That's contradiction, "first" means first, the possibility of infinite regress is therefore excluded. — Metaphysician Undercover
Unless you can justify this claim, it's nothing more than an opinion of an uneducated person. — Metaphysician Undercover
I gave you the example, moral ethics ... I see, morality is nonsense to you. — Metaphysician Undercover
My bold added, that portion being a metaphysical assertion.Yes, so there is but ontology; so long metaphysics;all is physical. — PoeticUniverse
But how do you know it is truly "first"? You do not. So, you will keep trying to find the really "true" first that comes before the current first. It just keeps going on. Ad nauseam. That is why it does not work. — alcontali
The most widespread and successful approach to morality is what the three offshoots of second-temple judaism propose, i.e. religious law. — alcontali
Read up on it, and then you will understand that what you are doing in the realm of morality, i.e. "metaphysics", is just un-methodical bullshit. Seriously, that is why there has been no progress whatsoever in metaphysics for over 2500 years. That was to be expected, because there is simply no logic in that madness. — alcontali
Of course, that's the nature of knowledge. Proceeding from the first principle has a similar problem,. There's no infinite regress, just some degree of uncertainty within knowledge, such that knowledge is forever evolving as we move forward. — Metaphysician Undercover
OK, now the point is that someone must determine the rules, the law. It makes no sense, to argue as you do, that all respectable knowledge proceeds from first principles in an axiomatic way, because this neglects the fact that someone must determine the principles, in the first place, from which the axiomatic knowledge will proceed. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you assume that all of the first principles for all divisions of knowledge have already been produced, this contradicts your original statement above, that we cannot know it's really "true", and therefore we must keep searching, in an endless way. You can't argue both sides of the contradiction. — Metaphysician Undercover
What is bullshit is your claim that there has been no progress in metaphysics in 2500 years. — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you think that human beings developed the current knowledge of the solar system, and the rest of the universe, by following the principles which were accepted 2500 years ago? — Metaphysician Undercover
That is only the nature of falsificationist knowledge. That is absolutely not the nature of axiomatic knowledge. The Pythagorean theorem was provable 2500 years ago. It still is provable today. The same holds true for Thales' theorem. It is as provable today as 2500 years ago. Once provable, always provable. Hence, that particular view on the nature of knowledge is epistemically completely incorrect for axiomatic knowledge. — alcontali
For mathematics, these rules are arbitrarily chosen. — alcontali
So, then where is that elusive progress visible? Any link? — alcontali
The initially hypothetical knowledge was very often stumbled upon, through serendipity, trial and error, and sheer luck. — alcontali
So, yes, a better understanding of the solar system and other parts of the visible universe took a lot of observation. In fact, it first took quite a bit of haphazard progress in optics and construction of telescopes just to be able to observe these things in sufficient detail. So, yes, if they had had proper telescopes 2500 years ago, they would obviously have seen it too. It wasn't a problem of following the wrong principles at all. — alcontali
What about, say, ten thousand years ago?Actually, telescopes came after it was theorized that the earth revolved around the sun, and not vise versa, so understanding the heliocentric nature of the solar system was not the result of telescopes. The idea was floated around 2500 years ago, but the planets were given perfect circular orbits according to the principles of Aristotelian metaphysics. The assumption of perfect circles resulted in inconsistencies which could not be reconciled until Copernicus. The point though, is that metaphysical theory preceded the fine tuning observations which were required to adjust the theory. — Metaphysician Undercover
When the two sides of a right angle are of equal length, the hypotenuse is irrational. Therefore the Pythagorean theorem as a first principle of geometry is deficient. Pythagoras himself grappled with this problem, and the fact that he could not resolve it bothered him. That the hypotenuse remains irrational indicates that the Pythagorean theorem remains unproven, just like the value of pi remains unproven.
