Because it is fully exhausted by its physical description. It is not "about" something else in the sense of Brentano. — Dfpolis
What I an asserting is that the concept of matter is orthogonal to the concept of intentionality and so intentional operations cannot be reduced to material operations. Just to be clear, in physics, we distinguish material states from the laws under which they evolve. — Dfpolis
Because it is fully exhausted by its physical description. It is not "about" something else in the sense of Brentano. Our awareness of the state, on the other hand, is both and act in itself and points to the state it is aware of. So, it is intentional, while the original state is not. — Dfpolis
Yes, natural processes have ends, and as a result an intrinsic intentionality. That is the basis for Aquinas' Fifth Way to prove the existence of God and the reason I hold that the laws of nature are intentional realities. So, physicality is partly intentional. I am not denying that. — Dfpolis
The physicalist assumes that these activities could be described by physical description if the sciences advanced to that point. But the fact is that the physical descriptions of these activities remain incomplete. — Metaphysician Undercover
Still, I see myself often searching for the right word(s) to express what I think, and occasionally fail. Thus, my thoughts have priority over even my internal monologue. — Dfpolis
I relate to an experience like that, but I tend to interpret it in terms of condensation. I'm reluctant to classify this 'cloud' as an actual thought. — sign
It looks like I'm basically describing a position like James'. Note that 'experience' must change its meaning radically once the idea is grasped. It is a ladder to be thrown away. James has no choice but to use subject-object language in order to be intelligible as he tries to lead subject-object thinking somewhere rich and strange. — sign
Thanks for sharing that. — sign
My influences are Christian, but this Christianity has passed through the 'fiery brook' of the Left Hegelians. For me the incarnation is central, and I suppose my mysticism inasmuch as I can keep and enjoy it is much like Blake's. — sign
Finally, for me religion is higher than politics. 'He causes his sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous.' 'And He saw that it was good.' — sign
I'm sorry but I doubt that; or rather I believe that the idea of 'encoding' must be mistaken here. — Wayfarer
I have an interesting book, 'Why Us?' by James Le Fanu. — Wayfarer
one point is that all of the neural studies which attempted to understand the areas of the brain, or brain processes, involved in learning new words, via fMRI scans, were hopelessly inconclusive. — Wayfarer
But the correspondence between the brain and the elements of meaning is nothing like that at all. What about people who suffer brain damage, and whose brains re-configure themselves to compensate? — Wayfarer
But they do cast doubt on the idea of a kind of 1:1 relationship between brain function and content. — Wayfarer
I think the idea of 'encoding' is what I call a 'rogue metaphor' — Wayfarer
What does 'fully natural' mean here? The whole point about theistic philosophies, which I had the impression you accept, is that there is an element in the human, namely, the soul, which transcends the (merely) natural. — Wayfarer
Something with which any scholastic philosopher would concur, I would have thought. — Wayfarer
They do have overlapping definitions. They both have causal power. I said that and you agreed, right?Things all share being, but they differ in how they share being. As matter and ideas have non-overlapping definitions, they are different. — Dfpolis
Right. So, like I said, intent is to you as color is to the apple. You still have yet to make a clear, coherent distinction between what is "matter" and what is "intent".Yes. I am what has changed. One intent ended. Another came to be. I remained. The point in contention was whether there was continuity in the intent rather than in the intending subject. — Dfpolis
You said:How is any of this an argument against my claim that matter has parts outside of parts? — Dfpolis
If this were the case, then for what reason does the mind bend a straw that isn't bent, or create a pool of water where there isn't one?If there were no parts outside of parts in reality, the mind would have no reason to separate them in thought. — Dfpolis
It seems to me that the apprehension would be just a continuation of the causal sequence. Tree rings still carry information about the age of the tree independent of any mind coming along and being affected by their existence (like becoming aware of their existence). If awareness isn't a form of knowledge about the world, then what is it and why still call it "awareness" if it doesn't fit the definition of "awareness" we already have?Information surely has causes, many of which are material. In my message example, the transmission process is described by physics, but the apprehension of information is not. Nothing described by physics involves awareness per se. — Dfpolis
The "laws of nature" is a human invention. There is just how things are, and then our explanations of how things are (laws of nature). Nature doesn't have laws. Humans have laws. Nature just is. Nature is deterministic if that is what you mean. It is logical.I did not notice this. There is no reason to think that everything with causal power is material in any commonly accepted sense. The laws of nature are unextended and appear to be unchanging, so they have none of the characteristics thought to define material objects. Still they cause physical phenomena to operate as they do.
