Mincing words. God is a premise that underlies your claim, which is not an argument, that:
— Fooloso4
This warrant no further response — Dfpolis
Thus, physical necessity is based on how nature works, not on how we describe it. It was as physically necessary that you would fall in paleolithic times as it is in the era of general relativity. What this shows is that there is a difference between the laws of being, on which classical logic is based, and those of nature. So, the laws of nature are contingent, and thus require a sustaining cause. — Dfpolis
Augustine was a dualist, but he would never have said that the soul is thinking stuff (res). — Dfpolis
I am asked "Do you know that strange object?" I say "Yes," because I have seen it, not because I understand it. That is not to say that I don't try to understand what I see, but that I know it with the first flash of awareness. — Dfpolis
As I understand Kant, he does not believe that phenomena are real. They are just how things appear (very like Plato's "shadows"). His noumena are real, but they are not accessible. — Dfpolis
Your argument only works if neural processes can be reduced to purely physical processes. If they have a partial dependence on intentional processes, our thoughts and actions would be partially determined by prior thoughts and not by prior physical states alone. This dependence must exist. — Dfpolis
You did not cite Aristotle and you did not lead me to reject being during change. — Dfpolis
To say that a thing is identical with its essence (which btw is false) is not to say anything about what happens over the course of time, which is what you are talking about. Essences only define what a being could do if it existed. So, as Aquinas saw, we need actual existence in addition to essences. — Dfpolis
I accept that, but there is also being at each point in the process. — Dfpolis
Becoming is the actualization of a potency insofar as it is still in potency. — Dfpolis
I did not say that. I said the number of kinds was always finite. — Dfpolis
A continuum is not a regress. There is typically one efficient cause, and one potential being actualized, for the whole transformation. What do you see as a regress? — Dfpolis
Since it is neither true nor false, the rules applying to truth and falsity do not apply. — Dfpolis
Not quite. Conceiving the same reality in different ways is a form of equivocation. When we are using different meanings for the same (nominal) concept, the same formal proposition can be true and false, not because the reality is indeterminate, but because we are not thinking the same things about it. — Dfpolis
In Plato's theory, sensible things are like images in a mirror and have no more an essence than a reflection does. — Dfpolis
You begin where you hope to convince others to end, that is, with your belief in God — Fooloso4
The only end of science, as such, is to learn the lesson that the universe has to teach it. In Induction it simply surrenders itself to the force of facts. But it finds . . . that this is not enough. It is driven in desperation to call upon its inward sympathy with nature, its instinct for aid, just as we find Galileo at the dawn of modern science making his appeal to il lume naturale. . . . The value of Facts to it, lies only in this, that they belong to Nature; and nature is something great, and beautiful, and sacred, and eternal, and real --the object of its worship and its aspiration.
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The soul's deeper parts can only be reached through its surface. In this way the eternal forms, that mathematics and philosophy and the other sciences make us acquainted with will by slow percolation gradually reach the very core of one's being, and will come to influence our lives; and this they will do, not because they involve truths of merely vital importance, but because they [are] ideal and eternal verities.
have a radically antireductionist and realist (scholastic not scientific ~ wf) tendency quite out of keeping with present fashion. And they are alarmingly Platonist in that they maintain that the project of pure inquiry is sustained by our “inward sympathy” with nature, on which we draw in forming hypotheses that can then be tested against the facts. Something similar must be true of reason itself, which according to Peirce has nothing to do with “how we think.” If we can reason, it is because our thoughts can obey the order of the logical relations among propositions — so here again we depend on a Platonic harmony.
The reason I call this view alarming is that it is hard to know what world picture to associate it with, and difficult to avoid the suspicion that the picture will be religious, or quasi-religious.
is responsible for much of the scientism and reductionism of our time. One of the tendencies it supports is the ludicrous overuse of evolutionary biology to explain everything about life, including everything about the human mind. Darwin enabled modern secular culture to heave a great collective sigh of relief, by apparently providing a way to eliminate purpose, meaning, and design as fundamental features of the world. Instead they become epiphenomena, generated incidentally by a process that can be entirely explained by the operation of the non-teleological laws of physics on the material of which we and our environments are all composed.
