I can find at least one person in a professional setting who will go to bat for anything. The only thing that matters is the soundness of their evidence and the logic of their argument. — Philosophim
Are you paying attention to someone patient enough to spoon-feed criticisms I and others have made countless times of your non-philosophical non-arguments, @Sam26? :eyes:Where is your evidence that people's perceptions that they are real, means they are real?
Remember the sun circling around the Earth? Feeling like things are real is not the same as it actually being real. Even if a lot of people feel that it is.
The problem again, is you keep presenting information that definitely shows that NDEs are real subjective experiences, but does not have enough weight to argue that the interpretation of these subjective experiences match reality. — Philosophim
Not so "open", I hope, that your brain falls out. :smirk:I have an open mind ... — Wayfarer
I would love for there to be life after death. Only weird people who cut themselves in the dark while crying to death metal don't. — Philosophim
This true account of Sam Bercholz’s near-death experience has more in common with Dante’s Inferno than it does with any of the popular feel-good stories of what happens when we die. In the aftermath of heart surgery, Sam, a longtime Buddhist practitioner and teacher, is surprised to find himself in the lowest realms of karmic rebirth, where he is sent to gain insight into human suffering. Under the guidance of a luminous being, Sam’s encounters with a series of hell-beings trapped in repetitious rounds of misery and delusion reveal to him how an individual’s own habits of fiery hatred and icy disdain, of grasping desire and nihilistic ennui, are the source of horrific agonies that pound consciousness for seemingly endless cycles of time. Comforted by the compassion of a winged goddess and sustained by the kindness of his Buddhist teachers, Sam eventually emerges from his ordeal with renewed faith that even the worst hell contains the seed of wakefulness. His story is offered, along with the modernist illustrations of a master of Tibetan sacred arts, in order to share what can be learned about awakening from our own self-created hells and helping others to find relief and liberation from theirs.
if you claim that all NDE's are 'merely hallucination' then the evidence of a cardiovascular doctor who has amassed considerable data to the contrary is salient, because you're writing as if there is no such evidence. — Wayfarer
The philosophical point is, what is the significance of such claims? If you believe they're hallucinatory, then they're not significant. But, your objections illustrate my point, as they're based on the conviction that it's all superstition and pseudo-science. — Wayfarer
So, it’s not all just ‘wake up and smell the roses’. Worse things can happen. — Wayfarer
No, that's an appeal to authority fallacy. — Philosophim
But if you just figured out that some observed phenomenon is not possible to explain; then you'd need to believe in dualism. — god must be atheist
Physicalism could be falsified by clear evidence of something nonphysical existing. — Relativist
Your second statement does not follow from the first statement which is why physicalists do not – I do not – make such a claim. Sadly, Wayf, you're still shadowboxing with strawmen rather than making actual valid arguments.Defenders of physicalism will say:
1. The predictive [& explanatory] power and technological applications of physics are unparalleled by those of any other purported source of knowledge.
2. Therefore what physics reveals to us is all that is real. — Wayfarer
Claims that some form of consciousness persists after our bodies die and decay into their constituent atoms face one huge, insuperable obstacle: the laws of physics underlying everyday life are completely understood, and there’s no way within those laws to allow for the information stored in our brains to persist after we die. If you claim that some form of soul persists beyond death, what particles is that soul made of? What forces are holding it together? How does it interact with ordinary matter?
Morphic resonance is the influence of previous structures of activity on subsequent similar structures of activity organized by morphic fields. It enables memories to pass across both space and time from the past. The greater the similarity, the greater the influence of morphic resonance. What this means is that all self-organizing systems, such as molecules, crystals, cells, plants, animals and animal societies, have a collective memory on which each individual draws and to which it contributes. In its most general sense this hypothesis implies that the so-called laws of nature are more like habits.
On the back of the head of a little boy in Thailand was a small, round puckered birthmark, and at the front was a larger, irregular birthmark, resembling the entry and exit wounds of a bullet; Stevenson had already confirmed the details of the boy’s statements about the life of a man who’d been shot in the head from behind with a rifle, so that seemed to fit. And a child in India who said he remembered the life of boy who’d lost the fingers of his right hand in a fodder-chopping machine mishap was born with boneless stubs for fingers on his right hand only. This type of “unilateral brachydactyly” is so rare, Stevenson pointed out, that he couldn’t find a single medical publication of another case. — Are We Sceptics Just Cynics?
Very roughly speaking, when most people think about an immaterial soul that persists after death, they have in mind some sort of blob of spirit energy that takes up residence near our brain, and drives around our body like a soccer mom driving an SUV.
Physicalism is, in slogan form, the thesis that everything is physical.... The general idea is that the nature of the actual world (i.e. the universe and everything in it) conforms to a certain condition, the condition of being physical. — Stanford Encylopedia of Philosophy, Physicalism
That's not phyicalism, it's scientism, which is:Defenders of physicalism will say:
1. The predictive power and technological applications of physics are unparalleled by those of any other purported source of knowledge.
2. Therefore what physics reveals to us is all that is real. — Wayfarer
Appealing to data in response to a claim is not a fallacy. — Wayfarer
If you claim that near death experiences must be hallucinatory, then evidence to the contrary ought to be considered also, and Pim Van Lommel's books are a source of that evidence. — Wayfarer
but there is testimonial evidence - and what other kind could there be for this subject? — Wayfarer
What I'm getting at, is not the belief that these experiences have no basis in reality, but why they can't have any basis in reality. — Wayfarer
Let's discuss why they couldn't be, what would have to be the case for such experiences to be real. — Wayfarer
So, I disagree with your carte blanche dismissal of what Sam has been presenting. — Wayfarer
There was an opinion piece published in Scientific American, by physicist Sean Carroll — Wayfarer
How does it interact with ordinary matter?
