It is the capacity of the mind (nous) to grasp that identity-through-change which underwrites all science. And that is metaphysical! — Wayfarer
I’m not sure I agree. I take something closer to Susan Haack’s view of what counts as a scientific approach. Methods that have been established within an intersubjective community, that have replicable and predictable results, where there's a body of standards and best practices based on empirical experience, would certainly include areas like plumbing, electrical work, and even boat building. All achieved over time through testing an idea, trial and error and experiment. Many fields fit this broader account of disciplined, evidence‑based inquiry. — Tom Storm
I hear you. Although I wouldn’t say philosophy as a whole. Some philosophy, perhaps even most. But I wouldn’t include something like logical positivism, for example. The problem is whether we can treat all philosophy as a form of truth, even while recognising that some philosophy is mistaken, and in some cases perhaps even wilfully ignorant. — Tom Storm
Be nice if your parents and grandparents were proud of you, instead of second-guessing everything you do. — Srap Tasmaner
Interesting. Do you think many scientists identify as anti‑realists, and also as Kantians—understanding space and time as forms of cognition rather than external features of the world? — Tom Storm
What are you thinking here? — Tom Storm
What would count as a different kind of truth? — Tom Storm
But it is a metaphysical presupposition. There are others, like causation and the idea that the world is ordered. And pragmatically this works for us ( for the most part). — Tom Storm
Is Dawkins? Many would say so. And yet he writes with vitality about the centrality of art, poetry and music in his life. I think perhaps scientistic tendencies begin with the idea that we apprehend reality and it can be described in full and that science is the only pathway to truth about subjects that matter ( eg, consciousness) Or something like that. How do you see scientism? — Tom Storm
For me what remains interesting is that science is built upon philosophical axioms ( e.g., reality can be understood) and how strongly these are believed depends on how scientistic we are or whether we are metaphysical or methodological naturalists. — Tom Storm
But perhaps you’re saying that’s not how you see yourself in relation to a claim like: ‘science is what we arrive at when philosophy has been successful and weeded out all the dead ends.' — Tom Storm
I think this a position often held by positivists. Russell makes similar points about philosophy: — Tom Storm
Some people hold a view that philosophy is merely speculative, whereas science deals with reality - no doubt there are hard and soft version of this. — Tom Storm
The sciences are philosophy's greatest achievement. — Srap Tasmaner
If one has already moved beyond billiard-ball mechanism, then Hart's argument will seem overwrought. — Esse Quam Videri
The remaining question (and I think it’s the one you’re gesturing at) is whether a non-mechanistic naturalism is stable as a metaphysics, or whether it either collapses into deflationary quietism or else starts to look like a cousin of the older metaphysical traditions—just with different vocabulary. — Esse Quam Videri
The interesting question is whether those generous naturalisms are still naturalism in any meaningful sense, or whether they've quietly conceded the ground Hart is fighting over. If one's naturalism includes irreducible intentionality, real directedness toward ends, and the genuine ontological priority of meaning over mechanism — at what point has one just become a fellow traveler with Hart who prefers different vocabulary? That's not intended as a "gotcha" — just an interesting question about where the boundaries of the dispute actually lie. — Esse Quam Videri
To summarize: I think Hart's challenge is serious. I'm sympathetic to the claim that intentionality and normativity are irreducible, but I'm less convinced that irreducibility forces you all the way to Plotinus or even to classical theism, rather than to a richer-than-mechanistic view of nature. Hart's argument doesn't force you to become a theist — but it does force you to decide whether you really believe that nature is exhausted by efficient causation. — Esse Quam Videri
I think this seems to be a good summary of the matter along with the tension for naturalists. — Tom Storm
Or do you hold to the idea that pudding just resulted from a random combination of ingredients in just the right way. — kindred
If you were to discover a watch on a sandy beach would you not assume that watch had a watchmaker? In fact it’s easier to accept a watchmaker rather than the watch being assembled on its own. — kindred
Where is it most vulnerable? Probably around P3 and P6. A naturalist will say: the “end” that organizes present action is just a neural representation — a predictive model of a future state that causally shapes present behavior. — Esse Quam Videri
Coming back to this. I wasn’t being critical of you or your thinking; I apologize if it came across that way. We’re all just fumbling through this stuff. :up: :up: — Tom Storm
I’m not accusing you of sidestepping the problem, but you can see how people might call this avoidance. In other words, if I say the model is wrong, I don’t have to engage with it, I can just change the subject. — Tom Storm
Yes, and this is really the area I’m interested in: understanding the argument, not refuting it or trying to sidestep it. I want the best possible formulation of this argument. We often move so fast on this site that, for the most part, people are playing a kind of tennis with their own preconceptions: you hold this, I return your serve with mine.