(Renaissance philosopher Giambattista) Vico....following formally in Aristotle’s footsteps ... asserts that real knowledge is the knowledge of causes. "I am familiar with a thing if I know the cause of it; I understand something that has been proved if I know the proof". But from this old thought something completely new is deduced: If part of real knowledge is the knowledge of causes, then we can truly know only what we have made ourselves, for it is only ourselves that we are familiar with. This means that the old equation of truth and being is replaced by the new one of truth and factuality; all that can be known is the factum, that which we have made ourselves. It is not the task of the human mind—nor is it within its capacity—to think about being; rather, it is to think about the factum, what has been made, man’s own particular world, for this is all we can truly understand. — Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, Introduction to Christianity
Quite likely, so let us think factually. Really, no matter how we think, we are not going to have exhaustive knowledge.As far as we know nature has always behaved invariantly. We agree that nature's behavior is
not logically necessary, but that might not mean much more than that we are able to think counterfactually. — Janus
It depends on what you mean by imagination. I know that it can act as it acts on me when I sense it. Say, it can scatter light, or make a strange sound. That action modifies my brain state, causing a presence we can be aware of as an "image." That is Aristotle's phantasm. We can also imagine things not so caused. If an image is not caused by an object, it cannot be our means of knowing an object, because it is not the dynamic presence of an object.If you know an object then you must have an idea of what it is, and I would count that as being possible due to imagination, — Janus
Yes, or others of their kind. But, on the first encounter with a new type of thing, we have no such image.We have 'images' of things, of their patterns or forms, which enable us to recognize them. — Janus
I agree with this statement. I don't think it is what Kant meant, but I am not a Kantian and so no expert. As I understand him, the mind adds forms of understanding, rather than basing concepts such as space, time and causality on reality.Appearances are relational, the thing in itself is not; it is what the thing is apart from all its relations. — Janus
Being preceded by is not the same as being determined by. My passing through a signal is preceded by the signal turning green, but determined by my decision to go. Yes, that decision is partially determined by neural processes, but in the end, it is determined by my valuation of various factors, and valuation is an act of the will.If all thoughts are preceded by neural processes, then those prior thoughts would also have been. — Janus
If you mean, as Spinoza did not, that thoughts and neural processes are two activities of a single person, I agree. But, being two ways of understanding, of of acting, does not explain the correlation of neural processes and the contents of awareness. We are aware of information encoded in neural processes. This cannot be an accident, and so calls for an explanation grounded in the relation of subject and object, for otherwise, our thoughts cannot put us in touch with reality.For Spinoza there is no real separation between thought and neural process, it is not that thoughts are caused by neural processes, but that "thought" and "neural process" are the two ways we have of understanding the one thing. We are not aware of our neural processes, but we can become aware of our thoughts. — Janus
Does our explicit awareness of our thoughts come as we think them or after the fact? My experience tells me that I do not decide what to think prior to thinking it, and that my explicit awareness or consciousness of what I have thought comes after having thought it, via the "echo" of memory, wherein I can "hear" my thought repeated as a "silent locution" in my "mind's ear". — Janus
As am I. Thank you for sharing your thoughts.I'm out of time at this moment so I'll have to address other points you made later. — Janus
Why think a mind is something that can exist without an information processing substrate to supervene upon? I.e. why think that a belief that God is metaphysically possible is not faith based? — wonderer1
How is it useful to know that my thoughts supervene on celestial motions? If you take supervenience seriously, you have to take astrology seriously.Supervene" is a pragmatic word for considering things from a more simplistic but useful view. — wonderer1
That is abstraction, not subservience.For example I can usefully discuss the workings of logic gates without concerning myself with whether the logic gates are instantiated with transistors and resistors, or vacuum tubes, or relays. — wonderer1
True, but irrelevant to the philosophical question of how physicality and intentionality relate. To study that you need to inspect, not ignore, their relation.It simply isn't feasible for us to discuss the physical behavior of a whole brain at the level of particle physics. — wonderer1
Since philosophers were able to discuss this for millennia without the concept of supervenience, it can hardly be necessary.So talking in terms of supervenient properties is simply a pragmatic necessity — wonderer1
