There is no way to prove it false or true. — Jackson
Interesting, could you elaborate a bit more? Also out of curiosity by what criteria is something “proven” to you or in the sense that you’re using it here?
Is it proven if it’s consistently the same throughout time - ie repeatability? If it stands to reason/ logic, or if you have first hand experience/ have observed it? Or other possible proofs? — Benj96
I am saying that physicalism is not science. — Jackson
If a scientist or philosopher says physicalism is true, we expect proofs — Jackson
As a metaphysics, it's arbitrary, even scientistic. However, as a methodology (criterion) for eliminaing "nonphysical" concepts from the construction of explanatory models of phenomena, physicalism is demonstrably more useful than any non/anti-physicalist alternative.I would like to know what’s problematic with this philosophy. — Benj96
Your belief is mistaken: physical sciences are not "move(d) by proofs" (Popper); only formal sciences have proofs.So, science moves by proofs, not beliefs. — Jackson
Surely if physicalism and science are unrelated then why do we need a scientists proof for physicalism — Benj96
Materialism has always had difficulty defining what it means to be material. If you mean what I think you mean by it - no "spooky stuff" - then that's just naturalism.
Besides this, probably the most significant challenge to materialism is the Kantian transcendental aesthetic, which holds that space and time are not things in themselves but are pure forms of sensibility. Pairing this with Kant's epistemology leads to the result that not only is the "external" and "material" world beyond space and time, it's completely inaccessible to knowledge, which makes metaphysical claims about its nature (like materialism) empty of any meaning. — _db
It is not clear to me what "consequences" actually are, but you are raising here an important issue, a flow in human knowledge, the responsible of which are materialists or materially-oriented people and esp. scientists --although philosophers have a big share in this. So, allow me to say what the main consequence is for me: There's no progress in understanding the consciousness and the mind, which includes thought and thinking, reasoning, emotions, mental health and a host of other mental features. Because these do not belong the material (physical) world.The consequences of such a philosophy is that the mind/ consciousness, the state of being/ living and all other seemingly illusive or mysterious/ abstract phenomenon are at there basis concrete and are wholly explicable by physics, chemistry, etc even if the exact mechanisms have not yet been elucidated. — Benj96
Certainly. This is in accordance with the consequence I mentioned above.It leaves little to no room for theology, spirituality — Benj96
I have launched a discussion about this subject: The problem with "Materialism" (https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/12480/the-problem-with-materialism/p1). I also mention your term, "physicalism", which is almost the same thing.I would like to know what’s problematic with this philosophy. — Benj96
The problem is deceptively simple. Physical = Existence. These two terms have the exact same definition and that implies nonphysical = nonexistence! :snicker: — Agent Smith
Is this lack of results maybe an indication of a failure in this area --the mind-- and that this area is not an area for the conventional, totally materialistic science to get involved in?
I strongly believe it is. — Alkis Piskas
What do you mean by “physical” - do you mean having substance or material? Because a photon is massless and yet it exists- if it didn’t you wouldn’t be able to read this. — Benj96
What do you mean by “physical” - do you mean having substance or material? Because a photon is massless and yet it exists- if it didn’t you wouldn’t be able to read this. — Benj96
It is very good that you have brought this up! :up:I think the hard problem may be a pseudoproblem in the sense that science may not be the correct discipline to decide the functioning of the mind — Benj96
I don't think it is. I don't think any evidence has been offered, except brain reactions to the environment. Of course, since the brain works on a stimulous-reaction basis. In a similar way with a computer, which reacts on programming instructions. The mind though, although it may work on a stimulus-response basis --e.g. on a subconscious level, in aberrated states, in disorders, etc.-- a healthy, non-aberrated mind works in a totally different way. (Not the place and moment to discuss this!)if the mind is generated by the brain ... — Benj96
Yes, it really looks so. But again, it hasn't to be so.So alas it’s a conundrum — Benj96
Materialism deals with both matter and energy: "All existence is made up of energy in some form. Matter is a form of energy. All things that exist are made of energy, atoms, molecules, forces and other entities that consist of energy. There are no non-physical or non-material existents." (https://www.qcc.cuny.edu/socialsciences/ppecorino/intro_text/Chapter%204%20Metaphysics/Materialism.htm, Chapter 4: Materialism)I’m simply chose physicalism because I felt it better encapsulated processes in physics that aren’t material but no less exist - such as the photon (which has no mass) and electromagnetism etc - all physical phenomena but with no actual material (atoms/ matter etc). — Benj96
So physicalism, materialism and naturalism are concepts. How are concepts physical, material or natural? How do physical things and concepts interact, or how do physical things come to possess concepts?To my mind, methodologically speaking, materialism (facticity, data) is a subset of physicalism (modeling) which is subset of naturalism (explanation). — 180 Proof
Sounds circular. What does it even mean for a concept to be physical vs. Non-physical? Are you talking about the ontology of concepts, or what the concepts are about? If the latter how do concepts come to be about anything? Is aboutness physical or non-physical?As a metaphysics, it's arbitrary, even scientistic. However, as a methodology (criterion) for eliminaing "nonphysical" concepts from the construction of explanatory models of phenomena, physicalism is demonstrably more useful than any non/anti-physicalist alternative. — 180 Proof
And then lost traction when science discovered that the world is not as it appears and that observers might actually influence what is observed.It gained traction with advancements in the natural sciences which heavily depended on observation and repeatability as a ground for establishing fact verses hypothesis or beliefs. — Benj96
Physical = matter & energy are physical. — Agent Smith
Matter = Mass + volume — Agent Smith
And then lost traction when science discovered that the world is not as it appears and that observers might actually influence what is observed. — Harry Hindu
Materialism deals with both matter and energy: "All existence is made up of energy in some form. Matter is a form of energy. All things that exist are made of energy, atoms, molecules, forces and other entities that consist of energy. There are no non-physical or non-material existents." — Alkis Piskas
How do physical things and concepts interact, or how do physical things come to possess concepts? — Harry Hindu
Sounds circular. What does it even mean for a concept to be physical vs. Non-physical? — Harry Hindu
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