Point well taken. As the video suggested, the part of metaphysics that's intriguing is that it uses logic to arrive at illogical conclusions which in turn, comprise consciousness and Being (itself), which is another reason why I posited the analogy to the concept of a God. In other words, using logic, we can't even explain our own conscious existence, so how are to explain a cosmological God's(?). — 3017amen
Mr. Wood,
Thanks again for your question(s). I would suggest you, at the very least, start here (that way you might find you'll have to reformulate most of your questions): https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Natural_science ↪3017amen And you found a reference to religion there where exactly? ....under life science.
— 3017amen
Fifth time asking. — tim wood
It is generally assumed that metaphysical questions take the form 'A/not-A', but the mystics deny this. . . — FrancisRay
With respect to the natural/physical sciences, like science and religion, — 3017amen
Good point, I wonder why? — 3017amen
. ,If logic cannot explain existence ex-nihilo, could it be that he universe is absurd and meaningless....
o...or is understanding of its existence and properties lie outside the usual categories of rational human thought?
In that sense, the theories of multiverse and other possible worlds come into play. Meaning, there may be a whole other metaphysical language (mathematics, logic, etc.) that is needed.
:Otherwise, mysticism seems to have some popularity in Physics.
...mystical thought lies at the opposite extreme to rational thought, which is the basis of the scientific method.
Also, mysticism tends to be confused with the occult, the paranormal, and other fringe beliefs.
many of the world's finest thinkers, including some notable thinkers such as Einstein, Pauli, Heisenberg, Eddington, and Jeans, have also espoused mysticism...some scientists and mathematicians claim to have had sudden revelatory insights akin to such mystical experiences...Roger Penrose...Gödel...-Paul Davies
“The temptation to belittle others is the trap of a budding intellect, because it gives you the illusion of power and superiority your mind craves. Resist it. It will make you intellectually lazy as you seek "easy marks" to fuel that illusion, [and] a terrible human being to be around, and ultimately, miserable. There is no shame in realizing you have fallen for this trap, only shame on continuing along that path."
— Philosophim — 3017amen
Paul Davies' book The Mind of God' is an excellent introduction to metaphysics. — FrancisRay
Not at all, If ex nihilo creation was the case then the universe would be absurd and meaningless, and we could never know much about it. — FrancisRay
...or is understanding of its existence and properties lie outside the usual categories of rational human thought?
A subtle issue. The Truth would be beyond thought, much as Kant surmises, but this is not to say we cannot usefully think about it. An intellectual understanding would be possible, but only for those who have explored what lies beyond the intellect — FrancisRay
In that sense, the theories of multiverse and other possible worlds come into play. Meaning, there may be a whole other metaphysical language (mathematics, logic, etc.) that is needed.
I think not. But we have to be much more careful than usual with our use of logic. ... . — FrancisRay
Apparently you missed the point of my post. I said Tim Wood's Physical worldview was "neat & tidy". So the implication was that your Metaphysical view is just the opposite : complex & messy. Most scientists, including Einstein & Heisenberg, were at first appalled at the strange worldview presented by Quantum "Mechanics". Because it's actually not very mechanical at all.Ahhh, could not be further from the truth! Much like time itself, metaphysics is not so neet and tidy. ☺ You may want to review the video... — 3017amen
You must have missed this link I provided in my previous post – Autopoiesis. It's a physical topic and not metaphysical except, maybe, analogously. Thoughts? — 180 Proof
In what ways do they "represent a threat to the status quo"? By "status quo" do you mean 'of any historical era' or only 'of the current era'?Metaphysics and mysticism are the two worst taught subjects in academia, and this is no coincidence. Both represent an immediate threat to the status quo. — FrancisRay
Perhaps consciousness is only as convoluted as the myriad of metaphysical systems under which it is viewed. Favor a system, find consciousness in it, define its parameters or its logical relations......done deal. — Mww
Self-organization carries the implication that consciousness is some sort of cognitive faculty susceptible to reason, but I rather think consciousness is the quality of the manifold of that which is reasoned about, which makes consciousness passive rather than the active self-organization implies. — Mww
Much as red-ness is the quality of the state of being red, fit-ness is the quality of the state of being fit, so too consciousness is the quality of the state of being conscious. — Mww
for otherwise I must have as many-coloured and various a self as are the representations of which I am conscious....” — Mww
Given this (favored) rendition of what consciousness is, the rest of your comment can be seen as otherwise, re: we have no consciousness at birth, consciousness has nothing whatsoever to do with perceived truth, consciousness does evolve over the course of a life time, it does remain faithful to the established self, because it is the established self — Mww
do you think that non-mental being exists? That is existence that has no mental properties whatsoever? — Manuel
Does science tell us about things in themselves generally? Can we have an idea of what they could be? — Manuel
To me, these ideas aren't any more absurd than a platonic reality (Demiurge). — 3017amen
Speaking of that, one question could be, can a bridge be built between the existence of abstract mathematical structures and an abstract cosmological God, from which abstract consciousness produces innate Kantian sense of wonderment and causation ? — 3017amen
So these physical objects you have in mind, do they exist mind-independetly, as in, before people existed there were trees, but only after we arose is that the notion or idea of a tree got articulated? — Manuel
Well, we all know the various theories we can adopt here. But the matter or realism versus idealism doesn't interest me much. I'll take quantum waves even though I have no idea what these are. I hold the view that speculative theories about the reality of things in themselves doesn't bring me anything useful. — Tom Storm
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