"What's wrong with Platonic Realism?"
Feser's objection focuses of Plato's postulation of a "third realm", transcending the physical and mental realms, in which the Forms exist. — Mitchell
It’s been decades since I have read any Metaphysics, but I cannot help but think that surely in the 900 years since Aquinas, other views defending Realism have been offered. — Mitchell
All this leads up to a simple question: is he right in claiming that there are only three possible Realist views: Platonic, Aristotelian, and Scholastic? It’s been decades since I have read any Metaphysics, but I cannot help but think that surely in the 900 years since Aquinas, other views defending Realism have been offered. — Mitchell
All this leads up to a simple question: is he right in claiming that there are only three possible Realist views: Platonic, Aristotelian, and Scholastic? — Mitchell
They are the emergent regularities - the symmetries or laws - that emerge to bound nature. — apokrisis
Nominalism starts to look the correct view, the classical physics view, as we seem to exist in a static Universe ruled by abstract God-given (or mathematics-given) laws and composed of atomistically material particulars. — apokrisis
All this leads up to a simple question: is he right in claiming that there are only three possible Realist views: Platonic, Aristotelian, and Scholastic? It’s been decades since I have read any Metaphysics, but I cannot help but think that surely in the 900 years since Aquinas, other views defending Realism have been offered. — Mitchell
This is confusing, because nominalism is 'names only' - i.e. that what realists think are universals, are really just names for similarities. — Wayfarer
You wouldn't say that laws are expressions of latencies that is actualised by concrete instances? I'm having trouble understanding 'emergent' as that seems to suggest laws or regularities are 'consequent to' - that first of all there's material bodies, then the laws 'emerge'. — Wayfarer
Whereas I had thought that in modern cosmology, something like the dimensionless constants (which might correspond to constraints) are real prior to the particulars, and that when laws to emerge, it's because these latencies are now being actualised - 'what is latent becomes patent'. — Wayfarer
All this leads up to a simple question: is he right in claiming that there are only three possible Realist views: Platonic, Aristotelian, and Scholastic? — Mitchell
In the first place, nearly all medieval thinkers agreed on the existence of universals before things in the form of divine ideas existing in the divine mind, but all of them denied their existence in the form of mind-independent, real, eternal entities originally posited by Plato. — SEP - The Medieval Problem of Universals
So to answer your question, there are various realist views even within Scholasticism. But I think they ultimately boil down to either transcendent or immanent realism. — Andrew M
As Boethius put it, "... Aristotle, however, thinks that they are understood as incorporeal and universal, but subsist in sensibles." — Andrew M
nominalism depends on an ontology where everything is a material particular. The differentiation of being is the primary fact. — apokrisis
So prior to the emergence of human being, if there is simply matter, or matter~energy, or electro-magnetic fields or plasma or whatever - there is no being as such. — Wayfarer
You seem to be conflating 'being' with 'conception of being' — Janus
So, again, the question that occurs to me, is that if there is a top-down organising principle, as systems science seems to be saying, what is responsible for that, because the ‘immanent metaphysics’ model seems very bottom-up, as far as I can understand it (which I readily admit might not be very far.) — Wayfarer
Being is not the object of study of the sciences, obviously — Janus
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