Infinity is solved by solving knowledge. How do you know what infinity is? Is infinity an actual thing, or is it a conceptual framework of an algorithm? — Philosophim
I mean an objective morality that would apply regardless of being human or having a culture. — Philosophim
because people are still looking for a soul. Its not really a philosophical discussion, but a faith based and emotional discussion. Once neuroscience ends that avenue, I'm sure people will look elsewhere. — Philosophim
Finally, rationality is once again, knowledge. As we can see, there is no greater need in philosophy then solving epistemology. — Philosophim
Perhaps, but as Raymond Chandler said “A writer who is afraid to overreach himself is as useless as a general who is afraid to be wrong.” — RussellA
...understanding is of concepts that only exist in the mind... — RussellA
...governments don't exist in a mind-independent world. — RussellA
...understanding can only ever be a better understanding of the concepts existing in our mind and can never be an understanding of what in a mind-independent world caused these concepts in the mind. — RussellA
You have concluded our world is mind-independent? — ucarr
...everything I know exists in my mind. — RussellA
I believe that there is a world that exists independently of my mind. — RussellA
I also believe that within this world that exists independently of my mind, there are other minds, such as John's and Mary's. — RussellA
My belief is that this something external to our minds is not another mind but is mind-independent. — RussellA
I mean an objective morality that would apply regardless of being human or having a culture.
— Philosophim
I'm curious what you mean by a morality regardless of being a human. Can you clarify? — Tom Storm
because people are still looking for a soul. Its not really a philosophical discussion, but a faith based and emotional discussion. Once neuroscience ends that avenue, I'm sure people will look elsewhere.
— Philosophim
Are you a physicalist? — Tom Storm
I have some sympathy for this as a potential resolution for some of our seemingly intractable questions. Any ideas for some directions? Do humans in your view have access to facts/truth beyond the quotidian (and even then...)?
Personally, I don't see any real breakthroughs happening in my lifetime and even then I wonder how much we'd understand when most of us still can't understand Kant? Possibly at some level it doesn't much matter. :wink: — Tom Storm
Therefore, infinity may be an actual thing, but we can never know. All we can ever know is the concept of infinity. — RussellA
In sum what is boils down to is noting that knowledge is a tool. It is based on the most rational conclusions we can make from our inner personal experience, as well as our inductive interactions with society. I am most proud of it not only because it presents a successful deductive approach to knowledge, but a rational approach to inductive knowledge which allows a hierarchy of cogency. — Philosophim
...people are still looking for a soul. Its not really a philosophical discussion, but a faith based and emotional discussion. Once neuroscience ends that avenue, I'm sure people will look elsewhere. — Philosophim
Soul is the part of you that truly believes
Soul-belief comes to children naturally
After childhood it threatens to slip our grasp
Soul is the heart of vulnerability — ucarr
Soul is the heart of vulnerability — ucarr
Soul is the heart of vulnerability — ucarr
I'm not sure this means anything, unless you force it to. What, in this sentence, are the words 'heart' or 'vulnerability' referring to? — Tom Storm
If your answer to the above is "yes," do you also believe the link goes in one direction only (mind independent world to RussellA's mind) — ucarr
do you believe that mind independent world conveys to your mind its contents without any intentions whatsoever? — ucarr
Is your belief Justified True Belief (JTB)? — ucarr
What is a soul? Are you referring to an immortal/immaterial essence as per Aquinas? — Tom Storm
soul | sōl |
noun
1 the spiritual or immaterial part of a human being or animal, regarded as immortal.
• a person's moral or emotional nature or sense of identity
2 emotional or intellectual energy or intensity, especially as revealed in a work of art or an artistic performance -- The Apple Dictionary
In Enactivism, cognition arises through a dynamic interaction between an acting organism and its environment. The environment of an organism is brought about, or enacted, by the active exercise of the organism itself. Living beings and their environments stand in relation to each other through mutual specification or co-determination. — RussellA
do you believe that mind independent world conveys to your mind its contents without any intentions whatsoever? — ucarr
Yes. If a raindrop hits a leaf and moves the leaf, there is no intention on the raindrop's part to move the leaf. — RussellA
I know beyond doubt is that for every effect there is a cause, in that self-causation is not possible, and that there is a world outside my mind, in that I am not a Solipsist. — RussellA
Therefore, I know beyond doubt my sensations, I know beyond doubt these sensations as effects have had a cause, and I know beyond doubt some of these causes are external to my mind. — RussellA
I may experience the colour red in my mind, and intellectually question whether in fact I really am experiencing the colour red, but no amount of intellectual musing will alter my visceral knowledge that I know beyond doubt that I am experiencing the colour red. — RussellA
A puzzle solved fits some other puzzle. — 180 Proof
Well I was referring only to philosophical puzzles (per the OP). Otherwise, I suspect neither QFT or GR are "solved" (i.e. complete) theories which may be why QG is so intractably elusive. String theory, btw, makes untestable (due to astronomically high energies required) predictions. And, as Gnomon says, "Enformationism" is not scientific but "Meta-physical", therefore its a pure speculation (e.g. transcendental illusion) that does not make any predictions, testable or not, in the first place ... like "First Cause", "Intelligent Design" or other woo-of-the-gaps. — 180 Proof
Do you think moral truth, as perceived and understood by humans, is local to the human brain, or does it also have a presence in the world independent of human cognition? — ucarr
In my earlier response to you I was referring to a person's moral or emotional nature or sense of identity — ucarr
There's no good reason to think 'suffering' is not a moral fact?I don't have good reason to think there are moral truths or moral facts ... — Tom Storm
In my earlier response to you I was referring to a person's moral or emotional nature or sense of identity — ucarr
Then the word 'soul' is of no practical use. — Tom Storm
The fact that humans, like animals, can be run over or shot or harmed emotionally points to any number of things, 'soul' not being one which springs out to me. — Tom Storm
I assumed Ucarr was referring to moral facts from a mysterious and transcendent source. — Tom Storm
I don't have good reason to think there are moral truths or moral facts - just intersubjective or communities of agreement about behaviours - codes of conduct if you like, which vary according to context and culture. — Tom Storm
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