....the principle grounding empiricism and rationalism generally;every question has an answer — Pfhorrest
....the principle grounding objectivism and critical rationalism.every answer must be questionable — Pfhorrest
The overall thesis is that there is nothing to reality besides the observable features of it, nothing hidden behind our experience, of which our experience is merely a representation -- our experience is direct contact with a very small part of reality (the parts that we are literally in direct contact with — Pfhorrest
Massless particles like photons (and the particles that get "blended" into electrons etc by the Higgs) are exactly like the "occasions of experience" that philosophers like Whitehead wrote about, and that in my elaboration upon that (viz the mathematicism stuff above) can be taken as signals passing between the mathematical functions that constitute the abstract object that is our concrete reality. — Pfhorrest
But gas is just more... I've lost track; is it real, or is it experience, or is it mere phenomena, or is it an idea, or is it information...? — Banno
Then what we "experience" is made entirely of sodium ions. — Isaac
Isn't "empirical" a property of justifications or knowledge? — frank
So you're saying there are no unstated true propositions? — frank
every question has an answer
— Pfhorrest
....the principle grounding empiricism and rationalism generally;
every answer must be questionable
— Pfhorrest
....the principle grounding objectivism and critical rationalism. — Mww
Phenomena are things that are experienced, by definition, so those are the same thing. And I’m saying there’s nothing more to those phenomena than the information that is conveyed in the experience of them, so on my account that’s the same thing too. But an idea is something in a mind, so in a universe with no minds, just gas, there aren’t any ideas per se. — Pfhorrest
My own worldview is best defined as both Empirical Realism and Transcendental Idealism. That seems to be similar to Kant's position on Reality and Ideality. It's based on the usefulness of both Empirical and Theoretical knowledge. Rational theories can try to fill gaps in Materialistic Science. :smile:My general position on the nature of reality is empirical realism. — Pfhorrest
Your comment missed the point. From my perspective, the Empirical and Theoretical views are not contradictory, but complementary. Human reason can "transcend" empirical reality, by imagining scenarios that are not visible to the physical eye. This is how Einstein came up with his revolutionary ideas about the ultimate nature of Reality. Of course, it helps if the theories are subject to empirical testing, as some of his were. :cool:So the cup in the cupboard is red, and yet also has has no colour? How to make sense of adopting apparently contradictory views? — Banno
No, “empirical” just means related to experience. It can be used of knowledge—that which is gained from experience—but it’s not limited to that use. To say that reality is empire is just to say there is nothing real that is beyond all experience, e.g. nothing supernatural. — Pfhorrest
Let's put this in context: it's neither as amazing or alarming as a giant sky lord judging me for masturbating. — Kenosha Kid
I don't see how your masturbation is relevant. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes, obviously with the 'in principle' caveat: — Kenosha Kid
I guess I'm just not seeing the relevance of masslessness. — Kenosha Kid
This might be off topic, but one thing occurs to me. When we interact with anything, it is overwhelmingly electromagnetic in nature. When we see a tree, photons emitted by that tree are destroyed in our eyes: this is sight. When we feel the tree bark, virtual photons emitted by the charges in the bark are destroyed by charges in us: this is touch. We never destroy charges, only the emissions of charges or systems. — Kenosha Kid
I guess that's why I find the primacy of mind and experience in your language (and I think that you do not distinguish between the experience of a person and of an electron) a bit of a barrier. — Kenosha Kid
In your literalist interpretation of the creation/annihilation operators of QFT, it is the fields that destroy electrons directly. (The Higgs mechanism is the destruction of an electron with one isospin followed by the creation of another with the opposite isospin. The motion of an electron is the destruction of the electron at one position followed by the creation of an identical electron at another.) — Kenosha Kid
Somehow this makes me think of the sort of equivalence between experience and objective reality you're getting at without necessarily being the sort of thing you had in mind. — Kenosha Kid
If you are not an idealist, then you must hold that there is unexperienced information. If you hold that all information is experienced, as you seem to be saying here, then your position is idealist, not realist. — Banno
My own worldview is best defined as both Empirical Realism and Transcendental Idealism — Gnomon
Science does not give us any evidence that all real things can be experienced, so how did you arrive at that conclusion? — frank
Science does not give us any evidence that all real things can be experienced, so how did you arrive at that conclusion?
