There is no opposition; science and metaphysics are first-order "apples" and second-order "fruit". — 180 Proof
To paraphrase Witty: they try to say things that, at most, cannot be said; such "meta-physics" are nonsense. — 180 Proof
What can we speculate about without talking nonsense? To my mind, only ways of interpreting nature – mapmaking maps of the territory – without using "supernatural" (i.e. ontologically transcendent / impossible world) predicates. — 180 Proof
Wovon man nicht sprechen kann, darüber muss man schweigen. — TLP, prop. 7
Basically, metaphysics consists in conceptual speculations to the exclusion (as much as conceivable ~ Aristotle) of occult babytalk, glossolalia or mystagogy. — 180 Proof
Science is, of course, only one way of interpreting nature which, though not without its problems and limitations, is the most probative, effective, reliable interpretive tool of nature we natural beings have developed so far. — 180 Proof
, lil D-Ker, be careful not too drown out here ... — 180 Proof
Wovon man nicht sprechen kann, darüber muss man schweigen. — 180 Proof
I am by nature a passive person. But as I get older, I get ornerier. I used to let the opposition push me around. But now I am more likely to fight back, not with volume, but with persistence. — Gnomon
It's a novel approach to the "hard problem" of Consciousness, which addresses the question of how dumb Matter can produce Mind. — Gnomon
OK, perhaps. But will one of them speak up? — lll
The Unequivocal Triumph Of Neuroscience - On Consciousness — Deleted User
Reductionism and the Hierarchy of Scale — T Clark
Oh yes. There's nothing new about the antagonistic split between reductive Reason & holistic Faith. It goes back, at least, to the Protestant Reformation. However, the "enlightenment" intellectual movement, of the 17th & 18th centuries, was not originally anti-metaphysics, but merely anti-dogma. Early church-educated scientists, using evidence & reason, concluded that the official cosmology of the Catholic Church was wrong on specific technical topics. Ironically, the geocentric cosmology of Christian Theologians was inherited from pagan Greeks & Romans (among others). But as soon as that doctrine was formally adopted as revealed Truth, it became incontrovertible dogma.Didn't know there was an anti-metaphysics brigade, but it seems inevitable, from a yin-yang point of view that is. . . .
So, science is enemy #1 for metaphysics. — Agent Smith
Also, I guess you might put me in as "one of them." As I see it, the mechanisms that produce mental phenomena are purely biological/neurological. — T Clark
That's not the same as saying that mental processes are nothing but biological/neurological phenomena. There are metaphysical and scientific reasons to recognize that mental processes are different from biological processes. — T Clark
Yup, William of Occam (Novacula Occami: Pluralitas non est ponenda sine necessitate); :kiss: (keep it simple, stupid). Why complexify? Shouldn't we simplify? — Agent Smith
assigning way too much sex-appeal to white-coated representatives of the scientific church and their grey-suited, freshly-tied, programmed talking representatives in power positions — EugeneW
Now that's a great question in our beloved tradition. The sound already makes my head turn and ears direct! I wonder what's the answer. — EugeneW
sourceFar from being a subset associated with problem solving—a tiny "Delaware on the map of cognition"—or a special variety of reasoning, analogy is the main event, Hofstadter asserted during an evening lecture Feb. 6 and during a discussion the following afternoon at the Humanities Center.
I think this is why careful, disciplined meta-cognition is indispensible for sound reasoning. — 180 Proof
I wouldn't be a Spinozist (immanentist) if I thought otherwise. This is why I allude to Sisyphus' 'endless task'... — 180 Proof
Have you ever considered the possibility that there is no such thing as "matter"? — Metaphysician Undercover
Well, I've never considered the possibility that there no such thing as "facts".Have you ever considered the possibility that there is no such thing as "matter"? — Metaphysician Undercover
Note -- the mental image of a real thing has a similar structure, in the sense of analogy or metaphor, but is not identical with the neurons that evoke that mental pattern. — Gnomon
simplicity is good. But why? — lll
1. There's only so much that our brains can handle. — Agent Smith
The map can't be an exact replica of the territory. — Agent Smith
The map can't be an exact replica of the territory. — Agent Smith
Economics, I'd say. (I don't just money, but practical constraints and tradeoffs.) — lll
Because it'd be useless, right? — lll
It'd be just as easy to stare at the world. — lll
oversimplification — lll
Abstraction is subtractive — lll
Ignore the right things, right? — lll
I've never considered the possibility that there no such thing as "facts". — 180 Proof
Broadly, I'm a pragmatist (re: meaning, inquiry-research & truth) and a naturalist (re: explanation, description, interpretation / evaluation) in the service of an absurdist (i.e. neither "idealist" nor "nihilist") project — 180 Proof
If the territory itself is the map then the map is an exact replica of the territory. — EugeneW
Good question. The next would be whether "mind" should be taken for granted. — lll
Well, I've never considered the possibility that there no such thing as "facts". — 180 Proof
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