Hart’s argument concerns an explanatory gap. Even if every mental state is correlated with a brain state, that only gives a correlation, it doesn’t explain why the brain state represents the world rather than merely being a physical pattern. The point, it seems is that naturalistic accounts struggle to bridge the gap from physical patterns to meaningful content. — Tom Storm
I think we’re actually quite close on several points. — Esse Quam Videri
But I’m not convinced that this makes explanatory scope, unification, etc. merely “aesthetic.” They look more like epistemic virtues that have proven themselves precisely because reality pushes back: ad hoc theories tend to break under novel testing, while unifying theories tend to be more counterfactually robust. So while we can’t directly compare a theory to “Being,” we can still distinguish better and worse ways of being answerable to constraint. — Esse Quam Videri
On voltage: I agree we invented the concept and the measurement practices, but it seems hard to deny that electrical potential differences existed long before we conceptualized them. That is, the conceptual scheme is constructed, but what it latches onto is not. — Esse Quam Videri
And on your last point: I’m sympathetic to the modesty of “some statements are true,” but I’m not sure we can cash out even that minimal claim without implicitly presupposing that what makes a statement true is not constituted by our norms of justification. Otherwise “true” collapses into “warranted by our best lights,” which reintroduces the very distinction we’ve been debating. — Esse Quam Videri
The problem with this formulation is that even for Hart the argument is independent of theism. Hart is quite comfortable to say that his argument does not lead to theism specifically; it merely identifies an inadequacy in physicalism's explanatory power, for reasons that wafarer has often pointed out (and he is not a theist either). Thomas Nagel holds a similar view and he is an atheist. — Tom Storm
I think it's better to identify the specific reasoning and work out what is actually going on. But the first step is to understand the argument properly, and I’m not convinced that I do. Hence my OP. — Tom Storm
I don’t think that’s a fair comparison. They are only similar in that both issues seem to be unresolved, but they are not addressing the same type of question. — Tom Storm
Even your formulation of the issue isn’t quite right: the question is not 'why the world is intelligible', but how naturalism explains intelligibility. Given that naturalism presents itself as the predominant explanatory framework for all things, the question seems apropos.
In my own life (I agree with you) I am content with not having explanations for things, like life or consciousness. My favourite three words are 'I don't know' and I wish more people would employ them. But that's a separate matter to trying to understand this argument. — Tom Storm
But I’m not sure that supports the stronger claim that there’s “no measure” of tracking what is the case better. Even if our access is historically conditioned, we still distinguish theories by explanatory scope, unification, counterfactual robustness, and coherence with independent lines of evidence. — Esse Quam Videri
it’s just the minimal realist point that what-is-the-case is not exhausted by what we can currently demonstrate. — Esse Quam Videri
But the reason we call the geocentric framing “oblivious” rather than merely “a different discourse” is precisely that it failed to track what was actually the case — Esse Quam Videri
I think your last paragraph is exactly right: warrant concerns justification, whereas truth concerns what is the case. I’m completely on board with that distinction. — Esse Quam Videri
I'm less sure about the suggestion that we’re only ever “talking about how we talk about” rather than referring to the thing itself. I agree that our interests determine which aspect of reality we’re talking about (we always carve out a facet, an affordance, a temporal slice, etc.). But that selectivity doesn’t seem to imply (on its own) that truth is merely an intra-discursive status rather than a genuine answerability to what is. — Esse Quam Videri
In fact, the possibility you mention — that a community can satisfy its own norms while being oblivious to something outside those norms — seems to presuppose precisely the asymmetry I’m pointing to: that what is warranted-for-us can fail to coincide with what is actually the case. If “truth” isn’t ultimately a constraint beyond our practices, in what sense is the community oblivious rather than simply operating within a different discourse? — Esse Quam Videri
I think it’s magnificent either way divine intervention or completely naturalistic — kindred
Despite the Uray abiogenesis experiment there are so many leaps going from amino acids to rna replication to dna etc that it would be like winning the lottery multiple times in a row and I don’t think this was pure chance alone but some helping hand to get things started then let evolution do its thing. — kindred
If we collapse the normative distinction between warrant and truth, mustn't we relinquish the possibility of an entire community being wrong, even while fully satisfying its own norms of justification? — Esse Quam Videri
Thoughts? — Esse Quam Videri
I see this problem as related to the question of where did everything come from. Big bang would say the naturalist without speculating any further of what existed before time and space and though there are scientific theories they cannot be proven ( such as cyclical universe, multiverse etc) — kindred
The theist would say something along the lines of god was before time and space alpha and omega etc. and it was the cause of the universe, prime mover etc.