No, because mind of God is not a human mind, but only analogous to our minds. God does not now in the same way as humans do. Aquinas discusses this at length. You may not agree with Aquinas, but unless you know his theory, you cannot have an informed opinion.The question is, will you be consistent and agree that the mind of a god has an isomorphic dependency? — wonderer1
Sure. That is why it is "a god" and not God.Furthermore, will you recognize that a god dependent on some sort of information processing substrate is not in itself an unmoved mover? — wonderer1
But the likely response to such sentiments will be that because this sounds like natural theology or religious apologetics, then it ought to be rejected on those grounds. — Wayfarer
following formally in Aristotle’s footsteps ... asserts that real knowledge is the knowledge of causes. — Cardinal Joseph Ratzinger, Introduction to Christianity
Hence the transformation (or devolution) of man from h. sapiens, 'wise man' — Wayfarer
Because the essential requirement for thought is a subject and an object. The object of thought need not be material, as we can think mathematical concepts that do not involve matter. — Dfpolis
So, while content may be encoded in matter, that presents more of a problem (how does the physical inform the intentional?) than a solution. — Dfpolis
Aristotle used no faith based premises to deduce that God was "self-thinking thought." Greek religion at the time was pantheism. — Dfpolis
How is it useful to know that my thoughts supervene on celestial motions? If you take supervenience seriously, you have to take astrology seriously. — Dfpolis
That is abstraction, not subservience. — Dfpolis
Supervenience is a shorthand abstraction, native to Anglo-American philosophy, that provides a general framework for thinking about how everything relates to everything else. The technical definition of supervenience is somewhat awkward:
Supervenience is a relationship between two sets of properties. Call them Set A and Set B. The Set A properties supervene on the Set B properties if and only if no two things can differ in their A properties without also differing in their B properties.
This definition, while admirably precise, makes it hard to see what supervenience is really about, which is the relationships among different levels of reality. Take, for example, a computer screen displaying a picture. At a high level, at the level of images, a screen may depict an image of a dog sitting in a rowboat, curled up next to a life vest. The screen's content can also be described as an arrangement of pixels, a set of locations and corresponding colors. The image supervenes on the pixels. This is because a screen's image-level properties (its dogginess, its rowboatness) cannot differ from another screen's image-level properties unless the two screens also differ in their pixel-level properties.
The pixels and the image are, in a very real sense, the same thing. But — and this is key — their relationship is asymmetrical. The image supervenes on the pixels, but the pixels do not supervene on the image. This is because screens can differ in their pixel-level properties without differing in their image-level properties. For example, the same image may be displayed at two different sizes or resolutions. And if you knock out a few pixels, it's still the same image. (Changing a few pixels will not protect you from charges of copyright infringement.) Perhaps the easiest way to think about the asymmetry of supervenience is in terms of what determines what. Determining the pixels completely determines the image, but determining the image does not completely determine the pixels.
It simply isn't feasible for us to discuss the physical behavior of a whole brain at the level of particle physics.
— wonderer1
True, but irrelevant to the philosophical question of how physicality and intentionality relate. To study that you need to inspect, not ignore, their relation. — Dfpolis
Since philosophers were able to discuss this for millennia without the concept of supervenience, it can hardly be necessary. — Dfpolis
No, because mind of God is not a human mind, but only analogous to our minds. God does not now in the same way as humans do. — Dfpolis
Aquinas discusses this at length. You may not agree with Aquinas, but unless you know his theory, you cannot have an informed opinion.
I'll leave discussing Aristotle to Fooloso4. — wonderer1
So why does Aristotle make so many theological claims? I think the answer has something to do with the difference between opinion and knowledge, what can be taught and learned, and the competition between theology and philosophy. Aristotle was able to give his listeners and readers opinions that they could hold as true, but he could not give them knowledge of such things. As if to be told is to know.
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There is then an important political dimension to the Metaphysics. The battle between the philosopher and the theologian is a continuation of the ancient quarrel between poetry and philosophy. Aristotle’s strategy in this quarrel is the same as Plato’s. Just as Plato presents a philosophical poetry, Aristotle presents a philosophical theology. It is better for these opinions to be generally assumed rather than some others. It is better to hold these opinions then succumb to misologic and nihilism. Better to give the appearance of knowledge than reveal our absence of knowledge.
