythology. But that massive misconception has now become foundational to the 'scientific worldview' as exemplified by the likes of Dennett. — Wayfarer
What do you mean when you say "nobody knows what the mind is"? I might say in kind, "Nobody knows what anything is". All we get is glimpses that we may piece together in various ways, carefully or recklessly, thoughtfully or impulsively. The thought that minds are especially mysterious seems to follow from the assumption that we're somehow in possession of perfect knowledge of the true nature of things on the basis of exteroception; and the assumption that each of us is somehow blind to his own mental activity because he has no sensory image of his own mental activity. Both these assumptions strike me as extremely unwarranted and confused.In reality, 'mind' is never an object of cognition. Many people seem to regard this as a radical claim, but I think it is an obvious fact. [...] — Wayfarer
Do you follow Dennett in his talk of "heterophenomenology"?They are phenomena as far as they are the subject of study of 'those who talk of religious experience'. So a scholar of comparative religion might talk of them 'as phenomena', but their real significance might only be disclosed in the first person. So locating them among phenomena is the very same naturalising tendency. — Wayfarer
I'm not sure how this is a response to the sentence you cited. To me it seems the reason conflicting metaphysicians don't have a definitive criterion to settle their dispute is that there is no such criterion, which is the point I was making.Often because they don't have skin in the game; it doesn't really mean anything to them. — Wayfarer
. It won't cure the illness to shift hope from one object to another, from "science" to "metaphysics", from "evidence" to "revelation". Cure the thing at its root: Relieve the anxiety without any appeal to vain hope or bad faith. — Cabbage Farmer
I suppose it's another sign of the strength and passion of the prejudice that disposes you to wage eternal war against the materialist whose prejudice opposes yours, when instead you might seek to keep peace and nurture agreements in pursuit of common interest for the sake of all humanity and all sentient beings. — Cabbage Farmer
Reports of a phenomenon are not the same as the phenomenon they report. I call the "sense of an unseen source of order" you mention a sort of mystical experience. Such experiences are themselves phenomena for each of us who has experiences of this sort. — Cabbage Farmer
What do you mean when you say "nobody knows what the mind is"? I might say in kind, "Nobody knows what anything is". — Cabbage Farmer
I'm not sure on what grounds you suggest that Dennett and all other naturalists have arrived at their positions unreflectively. — Cabbage Farmer
That is why, for example, values nowadays are almost always understood through the prism of Darwinism, i.e. as being in service to survival. There is no objective good, beyond the pragmatic and utilitarian. — Wayfarer
Cartesian anxiety, as characterized in that passage, is just one species of ontological anxiety. In whatever flavor it happens to afflict us, ontological anxiety gives rise to a sort of hope that the anxiety will be cured by a corresponding ontological certainty. It won't cure the illness to shift hope from one object to another, from "science" to "metaphysics", from "evidence" to "revelation". Cure the thing at its root: Relieve the anxiety without any appeal to vain hope or bad faith. — Cabbage Farmer
By speaking about them, we bring these particular phenomena to the attention of others. This way of informing other minds about circumstantially private experiences indicates the public character of subjectivity. — Cabbage Farmer
To all appearances, we acquire knowledge about the world noninferentially on the basis of introspection, no less than we acquire knowledge about the world noninferentially on the basis of exteroception. Introspective and exteroceptive awareness are two sources of empirical evidence and two bases of empirical judgment. According to our nature, we coordinate sights with sights, sights with sounds, and exteroception with proprioception, interoception, and introspection. The prima facie synthesis that comes to each of us whether he wants it or not, may be extended by rigorous empirical investigation and by modest accounts of the results of investigation in keeping with the balance of appearances, in the manner of Gassendi. Or that natural synthesis may be extended any way you please, jumbled by carelessness and leniency, distorted by fantasies and legends, bloated by hopes and fears. — Cabbage Farmer
If you've given any reasons for thinking that religious and aesthetic beliefs are not "understandable as being able to be inter-subjectively assessed in terms of "correctness', as empirical beliefs are", then I have not caught wind of those reasons. It seems to me you have yet to clear up the meaning of the claim, and I'm not sure what in your comments counts as a reason to support that claim. — Cabbage Farmer
This faith does not formulate itself—it simply lives, and so guards itself against formulae. To be sure, the accident of environment, of educational background gives prominence to concepts of a certain sort: in primitive Christianity one finds only concepts of a Judaeo-Semitic character (—that of eating and drinking at the last supper belongs to this category—an idea which, like everything else Jewish, has been badly mauled by the church). But let us be careful not to see in all this anything more than symbolical language, semantics[6] an opportunity to speak in parables. It is only on the theory that no work is to be taken literally that this anti-realist is able to speak at all. Set down among Hindus he would have made use of the concepts of Sankhya,[7] and among Chinese he would have employed those of Lao-tse[8]—and in neither case would it have made any difference to him.—With a little freedom in the use of words, one might actually call Jesus a “free spirit”[9]—he cares nothing for what is established: the word killeth,[10] whatever is established killeth. The idea of “life” as an experience, as he alone conceives it, stands opposed to his mind to every sort of word, formula, law, belief and dogma. He speaks only of inner things: “life” or “truth” or “light” is his word for the innermost—in his sight everything else, the whole of reality, all nature, even language, has significance only as sign, as allegory. — N
...[M]oreover this virtuosity of an ironical artistic life apprehends itself as a divine creative genius for which anything and everything is only an unsubstantial creature, to which the creator, knowing himself to be disengaged and free from everything, is not bound, because he is just as able to destroy it as to create it. In that case, he who has reached this standpoint of divine genius looks down from his high rank on all other men, for they are pronounced dull and limited, inasmuch as law, morals, etc., still count for them as fixed, essential, and obligatory. — H
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