The brain is made of matter, not pixie dust. — Garrett Travers
You are anthropomorphizing the universe. Whenever you realize that such givings are a miscalculation between your nature and the universe, you will understand completely. — Garrett Travers
Besides, the only way for us to master reality and learn its secrets, is to first obey its inviolable laws. — Garrett Travers
It's weird to see so many people on here, just like you on the mystic bandwagon, who never can give an argument about their beliefs in extra mundane phenomena that doesn't included insult, obfuscation, conflation, appeal to ignorance, or some other negation technique that, I guess normally works on the untrained minds with whom you regularly make contact with and present this trash to. — Garrett Travers
It's a "problem" of your own making, Count, because non-reductive physicalism is not "an ontological position" but a methodological paradigm (i.e. an epistemological criterion / paradigm)
Wittgenstein was saying that the laws of nature are not logically necessary - that they are contingent. Look at the context. — Banno
Matter is just a concept. Unless you can clearly define your concept of "matter" you might just as well be saying that the brain is made of pixie dust. Try it, exchange "pixie dust" for "matter" in some of your statements and you'll see that the meaning of your statement doesn't change a bit. — Metaphysician Undercover
The brain is made of [pixie dust, not matter]. Highly functional, highly systemmatized, genetically coded, [pixie dust] of unrivaled sophistication — Metaphysician Undercover
See, "matter" is just a stand in term, for something you haven't got a clue as to what it is, just like "pixie dust", so the two serve the exact same purpose in your statements. — Metaphysician Undercover
The real issue here is the question of how some instances of the assumed "matter" can be highly functional, and highly systematized, while other instances of matter are not. What gives your pixie dust ("matter") such magical powers, that it can come in all these different forms? — Metaphysician Undercover
You are making the exact mistake you are accusing Wayfarer of, except we might say that you are materializing the universe, rather than anthropomorphizing it. You are invoking a magical substance, naming it "matter" instead of "pixie dust", and claiming that this magical dust is responsible for all existence. This given, which you take for granted as "matter", is actually your miscalculation. "Matter" is just a human concept, therefore it cannot make up the independent universe. — Metaphysician Undercover
Now you're being hypocritical. You tell Wayfarer that laws such as "f=ma" are simply human conceptions. — Metaphysician Undercover
If "laws" are human conceptions, then there are no independent laws of reality which we must obey. — Metaphysician Undercover
And if you assume that there is some sort of "laws" which are independent from human existence, then please explain who is writing and enforcing those laws. — Metaphysician Undercover
That's why Berkeley had to assume God. If every unique, individual, particular thing is reducible to a unique formula, its very own specific law which determines its exact existence, then someone must be creating these laws. — Metaphysician Undercover
If you knew anything about the history of the concept of "matter", you would see that it is a central concept of western mysticism. — Metaphysician Undercover
So it is actually the materialist who is on the mystical bandwagon, summoning up a magical substance with mystical powers, named "matter", and insisting that this synonym to "pixie dust" is the cause of all reality. — Metaphysician Undercover
You've not demonstrated that any arguments I HAVE MADE with respect to "physicalism" are unsound or that my distinction of "methodological" & "philosophical" is inoperable or unwarranted, and this is why I find your comments irrevelant with respect to what I've posted on this thread. That said, Count, we clearly disagree (and many, if not most, philosophically-inclined practicioners of modern physical sciences disagree with you too).It's a problem of soundness for the arguments and systems generally associated with physicalism. — Count Timothy von Icarus
... whether or not we understand all of the mysteries of matter is irrelevent... — Garrett Travers
The only thing humans can determine is the how. — Garrett Travers
The mysteries of matter include the 'how'. The concept of matter is not fixed. — Fooloso4
Is matter "alive" or does it simply give rise to life under certain conditions at a sufficient level of complexity? — Fooloso4
If the latter, then how? Does it organize itself? How? — Fooloso4
Is it intelligent or does it simply give rise to intelligence under certain conditions at a sufficient level of complexity? — Fooloso4
Is the distinction between what is and is not alive clearly delimited? — Fooloso4
It is, rather, that at this stage of the game "matter" is not an explanation for how things are as they are. — Fooloso4
The how is open for discovery. The "why" is not. — Garrett Travers
Why is itself a human concept, that was my point. Not that matter is a concluded concept. — Garrett Travers
The evidence points to the the latter ... — Garrett Travers
No evidence suggests it is intelligent. All evidence suggests the latter. — Garrett Travers
Materialism posits that the universe is a material one, that all understandings of it can only come from that base position. — Garrett Travers
But, a mystery is not validation of an anti-materialist perspective. — Garrett Travers
The 'how'/'why' distinction is problematic. Using your example of chemistry we can ask why the combination of one element with another produce something that has properties that neither of the elements do. And why does it only occur under certain conditions? — Fooloso4
How too is a human concept that is addressed in terms of another human concept - matter. That is my point. — Fooloso4
The challenge is explaining self-organizing systems at various levels. How does something without intelligence organize itself? — Fooloso4
A base position without a solid base. — Fooloso4
I am not arguing for an anti-materialist perspective but rather for a recognition that what the materialist perspective at any given time in the past — Fooloso4
We do not know what matter is. — Fooloso4
We should be no more confident that what we proclaim today to be true than those chemists who proclaimed the phlogiston theory should have been. — Fooloso4
It was, after all, based on matter. — Fooloso4
Another anti-realityist down the tubes. And here I thought this was a philosophy forum... — Garrett Travers
The manner in which you just employed why, is actually to say "how is this happening?" — Garrett Travers