Yes. Abstractions only exist in the imaginary world of Minds. So, they are Ideal, not Real. And physical laws can only be used as metaphors for metaphysical relationships. :smile:Once we realized that abstractions are not reality, things become easier. There is no reason to think that the laws of mindless matter should apply without modification to thinking beings. — Dfpolis
I assume that by "non-sensical" you mean : from the perspective of Realism & Materialism. You may be correct, that many-if-not-most posters on TPF identify as materialists or physicalists, to the exclusion of psychological or metaphysical views. But not all.Most contemporary philosophers of mind employ a Cartesian conceptual space in which reality is (at least potentially) divided into res extensa and res cogitans. Then, they ask: how res cogitans could possibly interact with res extensa? I am suggesting that this approach is nonsensical because reality cannot be divided into res extensa and res cogitans. Clearly, thinking depends on neural processes and neural processes depend on extended stuff. This dependence has been known since Aristotle wrote De Anima. — Dfpolis
So, how do thought and matter interact? They don't -- because the question is ill-formed. What we have is being, with different beings having different capabilities. Some beings are extended and can think, some are extended and cannot think, and possibly, others are unextended and can know and will. This is no more surprising than some bodies being able to interact electromagnetically and others not. — Dfpolis
But as I interpret him these are not premises he holds to be true. — Fooloso4
Thank you. As I said, I am revising one on how the agent intellect works. If you would like to read it, and possibly comment, message me with your email.Great OP. Your paper also looks interesting. — Leontiskos
But presumably your opinion has no textual warrant — Leontiskos
The contemporary scholar David Bolotin quotes Alfarabi.
Whoever inquires into Aristotle’s sciences, peruses his books, and takes pains with them will not miss the many modes of concealment, blinding and complicating in his approach, despite his apparent intention to explain and clarify.
(Alfarabi, Harmonization (unpublished translation by Miriam Galston,
quoted by Bolotin in Approach to Aristotle’s Physics, 6) — Fooloso4
Now to understand why Aristotle presented what he knew to be such and exaggerated picture of intelligibility of the natural world, we must consider the implications of the limitedness of the achievement of what he regarded as genuine natural science. For his denial that natural science can finally explain the given world - and in particular his acknowledgement that it cannot discover its ultimate roots - seems to leave him unable to exclude the alternative that this world might partly consist of, or otherwise owe its existence to, a mysterious and all-powerful god or gods. If there are such gods, as was suggested by Homer and Hesiod, among others, we cannot rely on what reason and normal experience indicate as to the limits of what beings can do and what can be done to them.
Maybe that is because I think that empirical knowledge is informed by physical action via a modification of our brain state. However, since the same thoughts supervene on astronomical motions, saying that they supervene on brain states is not at all helpful. Saying that brain states encode the information we become aware of is.You haven't established that thinking of mathematical concepts can occur without supervening on matter. — wonderer1
No, I see subjects only in subject-object relations. There is no being a subject without having an intentional relation to an object known, willed, hoped for, etc. All of this is essentially intentional. Nothing about it demands physicality.You seem to simply be considering a "subject" as a pure abstraction without recognizing the subject's supervenience on matter — wonderer1
It is relevant because it shows that matter is not essential to all objects of thought. Ask yourself how physical states can determine immaterial contents. For example, what kind of physical state can encode Goedel's concept of unprovability? Physical states interact physically, producing physical, not intentional results. So, how can a physical state interact with immaterial contents? It can't.I'm not seeing how the fact that the object of thought need not be material is of much relevance. — wonderer1
That does not happen. Neural nets only produce physical activation states. As with my computer example, the meaning or intentionality of these states is not intrinsic, but imposed by human interpreters.The physical informs by developing intentional outputs. See this video on neural nets producing outputs that are about numerals in a visual field. Intentionality shows up at a relatively low level of neural network processing. — wonderer1
As you will. Still, it rebuts your claim.Aristotle used no faith based premises to deduce that God was "self-thinking thought." Greek religion at the time was pantheism. — Dfpolis
I'll leave discussing Aristotle to Fooloso4. — wonderer1
My point exactly! Supervenience alone is worthless. You have to look at causality, which supervenience theory was designed to avoid. And why? Because there is no possible reduction of intentional effects to physical causes. Dennett recognized that explicitly in Consciousness Explained and Chalmers recognizes it in discussing the hard problem. I showed why it impossible in my January article.With a well informed perspective on the matter, a person understands that the physical effect of celestial objects on the functioning of our brains is generally so negligible that we are justified in ignoring it. It is disappointing to receive sophistry like this as a response. — wonderer1