The common word for anything that can act is "being." — Dfpolis
Because it is fully exhausted by its physical description. It is not "about" something else in the sense of Brentano. — Dfpolis
It isn't fully exhausted by the physical description though, that's the point. Survival of a living being, and the activities of living beings are not fully described by physical descriptions. — Metaphysician Undercover
I want to know what you mean by "orthogonal" here. — Metaphysician Undercover
I assume that it means one thing is at a right angle to another. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you mean that "matter" and "intention" are two distinct ways of explaining the same thing (the point where they meet)? — Metaphysician Undercover
Perhaps you mean "parallel", but then how would they interact? In any case, your use of "orthogonal" doesn't make sense to me, can you explain? — Metaphysician Undercover
Because it is fully exhausted by its physical description. It is not "about" something else in the sense of Brentano. Our awareness of the state, on the other hand, is both and act in itself and points to the state it is aware of. So, it is intentional, while the original state is not. — Dfpolis
Yes, natural processes have ends, and as a result an intrinsic intentionality. That is the basis for Aquinas' Fifth Way to prove the existence of God and the reason I hold that the laws of nature are intentional realities. So, physicality is partly intentional. I am not denying that. — Dfpolis
Don't these two statements directly contradict each other? — Metaphysician Undercover
Things all share being, but they differ in how they share being. As matter and ideas have non-overlapping definitions, they are different. — Dfpolis
They do have overlapping definitions. They both have causal power. I said that and you agreed, right? — Harry Hindu
You still have yet to make a clear, coherent distinction between what is "matter" and what is "intent". — Harry Hindu
I don't understand your use of "intent" anyway. Most people use terms like, "ideas" and "mind" as opposite notions of "matter". In my mind, "intent" is "goal". Goal-oriented behavior is intentional behavior. Intent is your goal in mind that caused the action. — Harry Hindu
If there were no parts outside of parts in reality, the mind would have no reason to separate them in thought. — Dfpolis
If this were the case, then for what reason does the mind bend a straw that isn't bent, or create a pool of water where there isn't one? — Harry Hindu
It seems to me that the apprehension would be just a continuation of the causal sequence. Tree rings still carry information about the age of the tree independent of any mind coming along and being affected by their existence (like becoming aware of their existence). If awareness isn't a form of knowledge about the world, then what is it and why still call it "awareness" if it doesn't fit the definition of "awareness" we already have? — Harry Hindu
The "laws of nature" is a human invention. There is just how things are, and then our explanations of how things are (laws of nature). — Harry Hindu
Everything interacts causally, so I don't understand the distinction being made between "matter" and "intent"/"ideas". — Harry Hindu
In physics we abstract physical processes into states conceived as static time slices (matter) and tendencies by which these states evolve into other states over time (laws of nature). The states are fully specified by the values of their dynamic variables (classically, by their energy, momentum, etc., or, quantum mechanically, by their wave functions). So, all physics has to tell us about what reality is at any given time is its intrinsic state specification -- and that is what I am calling the material state. — Dfpolis
The standard Thomistic view is that humans are fully and completely natural. — Dfpolis
Denigrating what I say because I am a theist is an instance of the genetic fallacy, verging on ad hominem. — Dfpolis
I simply do not see the abstract and limited consideration of data on which natural science is (rightly) based as rational grounds for the a priori of logical possibilities -- which is what metaphysical naturalists do. Their blindness with respect to their to the fundamental assumptions, their preference for the a priori over the a posteriori, and their unwillingness to consider fully what is logically possible run counter to the entire scientific mindset. — Dfpolis
While I agree that the mind does a great deal of modelling, I think it is an error to think of mind primarily as a modelling process. — Dfpolis
There are integral human beings which have material and intentional operations -- operations describable by physics and operations that are not. I have given my reasons for holding that there are human operations not describable by physics. You have chosen not to rebut any of them. Instead, you are making dogmatic and unsupported claims as though I had not made my case. — Dfpolis
No, meaning need not result in action. Meaning is found in theoretical reflection as well as in practical reasoning. What action results from being able to distinguish essence and existence, or knowing that we cannot prove the consistency of arithmetic? — Dfpolis
Yes, I was insufficiently careful. I should have said "fully specified." Obviously, we have no exhaustive understanding of reality. The possibility of surprise is always present. What I meant was that once we give a material state its intrinsic specifications, it is fully defined. — Dfpolis
A similar empirical revolution is now unfolding in the biophysics of life and mind. In just the past 10 years, we have learnt how the quasi-classical nanoscale is a special convergence zone - analogous to the Planck scale - where the kind of semiotics that underpins biology can get its foothold. — apokrisis
Many physicalists argue that reality can be explained by physics, and if physics cannot explain the totality of reality at the present time, it will in the future, as the science of physics advances. Here at TPF, that is often cited as the premise of physicalism, when supporters define "physical" as that which is studied by physics. — Metaphysician Undercover
Oh boy - where to start?Things do not have overlapping definitions because they both exist. The basis of definition is not existence, for we can define things with no existence, like unicorns, but what they are (essences). — Dfpolis
How could there be pictures of unicorns if the idea of unicorns didn't have any causal power? Pictures aren't ideas. They are arrangements of matter that refer to their cause (the idea of a unicorn), just as a computer screen filled with scribbles refer to their cause (your idea and intent to communicate it). Tree rings are arrangements of matter that are the result of how the tree grows throughout the year (the cause). Tree rings mean the age of the tree through it's causal relationship. Both things (pictures of unicorns and tree rings) are effects that carry information, or mean, their causes. So there is an aboutness to matter as much as to minds.Following Brentano, intentions are characterized by aboutness and matter is not. — Dfpolis
