First, what exactly do you mean by saying that intentionality is active at every level of organic life? — Janus
Perhaps there was a good reason that Gotama refused to answer metaphysical questions; not just because he thought that such preoccupations would distract people from practice, but perhaps also because he realized that such question are inherently unanswerable. — Janus
How is it not clear? That every organism acts intentionally (although not with the conscious self-awareness that characterises higher organisms.) — Wayfarer
lower" organisms obviously respond to their environments, but I don't see how that equates to intentional behavior.
Just address that question or we will be unable to proceed. — Janus
We're going to need your definition of "cause." — tim wood
Also you appear not to distinguish between purpose and purposeful. A screw in a machine has a purpose, but it would be a kind of animism to suppose it - the screw - to be purposeful. — tim wood
And I would appreciate it if you would provide your distinction between function and telos. — tim wood
To me, function is what-it's-for, and if we're lucky, how it does it. — tim wood
Above you have telos being about relation and thus not being in the thing, the relation being "between" the thing and its purpose - not sure exactly what that means, or what you're trying to say. If telos is just another word for purpose, and if by purpose is meant function, then it should not be too difficult to note where the words are used beyond their sense. If telos is somehow the purposefulness - intention - of something able to have such a thing, then that is imho, the issue - what would be that thing. — tim wood
Eh? How does this work? How or why is efficient cause deterministic? — tim wood
..the materialism pushed by the so-called 'ultra-darwinists', which sees everything as being explicable in terms of physical laws... — Wayfarer
If a thing has a purpose then obviously that thing is purposeful. A screw in a machine, was put there for a purpose. It has a purpose, therefore it very clearly is purposeful, "purposeful" meaning "having purpose" — Metaphysician Undercover
No word games, please! I am quite sure the screw itself possesses zero purpose.Accordingly, the telos of a thing can never be intrinsic to the thing, as purpose is defined by the thing's relation to something else, for example its function in a larger whole. — Metaphysician Undercover
My bad. I thought telos would be what teleology was about; i.e., the -logy of the telos.I didn't speak of "telos", I provided a definition of "teleology". — Metaphysician Undercover
Then why did you make this claim?I think the nature of efficient cause is irrelevant at this point, and a different subject altogether, so I'll leave this question. — Metaphysician Undercover
And btw, I find this in Physics 2:3, "All causes, both proper and incidental, may be spoken of either as potential or as actual; e.g. the cause of a house being built is either 'house-builder' or 'house-builder building'."This restricts "cause" to efficient cause, making the world deterministic. — Metaphysician Undercover
Organisms not only react to stimuli but often do so in ways that are adaptive and goal-directed, suggesting a form of intentionality. This is seen in behaviors that enhance survival and reproduction, such as finding food, avoiding predators, and seeking mates. — Wayfarer
No word games, please! I am quite sure the screw itself possesses zero purpose. — tim wood
As to our screw, no doubt a someone or someones intended it for something, which we can call its purpose. But that "its" cannot be used to attribute anything to the screw itself - being just language of convenience. — tim wood
But I think you do use and understand teleology to do just that, attribute to things and beings themselves that which they do not and cannot have. — tim wood
This intention, and indeed "the whole," will you assay quick definitions? So far I agree with those you've given, because I think they're pretty good. And we can certainly start with them.then how would you propose that we could proceed toward understanding the intention behind the relationship between the parts and the whole? — Metaphysician Undercover
Such adaptive, purposive behavior cannot be entirely reduced to physical interactions because it involves a level of complexity and coordination that physical laws alone do not account for. That suggests that the principles governing biological systems include emergent properties and processes that arise from, but are not reducible to, their physical and chemical constituents. — Wayfarer
This intention, and indeed "the whole," will you assay quick definitions? — tim wood
Thus given a machine - a whole - the purpose of the screw can be worked out, its relation as part to whole. But given just a random screw, its purpose is indiscernible. And further, in its purpose being fulfilled, the screw has zero choice; that is, in terms of the purpose articulated, if the something itself is without choice, then the something in itself has no purpose. - And this pretty much what you have already defined. — tim wood