Not sure what the naturalist would make of the prime mover argument.
I'm curious: how would you cash out the distinction between "warranted-for-us" and "actually-the-case" if the norms of correction are understood as entirely internal to practice? — Esse Quam Videri
they don’t yet explain why those norms are (in principle) answerable to something beyond communal consensus. — Esse Quam Videri
Otherwise it becomes hard to make sense of inquiry as genuinely corrigible rather than merely internally self-stabilizing. — Esse Quam Videri
If there were no laws to dictate how atoms behave what would there be ? Nothing I assume, well at least no matter but I’m no physicist. — kindred
Why would there be a fundamental forces of nature such as these in the universe in the first place ? Again this to me seems to point towards divinity. — kindred
What is wrong with believing in god or god and science ? — kindred
Just boom, voila life seems a bit … well unbelievable to happen. And without any divinity it would be a magnificent deed indeed for life to emerge unaided. With divinity as explanatory power then not so much. — kindred
Perhaps I’m trying to prove God here and to me the emergence of life from non life seems to be an appealing argument.
Even if intelligibility “comes to light” only in the act of knowing, we still need an account of why that disclosure is normatively answerable to truth—i.e. why it can be correct or incorrect rather than merely an internally coherent projection. If the possibility of error is to be taken seriously, then disclosure must be constrained by what is the case. This seems to require that reality itself be intelligible in more than a merely relational sense. — Esse Quam Videri
Abiogenesis is not an exact science and scientists have been unable to replicate the emergence of life from non life but that is not to say that it will not happen someday. This means that we’re left with naturalistic explanations that life did somehow emerge from non life through natural hit and miss chance or that there was a divine spark that set things in motion to begin with. For now the case remains wide open due to science having no answers yet in terms of replicating the jump of life from non life. — kindred
I just find it improbable that life could emerge on its own without some sort of divine push to get things started…what is your take on this ? — kindred
As in the emergence or jump from inanimate matter to living things (abiogenesis) could not happen by chance alone. But then we’re inevitably drawn into the argument of probability to which I’d say that the complexity of life’s building blocks such as DNA and RNA is astronomically high. — kindred
A phenomenological space is all possible variations in a single experiential quality, not in a single experience.
That being said, the "overall experience" you refer to can be understood as a phenomenological space whose components are all of the experiential qualities making up that space.
So, in your video example: vision is one space, sound is another. The "overall experience" exists in a phenomenal space with vision and sound as axes. Those two spaces can, in turn, be analyzed into more basic axes. — Pneumenon
Ethics are taught in family and society. — Copernicus
If we agree that just because the majority says something doesn't make it right (in most cases, which can be mobocracy), why have we codified societal rulings on ethics and morals in our lives? — Copernicus
When the Tao is lost, there is goodness.
When goodness is lost, there is morality.
When morality is lost, there is ritual.
Ritual is the husk of true faith,
the beginning of chaos. — Tao te Ching 38
8. Although Hegel claims to derive the non-identical from the identical he never gives an accounting such that the question is simply answered in his greater Logic. Rather the answers are implied through the manner of setting out the question.
I've tried retyping this one out and I'm still scratching my head to give it this closer rendition I'm attempting:
While he sharpened the critique of analytical judgement to the thesis of
its “falsehood”, everything is an analytical judgement for him, the
turning to and fro of the thought without the citation of anything
extraneous to it. That the new and the different would be the old and
familiar, is a moment of dialectics. So evident its context with the
identity-thesis, so little is it circumscribed by this
But the rest: As our philosophical thoughts yield more to experience the philosophical thought becomes closer to an analytic judgment. Becoming aware of a part of cognition is itself cognition: the subject prepetually producing judgments as the Idealist mind perpetually created existence. But by relying upon experience, these close-to-analytic judgments, we let go of the absolute that the new ontologists and positivists have given chase to in their rejection of (and eventual inevitable return to) Hegel.
Honestly still scratching my head on paragraph 8 now, but wanted to revisit this and give it a more proper attempt. — Moliere