Intent is to you as color is to the apple — Harry Hindu
And effects refer to something beyond itself - the cause. Causes refer to their effects. Your "aboutness" is the same thing as a causal relationship.What I am contrasting is materiality, as characterized by physics, and intentionality, which is characterized by "aboutness" -- by referring to something beyond itself, as a referent, target of action or desire and so on. — Dfpolis
What do you mean "final" step? The "received, encoded intelligibility becoming" becomes the cause of the next effect. For what reason would you be aware in the first place? Isn't it to react (the effect), which then becomes another cause for another effect, which can refer all the way back to your "encoded intelligibility becoming"? "Becoming" is another one of those philosophical buzz-words that have no meaning.Of course it is a continuation of the causal chain. The question is: is the final step, the received, encoded intelligibility becoming actually known describable by physics? Clearly, it is not because physics lacks a concept of awareness (because of the Fundamental Abstraction). So, no physics-based argument can conclude: "And so Harry is aware of the tree." — Dfpolis
Well, being that you have yet to make that clear distinction between "intent" and "matter", (they both have an "aboutness" (causal relationship)) determinate outcomes could just as well be material and intentional.We need to distinguish between what I call "the laws of physics," which are approximate human descriptions and the "laws of nature" which operate in nature and are what the laws of physics attempt to describe. If their we no reality described by the laws of physics, physics would be a work of fiction. It is not. Instead, we discover the laws in nature and do our best to describe them accurately. If they did not exist in nature, we would have no reason to observe nature to discover them. So, there are laws in nature, that instantiate Brentano's aboutness criterion (being about determinate outcomes), and so are properly called "intentional." — Dfpolis
Denigrating what I say because I am a theist is an instance of the genetic fallacy, verging on ad hominem. — Dfpolis
But you called naturalism vague and irrational without good justification. And as a theist, you have yet to show that you are willing to deal with the metaphysical problems of theism rather than just cherry-pick naturalistic science that you can bend towards the support of a theistic conclusion. — apokrisis
So maybe you are just unfamiliar with that distinction? Systems thinkers are holistic naturalists and not reductionist naturalists. Hence the semiotic twist which recognises that things like finality and meaning are part of nature too. The goal becomes to give a fully scientific account of that. — apokrisis
My claim is that a systems naturalism is what modern science now clearly supports. Whereas religious belief still makes bad metaphysics. — apokrisis
While I agree that the mind does a great deal of modelling, I think it is an error to think of mind primarily as a modelling process. — Dfpolis
If you have thought about it so deeply, you could then quickly explain why. — apokrisis
The Peircean position would be that mindfulness does reduce to the absolute generality of a sign relation. Even the Cosmos is built of regulative habit. So the active interaction is the primary one. A contemplative or self-reflecting consciousness would be a secondary "luxury" that emerges with systems complexity. And psychological science says the self-aware human mind, with its inner world of thoughts and plans, is still primarily an active rather than a passive modelling relation. — apokrisis
As my approach to naturalism is semiotic, it fits my metaphysics that our abstract accounts of reality must arrive at this essential duality of matter and information — apokrisis
It all starts with the complementarity of information and entropy built in at the Planck scale. Context and event become indistinguishable at the microlevel. So the basis of a semiotic division - one that can develop thermally with Cosmic cooling and expansion - is a modern empirical discovery. You can't now do metaphysics and ignore that fundamental finding. — apokrisis
No, meaning need not result in action. Meaning is found in theoretical reflection as well as in practical reasoning. What action results from being able to distinguish essence and existence, or knowing that we cannot prove the consistency of arithmetic? — Dfpolis
You are talking about minds at the top of the food chain. As a philosophical naturalist, my argument is developmental and evolutionary. — apokrisis
So I am saying, sure, we have a modern cultural tradition - an attitude that arose in the philosophy of Ancient Greece - where the human mind is understood as essentially contemplative. As Plato said, look inwards and the enlightened mind will simply remember the realm of ideas. We celebrate this rather mystic and passive notion of mindfulness, putting it above the pragmatic kind of thought that is in fact the basis for our everyday, rather habitual and uncontemplative, being in the world. — apokrisis
So meaning remains founded in the ideas or theories that we would be willing to act on - stake our lives on if necessary. — apokrisis
Sure, philosophy, maths, poetry, and all other kinds of "contemplative" thought are good habits to cultivate. They are socially supported because historically they generate pragmatic social value. We pay folk to reflect in theoretical fashion ... because we get stuff like new technology and better ways of organising society as a practical outcome. — apokrisis
The angle of your argument is always to take the complex extreme of mindfulness and present it as the monistically simple starting point. As with Socrates, the philosopher becomes then top of the tree. The end of a journey is made the beginning. — apokrisis
I - as a naturalist - prefer to travel back to the root. And biosemiotically, that would be the nano-scale machinery that regulates the thermal blizzard we call the chemical basis of life. I can see the "mind" at work there - the active downward causation of organismic purpose and plan. — apokrisis
I had thought that all forms of Christianity accepted the immortality of the soul, and that ‘the rational soul’ was fundamental to pre-modern theology. — Wayfarer
But in saying that there is no exhaustive understanding of reality, aren't you also saying that there is no such thing as a material state which is fully defined? — Metaphysician Undercover
If we did not try to describe the intrinsic complexity of microscopic states simply, with a few macroscopic variables (e.g. temperature and pressure), the concept of entropy would not arise.
