But why are folk happy to call those same fundamental constraints of nature “laws”? — apokrisis
Yet still, it seems just as problematic to abstract away the causes of being - paint them as unplaced laws - — apokrisis
The reality of causation - at the general physical level of the Cosmos - needs a jargon that steers between both extremes. — apokrisis
A jargon can be useful, but it "need" not be anything. Whether it moderates on an arbitrary principle is purely, well, arbitrary. — Voyeur
You are ignoring the fact that talking in terms of either abstract laws or mentalistic purposes aren’t accidental choices. They are quite deliberate in their metaphysical commitments. — apokrisis
And even scientists might want to get down to the “truest” model even if it ain’t also the most pragmatic — apokrisis
pragmatic (in the everyday and unphilosophical sense of being the maximally simple, or most utilitarian, encoding of Nature. :razz: ) — apokrisis
but can systems theories also fall into the Cartesian Theater trap? — schopenhauer1
I said they were arbitrary, not accidental. Arbitrary choices can still be deliberate. — Voyeur
Attempts to act reveal a “self” and a “world” as this crisply divided state of affairs. — apokrisis
I suspect all theories, even "embodied" ones suffer from this. — schopenhauer1
You didn’t make any counter argument so far. — apokrisis
this selfhood arises as part of the world modelling — apokrisis
consciousness only arises through interaction with the world — apokrisis
We feel like a self in a world because the whole of our neurology is set up to represent this state of division. — apokrisis
So the output generates its input. We are in a constant state of acting on the world and so continually discovering ourselves to be in that world. — apokrisis
The observer is presupposed — schopenhauer1
What is this “observer” exactly. You appear to presupposed something here that I do not. — apokrisis
We can cover that later. — schopenhauer1
No. You brought it up. I’m asking what you mean. An explanation ought to be easy if you have a thought out position here and not just hand wavy “suspicions”. — apokrisis
I just gave you a critique as you requested. — schopenhauer1
Ducking the issue again. — apokrisis
There was a rhetorical purpose to claiming nature was ruled by mathematical laws. — apokrisis
Mathematical law describes reality in mechanical and exceptionless fashion. That directly contrasted with the organic and Aristotelean conception of nature that prevailed until Newton’s scientific revolution.
I’m unclear what point you really want to make in disputing this. — apokrisis
So yes, the scientist can chose one or the other view of causality as the most pragmatic for modelling reasons. That is the right way to think about it.
But then in everyday life, folk get rather passionate about which of these stories is “true”. And even scientists might want to get down to the “truest” model even if it ain’t also the most pragmatic (in the everyday and unphilosophical sense of being the maximally simple, or most utilitarian, encoding of Nature. :razz: ) — apokrisis
But ostriches still use their wings for other purposes like mating displays. We often use things for which the object wasnt initially, or primarily, designed to do, but something in that design permits one to use the object in some other way but not in every way. A chair could be used as a blugeoning weapon, but pillow could not."The purpose of a blackbird's wings is flight."
A common kind of phrase, where purpose is use. Their use can be seen when it is flying. Ostriches, by the way, can't fly.
"The purpose of our house is to live in."
Another common kind of (meaningful) phrase, except here there's more to purpose. When the house was being planned, and later while under construction, and while uninhabited, we'd still have thought of this purpose. — jorndoe
But ostriches still use their wings for other purposes like mating displays. — Harry Hindu
We often use things for which the object wasnt initially, or primarily, designed to do, but something in that design permits one to use the object in some other way but not in every way. — Harry Hindu
I question the distinction and the conceit of ‘apparent’ purpose. I think it all goes back to the abandonment of Aristotle’s fourfold causation as an aspect a consequence of the scientific revolution. This wants to see literally everything in terms of the non-intentional causation that can be understood through the paradigm of physics.
Note also the implications for the nature of reason. Whereas in the Aristotelian attitude, ‘things happen for a reason’, in the modern view, things are determined by material causes - for no reason, in the classical sense. — Wayfarer
And use is an effect of intent. No intent,, no use. But then some things can't be used how you intend because of how it was designed. Why can't the ostrich use its wings to fly even if it intended? Why can't a sparrow use its broken wing to fly?Hence when purpose is just use. — jorndoe
All organisms have bad blueprints. This is characteristic of purposeless (design without intent) natural selection designing organisms as opposed to a purposeful (design with intent) creator. Organisms make due with what they have and natural selection can only build upon biological features that already exist. Purpose is a mental phenomena as a relationship between some goal in the mind (intent) and the perceived design of some tool that is either helpful or not (useful or not) in achieving that goal. Some tools are more helpful than others because of their design.Surely you're not suggesting that there was a bad blueprint for ostriches, but it just so happened that ostriches found a different use for their wings? — jorndoe
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