A linguistic mishap that everybody falls into, of course. — Garrett Travers
How can be mapped to reality. Literature, and why, cannot. — Garrett Travers
Through chemical interactions, mass, time, and gravity. Nothing more to it. — Garrett Travers
That's mixing how's and why's again. — Garrett Travers
There's nothing more solid. It is the definition of solid. It is the foundation every scrap of science and what it has achieved is predicated upon. — Garrett Travers
I'm honored to be among the ones to be tasked with dispensing with such tripe. — Garrett Travers
This is anti-scientific ... — Garrett Travers
We know exactly what matter is. We do not understand all of its characteristics and dynamics, — Garrett Travers
Matter is the substances that constitute the observable universe. — Garrett Travers
Before we understood matter. — Garrett Travers
Wayfarer is good at complaining about "materialism" and parroting the same handful of quotes over and over. Actually arguing anything, otoh... that's not really what he does here. But that's more of a personal issue, there are anti-realists here and elsewhere who can (and do) actually argue their position. — Seppo
More like, what is happening. I take it you are arguing against some notion of meaning and purpose as the reason for things. — Fooloso4
It is not a linguistic mishap. There are various senses in which we ask why something happens. If someone borrows a tool and it comes back rusty and I ask why, — Fooloso4
It depends on what you are asking about. The how of human motivation is murky but the why might be clear. An understanding of the world is not limited to the physical sciences. — Fooloso4
A non-answer posing as science. These do not explain self-organization. — Fooloso4
I am asking precisely how matter organizes itself. There can be no chemical interactions without the organization of matter. — Fooloso4
There is a problem with attempting to explain the whole of science in terms of something that is not adequately understood. — Fooloso4
We cannot explain quantum physics or gravity or time by saying: well, its all just matter". The behavior of matter remains a mystery. — Fooloso4
It is just that you are saying much less than you imagine you are. — Fooloso4
Which is it, we know exactly what it is or we do not understand all its characteristics and dynamics? It can't be both! — Fooloso4
Is that singular or plural? Substance or substances? — Fooloso4
What you don't understand is that we still don't understand matter. We understand some things, although that understanding is subject to change, but there is a whole lot, perhaps an endless amount that we do not. — Fooloso4
You're agreeing with me in this instance. — Garrett Travers
This is a completely incoherent statement. I have no idea what you're saying. — Garrett Travers
No, there's a problem with trying to negate science — Garrett Travers
An argument from ignorance is not a fallacy that lends credence to the negation of material reality. — Garrett Travers
That which is know is definitive. — Garrett Travers
Everybod that argues against materialism is. — Garrett Travers
Plural, that needs no explanation. — Garrett Travers
I already stated as much. — Garrett Travers
We understand some things, although that understanding is subject to change, but there is a whole lot, perhaps an endless amount that we do not. — Fooloso4
Matter is understood extrodinarily well, and that which is understood is definitive. — Garrett Travers
they are not asking for a metaphysical explanation, but for the physical cause. — Fooloso4
You set up a false dichotomy with the distinction between how and why. — Fooloso4
The fault is your own. — Fooloso4
You are so intent on honoring yourself with the task of setting the world straight that you cannot see what the issues are. — Fooloso4
I am saying we know far less about it than you seem to imagine we do. — Fooloso4
You would do well to spend more time reading about the history of science. — Fooloso4
But it does. If there are multiple metaphysical substances how to they function to form a coherent whole? — Fooloso4
Once again, I am not arguing against materialism. I make no metaphysical claims, but have argued here and elsewhere that our best bet is to commit to some form of materialism. — Fooloso4
Matter is understood extrodinarily well, and that which is understood is definitive — Garrett Travers
A concept with a clear distinction that, much like f=ma, has correspondent value. "Why", on the other hand, does not. That is exclusively a human concept that does not apply to the universe. — Garrett Travers
It seems like much of your use of the word 'material' is a version of Mind/Brain Identity Theory. A common objective amongst these many versions of the theory is to dispense with mind/body duality in explaining and investigating the phenomena. I don't see anywhere in this group of theories any kind of appeal for the duality between 'how' and 'why' that you propose. — Paine
Much of that earlier stuff, identity theory and the like, was led to apologize years after being established for being anti-science. — Garrett Travers
Why is what you ask when you think f=ma means something beyond it being described within its operant nature. — Garrett Travers
sed it. Wittgenstein is saying that physical laws are not logically necessary, — Banno
Citation, please. — Paine
That is not how the word is used. Your definition sounds more like a premise to a model, not something found to be true by one means or another. — Paine
In other words, you're completely disregarding Banno's explanation of the context from which the quote was taken, and how it differs from the one in which you attempted to use it (a good and correct explanation, I should add).At any rate, in the context of the discussion, I believe that aphorism is entirely appropriate. — Wayfarer
The mind and body are all one. The brain produces consciousness and controls the body. — Garrett Travers
The brain produces consciousness... — Garrett Travers
But the expression "F=MA" did not magically appear to you as self-evident fact. It came from years of people asking why things happen the way they did. — Paine
In what sense does it 'produce' consciousness? Like a snail produces slime? Like a producer produces a film? Like a magician produces a rabbit? Like a computer produces an output on a screen? Like a radio produces sound? Or some other sense? — bert1
Again, its time to move on from this, you staying stuck on this terminology bit is only going to make your points stranger and stranger. — Garrett Travers
You are arrogant. — Paine
That is a self-evident fact. — Paine
I will not hinder your progress with any other observations. — Paine
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