I have no fear of science. Your posts are too long to deal with. — Wayfarer
It's like the waiter blaming math for you not able to count your money correctly when failing to pay for dinner — Christoffer
The modern period is defined by the success of applying mathematics to the world, and over time Plato gets inverted. Now there is no problem with the world, it exemplifies perfect mathematical beauty, but with the the mind.
— Count Timothy von Icarus
Perhaps a relevant aspect of the inversion - I'd say contra Plato's anamnesis, that we are all born ignorant and we are all going to die only somewhat less ignorant.
(Not that I know much about Plato's thinking that hasn't come from secondary and tertiary sources.)
@Fooloso4 — wonderer1
Not first thing in the morning
— frank
No energy until coffee. — wonderer1
In the end you have a simplistic counter to physicalism that only functions against reductionism specifically...
But this move probably requires jettisoning a lot of what makes physicalism "physicalism." — Count Timothy von Icarus
In the end you have a simplistic counter to physicalism that only functions against reductionism specifically...
I'm sympathetic to the idea of something like "physicalism without reductionism," but as is discussed earlier in this thread, I'm not sure such a thing currently makes much sense with how physicalism is generally defined — Count Timothy von Icarus
Can someone spell out to me what is being reduced and why this is a bad thing? (Because if the answer is subjective experience, I don't see in what sense physicalism is a "reduction"). — NotAristotle
The question of science re Hume as a whole is sort of interesting, as his attack on induction would seem to cut the legs out from underneath the entire scientific project. — Count Timothy von Icarus
all things pertaining to laws of thought and to all aspects of value theory (including the metaethics of what “good” is) is in physicalism reduced to the physical — javra
I get the sense there is an assumption at play that has not been articulated with physicalism that you are concerned is problematic? — NotAristotle
It’s worse than circular reasoning: it’s reasoning that the cart pulls the horse forward. — javra
I still think the idea that we have, in some respects, an inversion of Plato in the modern period holds water though. — Count Timothy von Icarus
Can you offer any clarification?What about emergence? The term is used in a variety of ways, in the sciences as well as philosophy. These uses are so wildly divergent that it is not clear that there is a common core notion. — Supervenience
t seems to me that supervenience is all about existential dependency
— creativesoul
I don't think it's about dependency. It's just that two things that track together: "There cannot be an A-difference without a B-difference." — frank
A number of writers make a distinction between physicalism and naturalism on the basis of the inclusion or exclusion of the role of subjective point of view in the determination of the object. — Joshs
The very idea that our cognition should be nothing but a re-presentation of something mind-independent consequently has to be abandoned. — Evan Thompson
I'm sympathetic to the idea of something like "physicalism without reductionism," but as is discussed earlier in this thread, I'm not sure such a thing currently makes much sense with how physicalism is generally defined. Physicalism might have to become just a vague commitment to naturalism and metaphysical realism to deal with strong emergence (which, to be fair, I think that's how many people colloquially use the term). — Count Timothy von Icarus
As long as an organizing contribution of a subject can be detected in the description of physical phenomena, then a species of idealism is at work. — Joshs
I agree with all that, particularly that cause alone cannot act as support for physicalism. — Count Timothy von Icarus
The question of science re Hume as a whole is sort of interesting, as his attack on induction would seem to cut the legs out from underneath the entire scientific project.
One of the things I've considered about Hume's position on cause is that it seems to be somewhat guilty of begging the question. If one billiard ball really does cause another to move, then watching them collide is observing cause. His position on cause then ends up being heavily reliant on his position on induction holding up.
Another way to read him is to say that if both Hume is right and science works, then science must not proceed by induction. — Moliere
I agree -- I don't think scientists are prone to claim this, or that it's necessary for scientific knowledge.I don't think science needs to claim that what appear to be the invariances of nature must of necessity forever remain invariant. — Janus
As far as science knows they have up until now remained invariant, so it can proceed on the basis of "if such and such law remains invariant, we can expect to observe this and that or whatever".
Why would it trouble us if everything was reducible to the physical?
I'm not sure why that is so. Unless by process metaphysics one is arguing that only processes, not the physical constituents involved in the process are real?
Another way to read him is to say that if both Hume is right and science works, then science must not proceed by induction.
I don't think he's guilty of begging the question, though yes I think that his position on skepticism follows from previous positions in the book -- he doesn't start with skepticism but ends the first part of his treatise with it.
I'm not sure I understand this. How is science supposed to work if we can't count on past observations to tell us anything about the future? We've been testing Newton's laws for centuries, but can we accept them now as, in some imperfect way, describing how the world works and will work in the future? We can't if Hume is right (and then he has the whole part about burning all the books that claimed to have knowledge based on past observations, which I did think was a good joke on his part). — Count Timothy von Icarus
Should it here be asked me, whether I sincerely assent to this argument, which I seem to take such pains to inculcate, and whether I be really one of those sceptics, who hold that all is uncertain, and that our judgment is not in any thing possest of any measures of truth and falshood; I should reply, that this question is entirely superfluous, and that neither I, nor any other person was ever sincerely and constantly of that opinion. Nature, by an absolute and uncontroulable necessity has determined us to judge as well as to breathe and feel; nor can we any more forbear viewing certain objects in a stronger and fuller light, upon account of their customary connexion with a present impression, than we can hinder ourselves from thinking as long, as we are awake, or seeing the surrounding bodies, when we turn our eyes towards them in broad sunshine. Whoever has taken the pains to refute the cavils of this total scepticism, has really disputed without an antagonist, and endeavoured by arguments to establish a faculty, which nature has antecedently implanted in the mind, and rendered unavoidable.
You are correct. I can't think of the right term for it. But I can frame it in a question to Hume: "what would it look like to observe causation?" There are all sorts of complex, nuanced issues with causation that have cropped up since Hume's day, but let's ignore those and just focus on billiard balls bouncing or dominoes falling or what have you. When we see one domino topple another, Hume says we aren't seeing cause. But what conceivable observation would qualify as "observing cause" in those cases?
It seems to me that, if one domino hitting another really does cause the second domino to fall, what we see is exactly what cause might look like. — Count Timothy von Icarus
If it is a way of thinking, is causation then not a thing in the world but a way of understanding things in the world? — Banno
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