Yes. That does not make every abstraction an instance of supervenience.Superveniences are a class of abstractions. — wonderer1
That is rather gratuitous! Where have I ignored neuroscience? I find it useful, but limited. It is like a street lamp's light. The light being under it does not mean that's where you lost your keys. It is better to think about what you did with your keys.To think that you have done a serious inspection while ignoring neuroscience is just fooling yourself. — wonderer1
No, a counter-example to the claim of necessity.Since philosophers were able to discuss this for millennia without the concept of supervenience, it can hardly be necessary. — Dfpolis
Fallacious appeal to tradition. — wonderer1
It would be special pleading if I held a general principle that this violates. I hold no such principle. Since you have insufficient evidence to generalize from some minds on a peripheral planet to all minds, neither I am not violating a universal principle you have justified. I merely reject your hypothesis.No, because mind of God is not a human mind, but only analogous to our minds. God does not now in the same way as humans do. — Dfpolis
Do you recognize the special pleading? — wonderer1
Because, that is what a truth-seeker should do. I did not read the Churchlands, Dennett, Chalmers any number of other naturalists because I expected to agree with them, but because I hoped to find insights -- and I did. It always helps to see things from a perspective very different than your own.You didn't qualify "informed opinion". I certainly can and do have opinions informed by much that Aquinas didn't understand. Why try to change the subject to Aquinas' uninformed opinions? — wonderer1
But presumably your opinion has no textual warrant — Leontiskos
You of course disagree, but it is not the case that there is no textual, and I might add, scholarly warrant. — Fooloso4
No, I mean from the perspective of anyone who takes science seriously. (I am not a materialist.) It is nonsensical because it has been known since Galen (129-216 AD) treated gladiators that thinking depends on the brain. Any well-grounded theory of mind has to take that into account. So, we cannot divide extended reality from human mental reality.I assume that by "non-sensical" you mean : from the perspective of Realism & Materialism. You may be correct, that many-if-not-most posters on TPF identify as materialists or physicalists, to the exclusion of psychological or metaphysical views. But not all. — Gnomon
As one with a doctorate in theoretical physics, I do not think that the facts support the far-reaching quantum interpretations that astound people. Some come from confusing the particle model with real particles (for which there is no irrefutable evidence). Some come from inconsistently treating measuring processes classically instead of quantum mechanically. Some comes ignoring entanglement over large distances, or accepted but little discussed trans-temporal symmetry principles, and some come from ignoring the nonlinearity of interactions.So now, there are good empirical reasons to doubt*1 the evidence of the physical senses, and to apply the 6th sense of philosophical Reasoning. The "science" I'm referring to is Quantum Physics, not Spiritualism. — Gnomon
No, one need only give credence to logical analysis such as that by which Aristotle established the existence of an immaterial unmoved mover, described as "self-thinking thought."It's obvious that Minds are always Embodied ; unless you give credence to invisible intangible ghosts. — Gnomon
Have you read Hannam, The Genesis of Science: How the Christian Middle Ages Launched the Scientific Revolution? No one interfered with his physics, which btw was atrocious.Cartesian dualism was merely a compromise, intended to allow Science to proceed without interference from Religion — Gnomon
How does one observe this?A more pertinent observation in the 21st century is that Mind is the Function of physical brains. — Gnomon
As I explain in my January paper, for this to be so, mind must have physical effects.I'm not proposing a Triality, but merely that both space-occupying things, and thinking things, might be merely various products of evolutionary Causation. — Gnomon
This is a non-problem for Aristotelians who see that measured values do not exist befoe measuring operations.The uncertainty principle presents a philosophical challenge to one of our basic assumptions about the nature of physical objects, namely, that physical variables have precise and definite objective existence. — Gnomon
The wise man according to Socrates is the man who knows when he does not know. — Fooloso4
There is no being a subject without having an intentional relation to an object known — Dfpolis
the collapse of the wave function has nothing to do with consciousness. — Dfpolis
Aristotle says:
We consider first, then, that the wise man knows all things, so far as it is possible, without having knowledge of every one of them individually …
(982a)
How far is it possible to know all things? Aristotle says that:
... it is through experience that men acquire science and art ...