As to intention, if there be such, then there must be (another) such that has it - presumably a being of some kind. And again I invoke freedom. If there be such a being, it must be free to not intend, its choice to intend being therefore a free choice. Of such beings, they either are or are not - this simpler than may seem at first. If it is, then there are applicable predicates: it is. If it is not, then no predicates apply, and it is not. — tim wood
Freedom/choice important because without it, purpose dissolves into operation according to law. The engine maker doubtless has many intentions, and purposes many things for the parts of his engine, but the parts themselves (presumably) operate in accord with laws appropriate to them themselves. — tim wood
Now to jump ahead into what I think the issue is. Does every free being have a purpose? Trivially yes, many. Ultimately, only as self-legislated. By "self-legislated" I mean arrived at by a process of reason. Absent which, the being has no (ultimate) purpose. — tim wood
I have a question or two about this. By "reducible to" do you mean 'explainable in terms of' or 'has its origin in'? Do you count global or environmental conditions as physical interactions? Do you claim there is "something more" metaphysically speaking than the physical world with its global and local conditions and interactions? If you do want to claim that, then what could that "something more" be in your opinion? — Janus
Then you haven't read. Because I did not say it had no purpose. I did say its purpose would be indiscernible, a whole other proposition.I agree that the random screw, in that description, has no purpose, — Metaphysician Undercover
Only if we're being sloppy in the way of ordinary and noncritical language usage. Or are you suggesting purpose resides somehow in the engine and screw combined, you having already made clear it cannot be in either separately. My own view is that the purposes of both are inventions of a being capable of such.In the example of the screw and the machine, it is the relation of part to whole which gives the screw purpose. — Metaphysician Undercover
all being the sole property of the being and nothing at all to either the screw or the engineit is in the relation of the means to the end — Metaphysician Undercover
No doubt, because I was not talking about choice and purpose, but aout choice and intention, here:I do not understand the relation between choice and purpose — Metaphysician Undercover
As to intention, if there be such, then there must be (another) such that has it - presumably a being of some kind. And again I invoke freedom. If there be such a being, it must be free to not intend, its choice to intend being therefore a free choice. — tim wood
And here we're back in tune - I agree.Choice, and the agent who chooses are independent from the purpose. That is why choice is "free" in the sense of freely willed. Purpose follows from the freely willed choice, it is not prior to it. — Metaphysician Undercover
And just as quickly out of tune again. Beings, those that are able, have intentions; non-beings, not. An engine builder (presumably) has intentions; his tools and his materials, not. And if no element of freedom in his intentions, e.g., the freedom to not intend, then it's not intentions that he has.I cannot follow this dialectic. I don't see the relation between intention and being which you start with. Nor do I see the relation to freedom. And the rest seems right out of place. — Metaphysician Undercover
Likely there are some adult English classes, maybe at night, you could take advantage of. Actually, I think you follow perfectly well, but don't want to admit it.I cannot follow this dialectic. — Metaphysician Undercover
Yes. I think so.Can we agree that "intention" is the cause of purpose? — Metaphysician Undercover
No. Intention, if intention is anywhere, is in the mind of the intender, and any purpose therefrom his purpose. The trouble is that we can suppose intention where there is none, and infer purpose wrongly.Wherever we find purpose we can conclude that there is intention as the cause of that purpose. — Metaphysician Undercover
Nope, and neither should you. Yours a categorical statement, when at best it is contingent and speculative.Do you agree, that anytime we distinguish purpose, there must be intent behind the thing we observe as having purpose, like the screw in the machine? — Metaphysician Undercover
I don't think dogs or whales have human intent, nor humans doggy or whale intent. But human intent can only come from humans. That is, we can indeed limit intention to being, and to certain definite and distinct beings as well. And we have no evidence to extend that limit.And do you agree that the intent is not necessarily the intent of a human being, — Metaphysician Undercover
