Where would you put metal on that scale?Earth, water, air and fire = solid, liquid, gas and energy. Not so far from modern science? :wink: — Pattern-chaser
But evidently it's not treated quite the same now as it was back in its heyday, which was kind of the point. I wasn't implying that no one reads the books or that we have all of the answers. It has very largely been superseded, because it has lost prominence and a different methodology which has more to do with his pupil, Aristotle, and some who came before him such as Democritus, has largely taken over. — S
It wasn't prominent though. Socrates, and Plato, were two people who expressed dissatisfaction with the sophistry which was prominent at the time. Aristotle attempted to resolve some of the problems raised by Plato, so he has been often quoted. Now Aristotle has dropped from the forefront of metaphysics. And similar sophistry has made a resurgence and is abundant today, so there is a real need for Platonic dialectics. — Metaphysician Undercover
I feel your pain. :worry:You lose me a bit with your terminology. — javra
I wouldn't worry about such hypotheticals. I don't know any more about G*D than you do. I just have a different way of thinking about G*D.In your system of representations, is "Zero" (non-being) the same as "G*D" (infinite BEING as transcendent potential)? If yes, they why all the comments on how they are different? If no, then how do you not start off with zero/non-being so as to arrive at being? — javra
That's why I prefer to use "physical" or "metaphysical" instead of "real" or "ideal". Plato asserted that his ideal Forms were the true reality, but that does not compute for most people who equate "physical" with "real". In my thesis, Information is both real and ideal; both physical and metaphysical. So I think of it as the intermediary between reality and ideality.But unless you're physicalist, then you will question whether what exists 'in a physical sense' is really the benchmark of 'what is real' - contra the general understanding. After all, physics itself has been unable to locate a truly indivisible particle - well, at least one that can be shown to exist outside the elaborate mathematical model of the 'particle zoo'. — Wayfarer
True.I think the better model of the rational mind is as 'that which perceives meaning'. There is no way to derive 'meaning' from neurobiology, without already assuming that ability; it's not something one can approach 'from the outside', so to speak, because every attempt to understand the relationship between brain and thinking must be an act of interpretation. — Wayfarer
The battery metaphor is an analogy between things that are physically different, but functionally similar.Voltage is not a form of potential energy, any more than current is a form of actual energy. — Pattern-chaser
Ha! That's getting deep into metaphysics. And off-topic.The primary substance is confusion. — Coben
:up:And similar sophistry has made a resurgence and is abundant today, so there is a real need for Platonic dialectics. — Metaphysician Undercover
In this case Voltage and Current are proxies for Energy. — Gnomon
Metaphysics is "weird" only in the sense that Religion and Science are weird : they are based on invisible intangible spooky forces or agents (like Energy & Gravity & Magnetism).But I think we need something better than "stuff that's a bit weird" for our use, don't we? :wink: — Pattern-chaser
But I think we need something better than "stuff that's a bit weird" for our use, don't we? :wink: — Pattern-chaser
I, for example, do agree with Metaphysician Undercover that potential devoid of actuality is technically nonsensical. — javra
Metaphysics is essentially on a par with religion because of its low possibility of provability. Besides for religion’s diminutive degree of empiricism and logic, the only major difference between the two is that religion entails behavior modification. Whether one leans towards theories extending from use of empiricism and logic or one leans towards “gut feeling” and pure “faith”, there is an inherent need for humans to conceptually grasp the big picture and this is where metaphysics’ finds its true value.” — Gnomon
we have logical possibility and real potential. — Janus
In that article an alternative "dualism" is presented, against the traditional dualism of res extensa and res cogitans, comprising res extensa and res potentia, being the "macro" and quantum "realms" respectively. — Janus
At its root, the new idea holds that the common conception of “reality” is too limited. By expanding the definition of reality, the quantum’s mysteries disappear. In particular, “real” should not be restricted to “actual” objects or events in spacetime. Reality ought also be assigned to certain possibilities, or “potential” realities, that have not yet become “actual.” These potential realities do not exist in spacetime, but nevertheless are “ontological” — that is, real components of existence.
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.