Thanks anyway, MU, but I don't eat fairy floss. — Janus
But is there a real distinction, truthful, between the physical and non material or phenomenal? — Blue Lux
What does "the physical" refer to other than the interpretations of our sensations — Metaphysician Undercover
...the doors of perception... — Blue Lux
What does "the physical" refer to other than the interpretations of our sensations. — Metaphysician Undercover
What we tend to disregard is that what we know as "the physical realm" is only what our senses present to us as "the physical realm" — Metaphysician Undercover
It seems that all attempts to understand something always lead back to an attempt at understanding existence (inevitable teleologies), which always leads to an attempt at understanding Human Existence. — Blue Lux
Would be a bit rude if I walked over and said "Hi neighbor, you're just my sensations". — jorndoe
Perhaps it is, but all of this boils down to the most important question of all. The question of meaning. — Blue Lux
The question works from dubious presuppositions... — creativesoul
All interpretation is of something already meaningful. The meaning is precisely what is being interpreted. Sensations aren't meaningful in and of themselves. They are necessary but insufficient for the attribution of meaning. All sentient creatures use sensation by virtue of autonomously drawing connections between 'objects' of physiological sensory perception and/or themselves. The complexity of the correlation translates to the cognitive ability and/or capability of the candidate. — creativesoul
Huh?
I chat with my neighbors all the time.
Why on Earth would they just be my sensations? — jorndoe
Why shouldn't a cause happen after the event? — Banno
So what is your belief about the purpose of existence? — Blue Lux
What does "the physical" refer to other than the interpretations of our sensations.
— Metaphysician Undercover
The question works from dubious presuppositions...
All interpretation is of something already meaningful. The meaning is precisely what is being interpreted. Sensations aren't meaningful in and of themselves. They are necessary but insufficient for the attribution of meaning. All sentient creatures use sensation by virtue of autonomously drawing connections between 'objects' of physiological sensory perception and/or themselves. The complexity of the correlation translates to the cognitive ability and/or capability of the candidate. — creativesoul
Yes, one ought to be dubious of any proposition, in the way of the skeptic. But you turn things around, as if it is the proposition which is dubious, rather than yourself who doubts the proposition. Are you really that confused? Do you really believe that it is the proposition which is dubious, and not yourself who is doubting the proposition? Why not state things to reflect the true reality, rather than creating such an illusion? — Metaphysician Undercover
Sure, but the point is that "objects" are created by the sentient creature, through the act of sensation... — Metaphysician Undercover
I would say it's actually classical physical explanations that break down rather than causality.
Events A and B are independent transformations which can be ordered differently. — Andrew M
I'm no QM expert! — Pattern-chaser
I have recently been led to conclude that knowledge will never be found but created. Objectivity is, too, not to be found, and too it is to be created. — Blue Lux
What is the difference between a cause and effect, if not their ordering in time? A common attempt to remove temporal ordering from the relationship, beloved by some fundamentalist apologists, is to replace temporal ordering with logical ordering, by which they envisage something like an entailment A->B, with the cause being the antecedent A and the effect the consequent B. The trouble with this is that, in most cases, when all information is incorporated into the calculation, the arrow becomes bidirectional A<->B. — andrewk
Does it even make sense to differentiate between "before" and "after" on the quantum level? I've heard that no, because the arrow of time for a quantum system only gets defined when the system decoheres into a classical system (the wave function collapses), thereby increasing entropy.
And if there is no difference between "before" and "after", what sense does it make to differentiate between cause and effect? — litewave
Sensations aren't meaningful. — creativesoul
You are failing to draw and maintain the distinction between what you're reporting upon and your report. You've got plenty of company in philosophy. — creativesoul
What is the difference between a cause and effect, if not their ordering in time? A common attempt to remove temporal ordering from the relationship, beloved by some fundamentalist apologists, is to replace temporal ordering with logical ordering, by which they envisage something like an entailment A->B, with the cause being the antecedent A and the effect the consequent B. The trouble with this is that, in most cases, when all information is incorporated into the calculation, the arrow becomes bidirectional A<->B. — andrewk
So you need both logical and temporal ordering to explain causality... — litewave
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