If not a being, and necessarily a particular being by type, human for human, eagle for eagle, etc., then what?The agent (not necessarily a being, — Metaphysician Undercover
Intention? Will power? Learn? For babies I do not think any of these terms are either well or meaningfully defined. Certainly they have no explanatory value, except perhaps as a naming of convenience for a result for which there is no good account.but the baby, through intention and will power can learn — Metaphysician Undercover
Maybe you could provide a clearer view of your perplexity? My own view is that an individual "gets purpose from a higher organization" through a process akin to consumption and digestion.Because of this, the way that a person gets purpose from a higher organization is very perplexing. — Metaphysician Undercover
Teleology is a way of studying things which looks at things in relation to purpose, reason for being. — Metaphysician Undercover
Terrence Deacon's concept of "ententionality," introduced in "Incomplete Nature," seeks to describe the unique properties and attributes of organisms and their goal-directed behaviors, which he believes are inadequately explained by traditional physical and intentional frameworks. Ententionality combines "intentionality" with "entelechy" (Aristotle's term for realizing potential), emphasizing that organisms inherently pursue goals and maintain themselves through a dynamic process of self-organization and adaptation. This idea highlights the complex interplay between biological structures and functions that give rise to purposeful behavior and consciousness, suggesting that life inherently possesses a form of directedness that goes beyond mere mechanistic explanations. — ChatGPT
‘Physical reductionism’ is generally taken to mean ‘explainable in terms of the laws of physics and chemistry.’ It is the kind of attitude which says that living organisms are ‘nothing but’ colllections of atoms or ‘nothing but’ the vehicles by which genes propagate. In practical terms, the desired reduction base is something that can, at least in theory, be explained and predicted in those terms. — Wayfarer
‘Global and environmental conditions’ were not, in times past, considered to be physical interactions, or considered as part of the reduction base. That is what might be called a holistic approach which is the opposite to reductionism. — Wayfarer
The ‘law of physics’ are context-free. They don’t need to take into account environmental factors but rather describe the behaviour of ideal objects under specified conditions. This is what makes them universal - the behaviour of a body with specific physical attributes will predictably act in accordance with physical laws under said conditions - like, the apple will fall at a given rate, provided nobody catches it, or the wind doesn’t blow and alter its path, or it isn’t in zero-gravity environments. — Wayfarer
Accordingly, I think it’s a mistake to try and conceive of the ‘something more ‘- the aspects of organisms that can’t be reduced to the chemical and physical - as any kind of ‘something’. That leads to the misconception of an elan vital or spooky ethereal substance - in other words it’s a reification. As you know, I’ve often commented that I think one of the consequences of Cartesian dualism is exactly that kind of reification, by treating mind as a ‘thinking thing’, more or less on a similar plane to physical things, but of a different kind. — Wayfarer
That something is not explainable in physical terms does not entail that it is anything over and above its physical constitution, the relations between its parts and the global and local constraints it is subject to. — Janus
reject physicalism on this basis is to be working from and reacting to outmoded mechanistic conceptions of physicality. — Janus
Of course, but in times past global and environmental conditions were thought to be given by God or determined by karma or some imagined supernatural principle. Are you now appealing to those kinds of ideas, and if not, just what are you appealing to? — Janus
Or are you suggesting purpose resides somehow in the engine and screw combined, you having already made clear it cannot be in either separately. — tim wood
My own view is that the purposes of both are inventions of a being capable of such... all being the sole property of the being and nothing at all to either the screw or the engine — tim wood
And here we're back in tune - I agree. — tim wood
An engine builder (presumably) has intentions; his tools and his materials, not. And if no element of freedom in his intentions, e.g., the freedom to not intend, then it's not intentions that he has. — tim wood
Likely there are some adult English classes, maybe at night, you could take advantage of. Actually, I think you follow perfectly well, but don't want to admit it. — tim wood
Nope, and neither should you. Yours a categorical statement, when at best it is contingent and speculative. — tim wood