If the rules are arbitrarily chosen then why choose a rule which results in the contradiction which is an irrational ratio? The fact is that the rules are not really chosen arbitrarily, they are chosen for purpose, pragmatics. The circle is useful, and pi is the result of the rule which creates the circle. The right angle is useful for making parallel lines, and the Pythagorean theorem is the result of the rule which creates the right angle. That each of these results in an irrational ratio indicates that they are lacking in truth and reality, despite the fact of being very useful. — Metaphysician Undercover
Actually, telescopes came after it was theorized that the earth revolved around the sun, and not vise versa, so understanding the heliocentric nature of the solar system was not the result of telescopes. The idea was floated around 2500 years ago, but the planets were given perfect circular orbits according to the principles of Aristotelian metaphysics. The assumption of perfect circles resulted in inconsistencies which could not be reconciled until Copernicus. The point though, is that metaphysical theory preceded the fine tuning observations which were required to adjust the theory. — Metaphysician Undercover
Irrational just means that a number cannot be reached by merely applying the standard arithmetic operators (+ - x /) to integers. — alcontali
Still, the algebraics are not enough when you look, for example, at the roots of polynomials with rational coefficients. You will need to keep adjoining additional field extensions if you want to close the splitting field — alcontali
So, in this context, "irrational" just means that the problem cannot necessarily be solved by using basic arithmetic, but that it may requiring adjoining to the rationals Q, other numbers produced with more complicated operations. — alcontali
Existing knowledge cannot possibly be the main ingredient in the discovery of new knowledge, because in that case humanity would never have discovered any knowledge at all, or else, discovered all possible knowledge already. — alcontali
We simply do not know how to discover new knowledge, and we can certainly not justify how we managed to do it anyway. — alcontali
Gödel's first incompleteness theorem also provably dismisses the idea of running through all possible well-formed formulas as to question a knowledge machine whether the formula is provable or not. For example, in the language required to axiomatize the existence of numbers, it is possible to produce formulas that are logically true but impossibly provable by the knowledge machine. So, if you enumerate the well-formed formulas in that language (which happens to be first-order logic), from first to last, the knowledge machine will run into examples of formulas of which the provability is simply undecidable.
So, it is just not possible to run new candidate knowledge claims through a knowledge machine filled with existing knowledge to check if these new claims happen to be justifiable. Gödel proved that this is not a legitimate knowledge discovery procedure. We will undoubtedly have to keep doing it with leaps and bounds, through serendipity, trial and error, and what have you, to slowly, gradually, and painstakingly, but surely, acquire new justifiable knowledge claims. — alcontali
"Irrational" refers to an incommensurable ratio. This means that the two things being related to each other cannot be measured by the same system of measurement, such as the examples I gave you, the circumference and diameter of a circle, as well as the sides of a square and it's hypotenuse. What this indicates is that there is incommensurability between one spatial dimension and another. — Metaphysician Undercover
You mean the problem can be solved by hiding the infinite regress behind "complicated operations". A good metaphysician is trained to recognize such sophistry. — Metaphysician Undercover
We need some intuition as to which of the proposable principles are credible. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is where new knowledge comes from, determining errors in the old knowledge, not from introducing new proposals and checking for consistency with the old. A new proposal which is inconsistent with the old knowledge is not necessarily wrong, it could be that the old knowledge is wrong. — Metaphysician Undercover
Well, the link with classical, Euclidean geometry has long ago been abandoned in contemporary number theory. I suspect that it was completely gone by the end of the 19th century, at the same time as they dumped Euclid's Elements. I have never had to carry out arithmetic using a straightedge and compass, like the Greek in antiquity apparently did. — alcontali
I believe that there must be ingredients in the process of knowledge discovery that are fundamentally unknowable, because if we could know them, then we could even systematize the discovery of new knowledge, while this is fundamentally not possible. — alcontali
Yes, I did refer to non-knowledge mental faculties. Intuition is clearly one. — alcontali
For example, they did not start building the first computers because there were errors in the old mechanical calculators that preceded them. — alcontali
Metaphysicians do not use any specific system, it is more like intuition, so metaphysics appears to be random nonsense to the uninitiated. — Metaphysician Undercover
f, for simplicity sake, we generalize and call this intuition, then we have something named, which we can discuss, and analyze toward understanding it. — Metaphysician Undercover
We can say now, that principles, axioms, are not chosen arbitrarily, but they are chosen by intuition. Intuition would assess the applicability of various possible principles, in relation to various goals, ends. — Metaphysician Undercover
am heavily "epistemized" and deeply invested in the idea of the existence of various knowledge-justification methods. — alcontali
Still, I completely acknowledge that non-knowledge mental faculties are key, not just for the discovery of new knowledge, but in general. But then again, systematization means converting things into knowledge. If it is not knowledge, but rather intuition, this is guaranteed to be a failing strategy. — alcontali
