human thoughts (where our math, morality and fiction are developed) map to physical entities in our mind through neuron patterns and such, and thereby exist in the ontological sense. — Read Parfit
Brain processes, like ink marks, sound waves, the motion of water molecules, electrical current, and any other physical phenomenon you can think of, seem clearly devoid of any inherent meaning. By themselves they are simply meaningless patterns of electrochemical activity. Yet our thoughts do have inherent meaning – that’s how they are able to impart it to otherwise meaningless ink marks, sound waves, etc. In that case, though, it seems that our thoughts cannot possibly be identified with any physical processes in the brain. In short: Thoughts and the like possess inherent meaning or intentionality; brain processes, like ink marks, sound waves, and the like, are utterly devoid of any inherent meaning or intentionality; so thoughts and the like cannot possibly be identified with brain processes.
Parfit argues that we can ask if claims are compatible with the laws of nature. — Read Parfit
While studying this question I ran across Parfit who argues, roughly, that human thoughts (where our math, morality and fiction are developed) map to physical entities in our mind through neuron patterns and such, and thereby exist in the ontological sense. — Read Parfit
If you think that the "laws of nature" are some independently existing laws, then how would we know whether the humanly constructed laws are a proper representation of the independent laws, or "fictions"? — Metaphysician Undercover
Furthermore, if you were to try and ascertain the sense in which 'neuron pattersn and such' constitute'human thoughts', then this would require interpretation and judgement: that this pattern of data means or equates to such and such a thought. But the nature of meaning, and the nature of judgement, is precisely what it is, that such an analysis is intended to explain. So such a judgement can't help but be circular or question-begging. — Wayfarer
You ought to consider that any "laws" are just human constructs. like any other concepts If you think that the "laws of nature" are some independently existing laws, then how would we know whether the humanly constructed laws are a proper representation of the independent laws, or "fictions"? We'd have to ask, are the humanly constructed laws compatible with the independent laws. But all that we have to go on is the world we perceive, the humanly constructed laws, and logic and reason. So it's quite clear that Parfit's suggestion doesn't solve the problem of distinguishing fictitious ideas from non-fictitious ideas. — Metaphysician Undercover
I must admit I am scratching my head a bit by his use of the word “with”. Brain scientists use gadgets to identify brain processes, all we can do on our own is experience them. — Read Parfit
Moving on to his larger point, I suppose if you isolated a group of electrochemical states “by themselves’’ you could argue they are meaningless in that sense, but I think the shortcoming of his reasoning is that these states are not isolated. Instead, they are subset of the larger thinking apparatus given to us by Evolution — Read Parfit
The only thing I am defending is that when when someone ‘discovers’ or ‘learns’ an abstract concept like the number 1, that concept then takes a physical form in our brain — Read Parfit
Once we grant thoughts themselves an ontological status, the next question becomes, can we apply objective criteria to the claims expressed by these thoughts? — Read Parfit
This use of "ontology" for example, looks like it should be "metaphysical." This goes back to your example of Pegasus: in metaphysical terms, talking about Pegasus is nonsense. There is no Pegasus. But clearly and obviously there is, and he comes with a long history. The way out of this contradiction is to recognize that it is not a real contradiction. Metaphysically, no Pegasus. But "Pegasus" is meaningful name. One simply asks, what does "Pegasus" mean, and then what it means for there to be such an idea as Pegasus - and so on. — tim wood
Yes, the laws of nature are a human construct, but that does not change the fact that they are the best reference for whether or not some other claim is compatible with how nature works. — Read Parfit
As I understand it, to exist in the narrow ontological sense, something needs be made of matter. — Read Parfit
Well, you did say that thoughts, language and reason 'exist in an ontological sense' as brain processes. But now you say that 'all we can do is experience them'. So - does the nature of first-person experience need to be understood in terms of brain processes, in order to understand them? Are they really physical or neurological in nature? That question is the basis of the well-known 'hard problem of consciousness' first articulated by philosophers David Chalmers. — Wayfarer
I'm dubious about treating evolution as an agency. The expression 'given to us by Evolution' seems to me an example of the way that modern culture tends to attribute to biological evolution the agency that was previously attributed to God (especially because Evolution is capitalised.) — Wayfarer
But without wishing to detract from the science, the problem is that such thinking is reductionistinsofar as it wishes to understand reason, language and abstract thought purely through the lens of the biological sciences. But biological science is not directly concerned with such faculties, except for in a secondary sense; the point of the theory of evolution is to explain the origin of species, not to solve complex problems of philosophy of mind. — Wayfarer
And again, identifying language and reason with neural processes begs the question of where reason receives it warrant. If it is indeed only a matter of successful adaption to the environment, then in what sense could it be said to be true? This actually is a very deep question, and is the subject of many philosophy texts. — Wayfarer