— frank
From the practical reasoning that if we ever take any claims to be beyond questioning, we simply stop searching for the truth, and so are likely to never find out if we are wrong, so we must not ever take any claims to be beyond questioning; and that claims about things that are not subject to experience cannot ever be shown wrong (because we could not tell whether or not they were, because we have no experience of them at all), so we could only take such claims on faith, without the ability to question them; so we must not ever entertain the possibility of things that are in principle beyond all experience, for in doing so we would be giving up our pursuit of truth. — Pfhorrest
And it definitionally cannot be shown that there does exist something beyond experience, because to show that would be to make it available for experiencing, so we don't have to worry about ever finding our assumption that there is not to be wrong. — Pfhorrest
There is a view that true statements must in principle be confirmable. But that's not really in line with what you're saying either. — frank
Does your "explosion theory" take into account the weirdness of Quantum Reality? If so, then statistically your exploding particle can be both P and ~P.. Both here and there, both singular and dual as it passes through a slit. :joke:Well, presumably, since you accept both p and ~p, by the explosion principle it can be any colour. Or not.
But then, because quantum. — Banno
Are there philosophers who hold that "actual concrete reality" is transcendental? How would you classify neuroscientist Don Hoffman's Model Dependent Realism? As I understand it, the physical phenomena we think we see are merely models in the mind that represent the underlying reality : indirect concepts instead of direct percepts. It's a "symbolic interpretation of the world, yet it is not an illusion, but merely a simplification of the messy reality of the Actual world (true reality vs apparent reality??), most of which we are not aware of. He thinks that evolution prepared our brains to abstract just enough information from the outside world to survive long enough to replicate.An empirical idealism, on the other hand, would hold that the kind of stuff we can observe, phenomena, are just abstract ideas in our minds, and conversely that actual concrete reality is the transcendental, unobservable stuff, the noumena, that underlie those phenomena, and which those phenomena represent to our minds. That's a view that both Kant and I reject. — Pfhorrest
Are there philosophers who hold that "actual concrete reality" is transcendental? — Gnomon
How would you classify neuroscientist Don Hoffman's Model Dependent Realism? — Gnomon
The basic criticism remains, If all there is, is experience, what remains of reality for you to call yourself a realist? — Banno
The difference is clear enough; its use, less so. The difference between a cup and...what shall we call it...the experienceability of a cup? - sure; And the experienceability-of-a-cup will presumably be full of experienceability-of-tea. All too convolute for my taste, especially as it is apparently there to answer an unwarranted scepticism.I don't know why it's so difficulty to communicate this difference... — Pfhorrest
The difference between a cup and...what shall we call it...the experienceability of a cup? - — Banno
Then what we "experience" is made entirely of sodium ions. — Isaac
Or the photons that mediate the chemical interaction with those sodium ions, sure; at least, if you draw the border between “self” and “world” at the edge of the brain, rather than the edge of the whole body as I was doing earlier. Exactly where to draw that border is a fuzzy question to begin with and I don’t have a hard opinion on which of those is the more appropriate place. — Pfhorrest
If this division is arbitrary then you've not defeated solipsism by any means other than say saying 'let's not' (which, incidentally, is my own argument against solipsism). — Isaac
In the end, identifying the world with oneself is no different than identifying oneself as just a part of the world, which is uncontroversially true. — Pfhorrest
Are there abstract Ideas in your Real world? If so, then you must accept both Idealism and Realism. If not, then you must repudiate the reality of Ideas. There is no contradiction, only the distinction between Abstract and Concrete. :cool:↪Gnomon
So you can believe both idealism and realism despite the inherent contradictions and no longer need pay attention to logic because quantum. — Banno
Reality is what exists outside and independently of us and that minute by minute imposes on us something that we would not want to know, something that we would prefer that it did not exist. — ThePhilosopher1
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