(981a) — Fooloso4
If you do not understand that Aristotle's art of writing requires an art of reading Aristotle, then we will not get very far. In large part that requires that we not read passively or expect him to tell us what is true and what to think. Like the good Socratic skeptic we must ask questions and make connections, look for contradictions and try to reconcile them. — Fooloso4
Does he or anyone else have experience of the arche of the cosmos? — Fooloso4
The latter approach is apophatic - which ties in with your ‘philosophy between the lines’ thesis, as apophaticism gestures towards what can’t be simply stated in plain speech, knowing that any propositional formulation will miss the mark. — Wayfarer
an awareness of the limitations of knowledge in exploring fundamental questions such as the nature of justice or the idea of the good. — Wayfarer
We consider first, then, that the wise man knows all things, so far as it is possible — Fooloso4
That explanation of the relationship between the substantial (res extensa) Body and the insubstantial (res cogitans) Mind (processor of Information) is very close to the reasoning behind my own Enformationism thesis. But, the Dualistic metaphor is only for convenience in communicating about Abstractions in a Materialistic society. A Realistic worldview can have no beginning or end, no preface or denouement ; only a never-ending meaningless in media res.I've learned that hylomorphic dualism offers a different perspective. The soul is not a separate "thing" or "substance" in the way Cartesian dualism conceives it. Instead, it is the form of the body—a principle of organization, a blueprint. The rational element of this soul (nous) is dynamic, intimately involved in the act of knowing. — Wayfarer
what suspicions or conclusions follow from an awareness of the limitations of knowledge in exploring fundamental questions? I think the answer is: human beings are not wise. — Fooloso4
I think you conflate Plato and Aristotle in this way. — Leontiskos
You are accustomed to reading Plato and then you apply the same hermeneutic to Aristotle ... — Leontiskos
an art of reading Aristotle — Fooloso4
your error of confusing a conclusion with a premise — Leontiskos
Relevant here is Aristotle's distinction between what is better known to us and what is better known in itself. We only come to the latter through the former. — Leontiskos
No, not at all. I simply do not make what has become a common assumption, that Aristotle rejects Plato. We should give some thought to the significance of Aristotle staying in Plato's Academy for 20 years. — Fooloso4
It is through experience that men acquire science and art.
No one has experience of the arche of the cosmos.
What is your conclusion? — Fooloso4
That action modifies my brain state, causing a presence we can be aware of as an "image." That is Aristotle's phantasm. We can also imagine things not so caused. If an image is not caused by an object, it cannot be our means of knowing an object, because it is not the dynamic presence of an object. — Dfpolis
I agree with this statement. I don't think it is what Kant meant, but I am not a Kantian and so no expert. As I understand him, the mind adds forms of understanding, rather than basing concepts such as space, time and causality on reality. — Dfpolis
If you mean, as Spinoza did not, that thoughts and neural processes are two activities of a single person, I agree. — Dfpolis
Does our explicit awareness of our thoughts come as we think them or after the fact? My experience tells me that I do not decide what to think prior to thinking it, and that my explicit awareness or consciousness of what I have thought comes after having thought it, via the "echo" of memory, wherein I can "hear" my thought repeated as a "silent locution" in my "mind's ear".
— Janus
Clearly, this is not completely true. I wanted to know how physical processes engender knowledge, so I decided to study authors who had written on cognition, such as Plato, Aristotle, Aquinas, Bucke, James, Stace, Suzuki, the Churchlands and Dennett. Clearly, I decided what to think about before I analyzed their arguments. As I read, my neural net activated related contents, giving me the means of testing what I read. Yet, even there, I valued some contents more and other contents less, and that valuation determined the amount of time I spent thinking about various points in light of various facts. — Dfpolis
The conclusion is that knowledge of deep causes comes through reasoning, not direct experience. — Leontiskos
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