I'm not in the mood to work through all the stuff done over the last few days. I was going to address replies specific to me.
Is there anything specific you or anyone else here now would like to address? For maybe an hour or so? — Banno
My path would be that the uses given for our two key terms in the OP are fine, and that it's also OK to use those words in other ways, so long as we keep an eye on what is going on.
I thought I had shown how a few of the suggested extensions to their use led one astray, but it is apparent... — Banno
Naturalism - what you see out of the window.
Phenomenology - you looking out of the window.
So, phenomenology takes into account 'the act of looking', which naturalism brackets out and then neglects to consider. — Wayfarer
Using your eyes is as natural as using language to explain what you see. — Harry Hindu
But talking about it and the thing in itself are two different thingsYour mind is just another object that I can talk about - no different than talking about any other thing in nature. — Harry Hindu
Subjective facts is a contradiction. Objective facts is a redundancy. There is no such thing as a subjective fact.in particular, don't pretend that there are either only subjective facts, or that there are only objective facts. — Banno
More anthropomorphism.That is not true, language is a societal phenomenon, sight is a natural phenomenon. — Merkwurdichliebe
Of course. If you want to separate humans from nature, you'd be practicing some religion, not science.Then it follows that technology is a natural phenomenon in which case... — Merkwurdichliebe
I would prefer the term, "naturalism".More transhumanism — Merkwurdichliebe
Sure, you referred to a fact of reality - namely my beliefs. I have beliefs, you have beliefs. There, I just spoke objectively - referring to some state-of-affairs of reality.So you believe.
(See what I did there?) — Banno
But I think I've answered your questions, although I grant that I might not have spelled absolutely everything out. — S
But I didn't ask you to spell everything out. I asked you quite specifically about what force of necessity the distinction you've drawn has. What motivates it? Why this distinction, and not any other of the rather fanciful ones I came up with? What presuppositions are at work such that this distinction is significant? What is the drawing of this distinction meant to say - imply - about how the world is, such that it has this significance? What makes this distinction non-arbitrary? The very drawing of this distinction - and not another - has something to say. But what? — StreetlightX
Another way this might be put: as it stands, the whole question of 'objectivity' as you've set it out is merely nominal. 'Objectivity', as you use it, simply names a particular (let's call it) state of affairs, which may or may not be the case. And what is being wrangled over is nothing but the applicability of a name ("turns out, the existence of Jupiter is (what we call) an objective fact! Wow!); But again, why this distinction and not another? It is simply arbitrary that this relation (between 'us' and Jupiter) is called 'objective'? Or is the significance of this distinction - from whence it draws the force of its necessity - being guided by a certain set of (as yet un-spelled-out) presuppositions? If you're doing any kind of philosophy worthy of the name, then of course it is. If. — StreetlightX
Non-answers, both paragraphs. — StreetlightX
But I didn't ask you to spell everything out. I asked you quite specifically about what force of necessity the distinction you've drawn has. What motivates it? Why this distinction, and not any other of the rather fanciful ones I came up with? — StreetlightX
It's this distinction, rather than others, because a bunch of people came up with the philosophy of idealism — S
There is a motivation there. It's just a reactive, rather than creative one. It's taking something that's already there and using it, in order to define oneself against some clearly demarcated, monolithic tradition of Hocus Pocus.
I feel like that is a type of philosophy. It's not OLP, tho. It's whatever New Atheism is, in essence. More charitably, I guess you could call it Voltairism. — csalisbury
I feel like that is a type of philosophy. It's not OLP, tho. It's whatever New Atheism is, in essence. — csalisbury
More like every paragraph he writes in response to an inquiry. Nothing but dodging the questionNon-answers, both paragraphs. — StreetlightX
It is beginning to occur to me that this whole debate stems from this notion that humans are special and separate from nature. — Harry Hindu
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