In the end, this kind of research rather amounts to playing with "cool toys". But then again, it is not possible to know what people will find unless they actually try. Furthermore, this type of research nicely emphasizes the true nature of axioms as fundamentally arbitrary starting points. — alcontali
What do you mean by "deeply invested"? — Metaphysician Undercover
Do you agree that mental activity is not knowledge, but it uses knowledge? — Metaphysician Undercover
Furthermore, there must be mental activity which does not even use knowledge, as this would be required to account for the coming into existence of knowledge, unless you place knowledge as prior to mental activity (but this could only be intuition, which you deny as knowledge). — Metaphysician Undercover
The strategy by which this mental activity proceeds cannot be "guaranteed to be a failing strategy", because it is responsible for the existence of knowledge. Therefore, the mental process which proceeds without the use of knowledge ought not be denigrated as a guaranteed failure. — Metaphysician Undercover
But they are used for the purpose curiosity and wonder, for play, like an artist playing with different colours, or a composer playing with different notes. So new axioms are discovered through this activity of creative playfulness, which because it is not putting tools to work it is not an act of using knowledge in thinking, it's more like thinking for the purpose of finding interesting things, playing. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, agreed, the discovery of new knowledge is mostly carried out with other, non-knowledge, tools/mental faculties. — alcontali
Ha, but if we could "know" the nitty-gritty of these other, non-knowledge mental tools, then they are actually knowledge, and that would be contradictory. Therefore, I am opposed to any strategy that consists in trying to systematize these other mental tools, because in order to do that, we would need to thoroughly "know" them, which is is not possible, because they are not knowledge. — alcontali
But how do you know it is truly "first"? You do not. So, you will keep trying to find the really "true" first that comes before the current first. It just keeps going on. Ad nauseam. That is why it does not work. — alcontali
the essential attribute of metaphysics is that, whereas what we conceive of as 'natural science' comprises what we think we can explain by way of natural principles, metaphysics is concerned in some sense with what explains us, and also what gives rise to those natural principles in the first place. It is, as it were, prior to any of the specific arts and sciences, and for that very reason, resists elaboration and explication, as it can only ever be intuited by the discursive intellect. — Wayfarer
Introduction to Metaphysics, 13 (H9-10).It is entirely correct and completely in order to say, "You can't do anything with philosophy." The only mistake is to believe that with this, the judgment concerning philosophy is at an end. For a little epilogue arises in the form of a counter-question: even if we can't do anything with it, may not philosophy in the end do something with us, provided that we engage ourselves with it?
Instead of looking at the real, physical world, he looks at the abstract, Platonic world of knowledge and tries to discern if particular patterns emerge. The scientist does that with the real, physical world, . . . — alcontali
Matter is now known to be composed of Energy, but what is energy made of? Nobody knows, so the essence of energy is undefined. — Gnomon
So Philosophy is becoming relevant again for understanding the real world. — Gnomon
[W]hat we conceive of as 'natural science' comprises what we think we can explain by way of natural principles, metaphysics is concerned in some sense with what explains us, and also what gives rise to those natural principles in the first place. — Wayfarer
Right on. Philosophy does something with us. Or to us. Makes us think. — Mww
How does one (categorically) predicate that which necessarily precedes, and thereby exceeds, all predicates? — 180 Proof
Personally, I'm comfortable with A. W. Moore's take on it, from his book, The Evolution of Modern Metaphysics: "Metaphysics is the most general attempt to make sense of things." — Jack-N
As I said, energy is defined by what it does, not by what it is (essence). Energy is indeed a quality (attribute) of matter, like the redness of an apple, which exists, not in the apple but in the mind of the observer. A Quale is a subjective experience, not an objective thing. So, Energy (potential) is metaphysical, but it can become actual & physical in the sense of E = MC2. Perhaps I should have said that Energy is what Mass is composed of. Mass is also a property of Matter. So again, what substance is Matter or Mass made of?Energy is defined as the capacity to do work. Energy is not what matter is composed of, it is a property of moving objects. — Metaphysician Undercover
Since quantum physics deals with "things" that are not actual or physical (virtual particles, quantum field), it necessarily involves philosophical metaphysical reasoning about abstractions rather than empirical objects. Quantum theory is paradoxical, and subject to misunderstanding, because it necessarily uses material metaphors to discuss immaterial concepts.Yes, philosophy is relevant, as necessary to avoid misunderstanding, like above. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes. Unfortunately, metaphysical Philosophy has been contaminated by association with various mind-over-matter notions (magical thinking) among aficionados of the occult arts. Those "arts" typically use the techniques of stage magic (misdirection, concealment, etc) to simulate psychokinesis or psychic mind-reading. Those mind-games are much more popular than the artless (unfeigned) discipline of philosophical metaphysics.metaphysics as a publishing-industry catch-all for squishier occult interests. — Jack-N
Perhaps I should have said that Energy is what Mass is composed of. Mass is also a property of Matter. So again, what substance is Matter or Mass made of? — Gnomon
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