No. Intention, if intention is anywhere, is in the mind of the intender, and any purpose therefrom his purpose. The trouble is that we can suppose intention where there is none, and infer purpose wrongly. — tim wood
I don't think dogs or whales have human intent, nor humans doggy or whale intent. But human intent can only come from humans. — tim wood
If not a being, and necessarily a particular being by type, human for human, eagle for eagle, etc., then what? — tim wood
Intention? Will power? Learn? For babies I do not think any of these terms are either well or meaningfully defined. Certainly they have no explanatory value, except perhaps as a naming of convenience for a result for which there is no good account. — tim wood
Maybe you could provide a clearer view of your perplexity? My own view is that an individual "gets purpose from a higher organization" through a process akin to consumption and digestion. — tim wood
These posts becoming long and exhausting. We should try to keep it simple and short. Given how we have proceeded with purpose and intention, I wonder if you care to reconsider your definition of teleology, here: — tim wood
But such constraints are not considered in reductionism. — Wayfarer
Mechanistic materialism still prevails in or underlies many naturalistic accounts. — Wayfarer
The physicalist paradigm is just exactly that everything is ultimately reducible to the laws of physics. But it’s clear that these are abstractions that don’t describe the complexities of organic life. — Wayfarer
One kind would consist in the claim that everything can be explained in terms of physics. I find that claim ridiculous, because everything obviously cannot be explained in terms of physics. — Janus
As i see it a far bigger problem in today's world is materialism in the form of consumerism—the desire to acquire ever more and more possessions, the identification of the personal identity, of its worth, with material wealth. — Janus
A recent survey of academic philosophers shows that slightly more than 50% ‘accept or lean towards’ physicalism, presumably they don’t. (Another survey shows that around 66% ‘lean towards’ atheism. So the majority of academic philosophers ‘lean towards’ physicalism and atheism. No surprises there.) — Wayfarer
They’re plainly related. It’s logical for a social philosophy that recognises nothing other than the physical. — Wayfarer
I’ve been trying to point to more recent ‘philosophies of biology’ e.g. Terrence Deacon, Alice Juarrero, Steve Talbott, which question that form of materialism. — Wayfarer
Nonsense. The US, probably the most materialistic culture, has a high percentage of people who profess to be either religious or spiritual. — Janus
I don't remember him (Deacon) positing that anything beyond the physical world exists, any transcendent reality. — Janus
We’re loosing sight of the OP. The question was ‘what is purpose, how does it arise’. My argument is that in ‘modern’ vision of the Cosmos, described by classical physics and Galilean science, purpose can only be understood in terms of intentional agents or agencies. The laws that ‘govern’ the cosmos, and also evolution, are devoid of intentionality and purpose. So it was presumed that the Cosmos and everything in it arises as a consequence of the ‘accidental collocation of atoms’ (Bertrand Russell’s term.) — Wayfarer
Yes, and more broadly the same is true for many people who identify with 'New Age' spirituality and Eastern religious ideas - even those who follow this or that guru. They remain resolutely obsessed with status, wealth and real estate. And having worked with a number of Thai Buddhists - the same materialism dominates. — Tom Storm
Of course many defenders of higher consciousness worldviews are likely to say that such people are not real, Buddhists, Hindus, Parsis, Sikhs, Christians, etc. — Tom Storm
They're all "just letters", right? What distinguishes that paragraph from the rest of the text on this page is that, absent the organisation imposed by language-using agents, it conveys no meaning.
isn't it more reasonable to say it is Atoms and matter having a living experience — Caerulea-Lawrence
But there's nothing in the theory of 'atoms and matter' which account for the nature of experience. That is the subject of the well-known David Chalmer's paper Facing Up to the Problem of Consciousness, a perennial topic on this forum, and which spawned an entire academic industry of 'consciousness studies'. — Wayfarer
Isn't it therefore reasonable to say that what our minds do is exploring, understanding and parsing the inherent 'purpose' and 'meaning' in our bodies and from the world around us? Like small, hard to read text-files that we make a bigger and more complex story about? — Caerulea-Lawrence
Yes, we are language-using agents, but what are we reading? Yes, we can read letters, but we can also read landscapes, speed, color as well as faces (Many of us, and to varying degrees and to certain points). Moreover, we can also 'read' our own bodies.