What this means is that entropy, instead of being a pure physical property, is one that depends on how knowing subjects conceptualize physical systems. — Dfpolis
The idea is that physicalism isn't "latched on" to physics, and basically subservient to it, so that it's something like the "marketing team for physics" or "the ideological cheerleading team for physics." — Terrapin Station
Physics is studying the same stuff (as we posit as physicalists), as is chemistry, geology, meteorology, etc.--all the sciences are studying the same stuff. — Terrapin Station
There is a conflict between the requirements of scientific and philosophical definition. As I am addressing a naturalistic or physicalistic position, it is reasonable to use the criteria of physics in speaking of material state definitions. — Dfpolis
As my whole point is that physics does not give us an exhaustive understanding of reality, I obviously think that a specification sufficient to do physics is not exhaustive. — Dfpolis
Theologically, this is seen as an argument for the need of a resurrection. — Dfpolis
First, I never said that the overlapping definition was that they both exist. I said the overlapping definition was that they both have causal power. — Harry Hindu
Second, unicorns do exist and have causal power. They exist as ideas, not as an animal and I wouldn't say that animals and ideas have different "essences" because I don't know what that is. — Harry Hindu
What do those scribbles refer to? What do they mean? — Harry Hindu
How could there be pictures of unicorns if the idea of unicorns didn't have any causal power? — Harry Hindu
Both things (pictures of unicorns and tree rings) are effects that carry information, or mean, their causes. So there is an aboutness to matter as much as to minds. — Harry Hindu
And effects refer to something beyond itself - the cause. Causes refer to their effects. Your "aboutness" is the same thing as a causal relationship. — Harry Hindu
What do you mean "final" step? — Harry Hindu
For what reason would you be aware in the first place? Isn't it to react (the effect), which then becomes another cause for another effect, which can refer all the way back to your "encoded intelligibility becoming"? — Harry Hindu
"Becoming" is another one of those philosophical buzz-words that have no meaning. — Harry Hindu
Well, being that you have yet to make that clear distinction between "intent" and "matter", (they both have an "aboutness" (causal relationship)) determinate outcomes could just as well be material and intentional. — Harry Hindu
The problem is that information cannot be a primary concept. Since it is the reduction of logical possibility, it presupposes the existence of logical possibilities to be reduced. — Dfpolis
As I already pointed out, it is you that is equivocating - using terms like, "matter", "ideas", "being" and "essences" without any clear explanation of what those things are.Let us not equivocate. Unicorns as such do not exist. The idea of a unicorn is not a unicorn. — Dfpolis
unicorns do exist and have causal power. They exist as ideas, not as an animal and I wouldn't say that animals and ideas have different "essences" because I don't know what that is. — Harry Hindu
is the same as saying unicorns don't exist as animals.Unicorns as such do not exist. — Dfpolis
Right, the effects are not the cause. A picture of a unicorn isn't a unicorn either. It is the effect of the idea of a unicorn.The idea of a unicorn is not a unicorn. — Dfpolis
Then the grass would be a different essence than the goat. All you have done is redefine "thing" as "essence", and that throws a wrench into your explanation of "matter" and "ideas". Each idea does different things and would therefore be a different essence. How would you know that you have an idea of a horse as opposed to a unicorn, if those ideas didn't do different things?As for animals and ideas, they have different essences because they can do different things. A goat can eat grass, but the idea of a goat can't. — Dfpolis
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