I'm saying that the conclusion is a contradiction, — Michael
The conclusion is B, because If A, then B, and A. It's a simple modus ponens. So you're saying that the conclusion of a modus ponens is a contradiction. — Terrapin Station
Semantic content doesn't matter for that, does it? I asked you that earlier and you just ignored it. — Terrapin Station
Doesn't matter for what? — Michael
Sure, we can reason about reason, " turn it back to face itself"; which presumably a dog or chimp cannot. — John
We can investigate and hypothesize about histories of reason, in animal and human lineages, just as we can with histories of digestion, if that is what we find thrilling. — John
But we have no clue as to its origin and its mysterious ability to make the world intelligible, just as we have no way of rationally working out what the absolute origin of the world, or its capacity to be made intelligible by reason, is. — John
This is where reason ends and faith based on intuition begins. — John
Of course no one is constrained to step beyond merely empirical inquiries if the latter are found to be satisfactory. That's certainly a matter for the individual, and individual taste. — John
Let's note in passing that hypothesis is only one factor of investigation; and that without some corresponding investigation, hypothesis is just a sort of talk. — Cabbage Farmer
What special mystery do you find in the way that rationality "makes the world intelligible"? ... I see no more mystery in the fact of rationality than in the fact of sentience, or in the fact of life, or in the fact of existence. And look, here we are. That mystery is no obstacle to understanding. — Cabbage Farmer
What do you mean by "intuition"? I'm not accustomed to treating "reason" and "intuition" as if they were mutually exclusive. Nor "faith" and "reason", for that matter.
I do acknowledge a thing we might call faith without reason. — Cabbage Farmer
Can you prove they don't...or...can you prove you do? — John
Creatures that possess qualia have radically different behaviours to those that do not. — tom
Perhaps a better phrasing is that in order to explain animal behaviour it is unnecessary to ascribe to them subjectivity. For humans, it is impossible to explain their behaviour without it.
The robot butler 'knows' how to do a lot of things, but it can't improvise, or adapt, or do anything outside being a robot butler. — Wayfarer
I agree it's meaningful to talk of such things, but I think the problem with simulated and artificial intelligence is that it conflates intelligence and computation - it says basically that intelligence is a variety of computation — Wayfarer
which is why the AI advocates truly believe that there is no ontological distinction between the two; that rational thought, and the operations of computer systems, are essentially the same. — Wayfarer
They're instruments of human intelligence; but I think the idea that they are actually beings themselves remains in the domain of science fiction. — Wayfarer
The divergence is because I want to resist what I see as the reductionism that is inherent in a lot of modern philosophising; and I know this rubs a lot of people up the wrong way. My approach is generally platonistic, which tends to be top-down; the Platonic conception of mind is that mind is prior to and the source of the phenomenal domain, whereas naturalism presumes that mind is an evolved consequence of a natural process. — Wayfarer
This divergence, then, is one manifestation of the 'culture war' between scientific naturalism and it's opponents. I'm not going to apologise for the conflict this often causes, but I will acknowledge it. — Wayfarer
In any case, one reason that we can't explain reason is because of the recursive nature of such an undertaking. To explain anything, we must employ reason, but if reason is what we're trying to explain, then such attempts must invariably be circular. You can't 'put reason aside', and then analyse it from some point outside of it; every attempt to analyse it, must call on the very thing it wishes to analyse *. — Wayfarer
The basic operations of reason - if/then, greater than, same as, etc - are in my view 'metaphysically primitive', i.e. they can't be explained or reduced to anything more simple. They are intrinsic to reason and therefore to science (a point that is broadly Kantian — Wayfarer
I think there are evolutionary accounts of how h. sapiens developed the capacity to reason - but notice the expression 'capacity to reason'. I think the furniture of reason, these primitive terms without which reasoning is not possible, are not themselves something that evolves - what evolves is the capacity to grasp them. — Wayfarer
Once intelligence reaches the point of being able to grasp them, then it passes a threshold, namely, that of rationality, which makes modes of being and understanding available to it, which are not available to its forbears. — Wayfarer
So in that sense, those elements of rational thought are not something that can be explained, even though they can be used to explain many other things. — Wayfarer
(That, by the way, is why I believe that 'science doesn't explain science', i.e., science doesn't really account for the nature of number or natural law, but it can use its ability to discern these things to explain all manner of other things. — Wayfarer
Wittgenstein touches on this when he says 'the whole modern conception of the world is founded on the illusion that the so-called laws of nature are explanations of natural phenomena.' TLP 6.371) — Wayfarer
I think dogs, elephants, birds, primates, cetaceans, are certainly sentient beings, but that all of what you're describing can be understood in terms of learned behaviour, response to stimulus, memory, and so on. — Wayfarer
Actually animals are capable of a great many things science doesn't understand at all, like fish and birds that travel around the world to return to their place of birth. They're sentient beings, so we have that it common with them. But those attributes don't qualify as abstract rationality. — Wayfarer
What is “ontological distinction” supposed to mean here? Is there an “ontological distinction” between my left hand and my right hand? — Cabbage Farmer
Here I am, a part of the world, and a part of the world wants to understand another part of the world. Is this a paradox for you? — Cabbage Farmer
What is “ontological distinction” supposed to mean here? — Cabbage Farmer
I’m content to say that anything said to “exist” -- oceans, clouds, raindrops, water molecules -- is rightly called an existent, an entity, a “being”, an object, a thing of one sort or another. — Cabbage Farmer
Without investigation there would be no hypothesis to begin with. That seems obvious, so I'm not seeing your point here. — John
That's right, and I did already note that the world is co-mysterious with reason. — John
I also agree that the mystery of being is no barrier to empirical understanding. What we don't know is why things can be understood or what the significance of that is. — John
Of course, it's also true that if things could not be understood then there would be no sentience, and no life to speak of. — John
My point was just that empirical investigations don't even begin to approach such questions. For me these are the interesting questions; the ones that cannot be answered by empirical inquiries; the latter are best left to science, it's better at them than philosophy is. — John
I don't agree that empirical understanding doesn't "approach" the questions we've raised here in this thread. I think it clearly does approach them, though it never gives a "final answer" in this or any other matter. There's always room for further investigation, and there's always more to be said. — Cabbage Farmer
One might hypothesize on the basis of casual observation or on the basis of what's called common sense. — Cabbage Farmer
One thing you haven't yet made clear to me: How is "reason" special in this regard, among all other things in the world? Is there anything in the world that is not "co-mysterious" with the world? Is reason the only thing in the world that is "co-mysterious" in this way?