But that is not what 'most people have in mind'. — Wayfarer
So, I myself don’t much like the terminology of ‘consciousness surviving death’ — Wayfarer
Must they be hallucinatory? I don't know. I never claimed that. Did you read our discussion and my points, or are you only taking a later post? — Philosophim
If a bunch of people have a hallucination, no one doubts they have a hallucination. But the fact that multiple people have a hallucination is not an argument for that hallucination being real. — Philosophim
That's not phyicalism, it's scientism — Relativist
Both believe the physical world is all that exists, but Feser's objections to scientism do not apply to metaphysical physicalism. Someone who embraces scientism without a grasp of physicalism as a metaphysical system will be stumped by his assertions. So I can see them sort of joined at the hip, as long as we recognize that physicalism, but not scientism, is a metaphysical system.They’re nearly always joined at the hip. Are there any advocates for ‘scientism’ who do not hold to physicalism? — Wayfarer
A physicalist metaphysician has no problem addressing the philosophical questions he raises every bit as well as a Thomist like Feser. That science is a rational form of inquiry doesn't require a supernaturalist metaphysics to justify; the "causal regularities" he refers to can be accounted for as laws of nature (relations between universals). — Relativist
That science is a rational form of inquiry doesn't require a supernaturalist metaphysics to justify; the "causal regularities" he refers to can be accounted for as laws of nature (relations between universals). — Relativist
"For scientific inquiry itself rests on a number of philosophical assumptions: that there is an objective world external to the minds of scientists; that this world is governed by causal regularities; that the human intellect can uncover and accurately describe these regularities; and so forth. Since science presupposes these things, it cannot attempt to justify them without arguing in a circle." ~ Edward Feser — Relativist
Must they be hallucinatory? I don't know. I never claimed that. Did you read our discussion and my points, or are you only taking a later post?
— Philosophim
Never? — Wayfarer
The point about Van Lommel and Ian Stephenson is simply to indicate that large data sets exist, that researches have wrestled with the question as to whether nde’s and past-life memories have any basis in reality. — Wayfarer
I could take the time to reproduce some of their examples for discussion, but I have a fair idea of what the response would be, so I’m not going to bother. — Wayfarer
Universals aren't "shoehorned". Armstrong wrote a book ("Universals: An Opinionated Introduction") where he lays out the case for his treatment of them. It's a stepping stone toward his comprehensive metaphysics (universals are integral), but it stands on its own.But, are universals themselves physical? I know David Armstrong says they are, but I think his is a revisionist account of universals shoehorned into a materialist framework and undermined by science itself — Wayfarer
Quantum "entities" are quantum systems, and they evolve deterministically (per a Schroedinger equation)- irrespective of interpretation.For example, the Copenhagen interpretation suggests that quantum entities do not have definite properties until they are observed, which conflicts with Armstrong's view that properties (or universals) exist independently of perception and measurement) — Wayfarer
There aren't many settled questions in philosophy. But Armstrong argues that the notion that abstractions have objective, independent existence seems unparsimonious - they are unnecessary additions to the "furniture of the world" (as he puts it).In the SEP entry on Physicalism, cited above, there is a section on 'the problem of abstracta' ... So it's far from a settled question. — Wayfarer
I'd say that scientism (not science, per se) has to depend on the assumption that there is a compatible metaphysics underlying it all. I'm not aware of Feser ever acknowledging that. Instead, he criticizes scientism for its absence of accounting for a foundation of knowlege. Of COURSE it lacks that! But the physicalist metaphysics you consider entailed by it doesn't lack it.naturalism assumes nature' - it starts with the apparently self-evident fact of the existence of the empirical world, to be studied by science. But again, that apparently innocuous assumption always entails an implicit metaphysics and epistemology. — Wayfarer
IMO, true epistemic objectivity is an unobtainable ideal, but we can pursue intersubjectivity.An example is the status of objectivity: I've argued at length in another thread that objectivity is itself reliant on there being a subject to whom objects appear (per Kant). The fact that communities of subjects see the same sets of objects doesn't undermine that.
I addressed both points.And then, there's the observer problem in physics, already noted. And the objects of physics itself are essentially abstractions.
You keep taking the time to treat me like I'm an idiot, and I keep proving you wrong. Is this ever going to change? — Philosophim
I believe somewhere in that insecure mess of a brain of yours — Philosophim
I can practically see you sulking as you type the words out. — Philosophim
If you got over yourself — Philosophim
have a humble conversation — Philosophim
That's a Humean account. More recent philosophers have developed an (arguably) superior account: law realism."Laws of Nature" just refer back to those causal regularities. — AmadeusD
You keep taking the time to treat me like I'm an idiot, and I keep proving you wrong. Is this ever going to change? — Philosophim
Currently the hypothesis, "Our consciousness does not survive death," has been confirmed in applicable tests. You'll need to show me actual tests that passed peer review, and can be repeated that show our consciousness exists beyond death. To my mind, there are none, but I am open to read if you cite one. — Philosophim
I have no problem with his pointing out the fact scientism can't explain itself, but it would be more reasonable to point toward the need for a metaphysical model that fills the gap he identified. — Relativist
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