The problem I see with saying that things convey "no meaning" is that you are adding 'organization' post-hoc. If you have a book, but you can't read, the letters there also don't convey any meaning to you, despite the book being both intentionally and purposefully written and bound. So, if you learned how to read, you would say "oh, this is meaningful". But the meaning was already inherent in the book, you only learned how to read.
Which I don't see clash with your argument at all. I'm not arguing that atoms and matter account for the nature of experience, but that treating atoms and matter as inconsequential to our understanding of purpose and meaning, seems arbitrary at best. — Caerulea-Lawrence
What!!? I am shocked and amazed at your naivety. You think "learn" has no explanatory value in the behaviour of babies? You think "intention" has no explanatory value in the behaviour of babies? You think "will power" has no explanatory value in the behaviour of babies? — Metaphysician Undercover
Our caveat against reifying inferences in mind, I argue that organizational hierarchy does not mean a hierarchy of sources of intention. It can certainly mean a variety of sources of information that can inform intention. And the intention, coming from the individual, is usually in part the result of consumption and digestion of that information.So, if the individual human being has purpose in relation to a higher organization, such as a family, business, community, society, or humanity in general, where is the intentional agent which gives this purpose to the individual? — Metaphysician Undercover
I think you make an error in logic. You have purpose implying intentional creation. P => IC. And if in fact you have the P, then you have the IC - simple modus ponens. But you infer P; you don't have it; and thus you do not have IC. — tim wood
We have a screw and the engine it's a part of. — tim wood
These things themselves entirely innocent of any intention, purpose, or creation, being just (presumably) pieces of metal. So also any relation, relation itself being just an idea. Are we in complete agreement on this? — tim wood
As to freedom of choice, I merely say that, it seems to me, creation involves discontinuity, from not-being to being. And freedom necessary because no freedom, no discontinuity, no becoming. Rather instead it - whatever it is - in some sense inevitable. Which I call operation according to law. As to human freedom, you seem to hold that there is no freedom to not choose - not choosing itself being a choice. And this in this context both trivial and vapid - and counter-productive. Unless at the ice-cream parlor, you being offered a choice between vanilla and strawberry and choosing neither, are pleased to pay your four dollars for an empty dish full of neither. — tim wood
That's right. I hold the words "learn, intention, and will-power" in themselves have no explanatory value. — tim wood
You are confusing yourself with language. A relation is either an idea - or the expression of one - or a thing. I don't see how a screw can in any sense have an idea, nor how it can be one, and at the same time a screw. Nor do I see how an idea can be a thing. And the screw is a part of the engine not in virtue of any idea or relation, but on the simple fact that it is.No, we are not in agreement on this. By saying that one is a part of the other, you already include a relation. You want to deny my description, that the screw has purpose in relation to the engine, and replace it with your description, that the screw is a part in relation to the engine. Each description involves a relation between the screw and the engine, and neither description is more true than the other. — Metaphysician Undercover
Just the truth, then? Hmm, could be interesting - your criteium for truth being?This is not an issue of the validity of the logic, — Metaphysician Undercover
I agree on this section, but did you mean artifact instead of "artifice"?You ought to be able to see that my description is just a more precise and accurate description of the items indicated, and the relations which constitute a part of the description. — Metaphysician Undercover
Great, what do they explain?That's right. I hold the words "learn, intention, and will-power" in themselves have no explanatory value.
— tim wood
Really? I find that highly unusual, even absurd. — Metaphysician Undercover
On the basis of intention or the lack of it someone is guilty or innocent? Intention to what? And because you lodge meaning in the word, the word for you shall have to be sufficient. Well, guilty? Innocent? The words themselves just names - signposts - otherwise devoid of meaning. E.g., from the word "learn," what do you learn about learning? From the word "intention," what do you know of my, or anyone's intention(s)?Come on now tim, does the difference between something produced intentionally, and something produced without intention have absolutely no significance to you? Have you never spent time in a court of law where intention provides great leverage with its explanatory value? — Metaphysician Undercover
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.