What about love? What about time and space? What about matter and energy? What about imagination, possibility, life, freedom, perception, language, beauty, taste... what about anything else? — Cabbage Farmer
In what sense do sentience and life depend on "things being understood"? — Cabbage Farmer
A lot to respond to there! At this moment I'm commuting with an iPad so can only respond to just a few points but will come back again. — Wayfarer
When I refer to the culture war of course I don't imply that I am at war wiith you, or anyone for that matter. It is a reference to what is see as the conflict between scientific materialism and traditional philosophy (to select two examples from a range of possibilities.) — Wayfarer
Steven Pinker's essay Why Science is not the Enemy of the Humanities, 2013, is an example of the kind of approach I'm arguing against. That often puts me in the company of philisophers of religion or at any rate critics of materialism (not all of whom are philosophers of religion.) — Wayfarer
The distinction between hands is 'chirality'. — Wayfarer
'Ontology' refers to 'the study of the meaning of being' - as distinct from the study of phenomena. — Wayfarer
I say that 'beings' are ontologically distinct from 'objects', which is why it is incorrect to designate objects as beings, or beings as objects. — Wayfarer
Beings generally are subjects of experience, which objects are not. — Wayfarer
At issue is the relation of objects and subjects. — Wayfarer
Humans are the subjects of experience, in a phenomenal domain, comprising objects, forces, other beings, and so on. — Wayfarer
And you're right about me confusing recursiveness and reflexivity - I mean the latter. My bad. — Wayfarer
The principle I'm referring to is from the Upanisads, where there is a verse that says 'the hand can grasp another, but not itself. The eye can see another, but not itself. You cannot see the seer or know the knower.' I think a form of this principle is also found in Kant, in the idea of 'transcendental apperception'. I have always regarded it as a first principle. — Wayfarer
The point is, the mind organises sensations, perceptions and so on, according to judgements, reason and the like (spelling it out formally takes a lot of text). — Wayfarer
Because this is the activity of the 'unknown knower' — Wayfarer
it is determinative of what we consider to be reality, — Wayfarer
which we instinctively believe to be external or 'other' to the mind. — Wayfarer
There is a sense in which that is true, but another sense in which the very notion of 'external' is also in the mind! This is clearly spelt out in Schopenhauer's idea of 'vorstellung' which is why he himself said his philosophy was similar to that of the Upanisads. — Wayfarer
As above. — Wayfarer
Notice you have to enclose 'being' in quotes in this sentence. — Wayfarer
that is because 'beings' are subjects of experience. In very simple beings, this is only present in rudimentary form, whereas in human beings, the nature of being itself can be reflected on. But inanimate objects are not beings, because they're not subjects of experience (although pan-psychism seems to argue that everything is a subject of experience, but I myself don't adhere to that view.) — Wayfarer
But what about the power which makes clear to you that which is common to everything, including these things: that to which you apply the words 'is', 'is not', and the others we used in our questions about them just now? What is that power exercised by means of? What sort of instruments are you going to assign to all those things, by means of which the perceiving element in us perceives each of them? — Socrates, in Plato's Theaetetus (McDowell trans.)
// to be continued. — Wayfarer
When I refer to the culture war of course I don't imply that I am at war wiith you, or anyone for that matter. It is a reference to what is see as the conflict between scientific materialism and traditional philosophy (to select two examples from a range of possibilities.)
— Wayfarer
I'm not sure I would locate "traditional philosophy" in the culture war the way you have just now. — Cabbage Farmer
I often prefer to translate the suffix "-logy" in terms of "discourse", "language", "account", "narrative", "story"... "logos".
Why do you say "meaning of being" instead of just "being"? The name "ontology" suggests a logos of being or beings. In what sense is it, instead, a logos of the meaning of beings? — Cabbage Farmer
The compound word ontology combines onto-, from the Greek ὄν, on (gen. ὄντος, ontos), i.e. "being; that which is", which is the present participle of the verb εἰμί, eimí, i.e. "to be, I am", and -λογία, -logia
for me "being" is practically synonymous with "entity", "thing", and the other terms I listed in that passage — Cabbage Farmer
I suppose human beings can reflect on "the nature of being", either before or after they've decided what they mean by the phrase, or as part of the task of definition. It seems human beings are much better at "reflection" and "abstraction" than any other animal species we know; and that this opens us to a special domain of peculiarly human knowledge and confusion. It may be we're the only ones to reflect on "the nature" of anything. It seems that you and I are more or less in agreement in this one respect, while drawing rather different implications. — Cabbage Farmer
I enjoy our exchanges and the pattern they weave over time. — Cabbage Farmer
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