But, concepts are not physical. If you had a brain injury - God forbid - your brain might have to vastly re-organise its activities so as to compensate. In such cases, the part of the brain that is normally associated with one aspect of cognition can be re-purposed to deal with another, in order to compensate. (This is one of the findings of neuroplasticity.) So, if the process was only physical, then this couldn't happen, because changing the matter, i.e damaging the brain, would stop you from being able to count or understand numbers (which in some cases it would.) But in cases where the brain successfully re-configures itself to be able to count, then the cognitive requirement is actually changing the physical configuration. It's 'top-down causation' in this case. — Wayfarer
Whether knowingly or not, your general approach could be described as being in line with scientific materialism - which is of course a very influential attitude in modern culture, but which I think ought to be questioned. — Wayfarer
I believe evolution hardwired humans to reason in the same way it produced long necks in giraffes — Read Parfit
This is why AP winds up in modal realism. Unicorns might not exist in our world, but they could have evolved in some other world with the same natural laws. So they are a definite possibility. — apokrisis
A brain of course evolved. But brains are not machines or computers. — apokrisis
But science of course has moved on, both in physics, but especially in biology. And this is returning us towards a more sophisticated Aristotlelian "four causes" ontology. AP feels so last century now. You are dealing with a historical curiosity is all. — apokrisis
These concepts may or may not or may not describe something that is compatible with the laws of nature, but the concepts still exist in a physical way. — Read Parfit
So sure, every concept exists as a pattern of neural activity. It is a set of physical marks. But where in your physicalist conception of this situation is the meaning of the marks? I see only syntactical operations - the mechanics. I don’t see physicalism accounting for any semantics, any interpretance. — apokrisis
I don’t see the point of someone (not saying you) trying to maintain some definition of God that requires denial of evolution That version of God will continue to be buried in a an ever growing mountain of fossil and biological evidence. — Read Parfit
I vaguely remember [Aristotle] having written 'the question isn't ifsomething exists, but how it exists.' — Read Parfit
The brain is obviously capable of storing, retrieving and crunching these patterns in ways that are meaningful to us. Isn't that where to find the semantics and interpretance — Read Parfit
If some gizmo were able to identify the model of Ant Man in my brain and wrote that as 'kdhfh' in a language called Braineze, the definition of 'kdhfh' would be ‘The model of Ant Man on a desk inside Read Partit’s brain.' — Read Parfit
There is a sense in which science has moved into the role previously occupied by religion - as the kind of court of appeal for what ought to be considered real, the ‘umpire of reality'. And that shows up as physicalism, the attitude that 'whatever can be known, can be known by means of science'. — Wayfarer
The 'law of the excluded middle' and the fact that 2 + 2 = 4 did not come into being as a consequence of anything Darwin discovered. — Wayfarer
From this perch, I have not met a single person who has said 'whatever can be known, can be known by means of science'. — Read Parfit
Long before we had formal math, I can imagine the Darwinian advantage of a band of humans learning to communicate that first 2 tigers went into that cave, and then 2 more went into the cave, then 3 came out. — Read Parfit
It does not mean that the hardware we use was not invented through evolution. — Read Parfit
(1876 ed., 68-69) [emphasis added]It may be metaphorically said that Natural Selection is daily and hourly scrutinizing, throughout the world, the slightest variations; rejecting those that are bad, and adding up all that are good; silently and insensibly working whenever and wherever opportunity offers, at the improvement of each organic being.”
Darwin starts by insisting that nature is not a goddess but a metaphor. As soon as he begins to talk about nature, however, she is transformed into a divinity with consciousness and will.
Again - there is an implied agency in this sentence. — Wayfarer
something that produces or is capable of producing an effect
All appearances to the contrary, the only watchmaker in nature is the blind forces of physics, albeit deployed in a very special way. A true watchmaker has foresight: he designs his cogs and springs, and plans their interconnections, with a future purpose in his mind's eye. Natural selection, the blind, unconscious automatic process which Darwin discovered, and which we now know is the explanation for the existence and apparently purposeful form of all life, has no purpose at all. If it can be said to play the role of watchmaker in nature, it is the blind watchmaker. — Richard Dawkins
Through the microscope of molecular biology, we get to witness the birth of agency, in the first macromolecules that have enough complexity to ‘do things.’ ... There is something alien and vaguely repellent about the quasi-agency we discover at this level — all that purposive hustle and bustle, and yet there’s nobody home.
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Love it or hate it, phenomena like this exhibit the heart of the power of the Darwinian idea. An impersonal, unreflective, robotic, mindless little scrap of molecular machinery is the ultimate basis of all the agency, and hence meaning, and hence consciousness, in the universe. — Daniel Dennett
There is no inventor, no intelligent design. Nonetheless, natural selection subjects all traits to the most exacting tests, and the best designs win out. It is a natural laboratory that belittles the human theatre, scrutinising trillions of tiny differences simultaneously, each and every generation. Design is all around us, the product of a blind but ingenious process. Evolutionists often talk informally of inventions, and there is no better word to convey the astonishing creativity of nature. To gain an insight into how all this came about is the shared goal of scientists, whatever their religious beliefs, along with anyone else who cares about how we came to be here.
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