For clarity: I do not question the existence of presuppositions. When they constitute answers to questions - that is, when they are propositions - then they're fair game for interrogation. As presuppositions, they're not, and it is a mistake to think they are. — tim wood
Where it gets interesting is when the presupposition is a) buried so far down that it is never made explicit, and b) is foundational to the thinking that presupposes it. — tim wood
One such is that every effect has a cause. In many areas of science, this is still a fundamental presupposition of that science (i.e., not proved but presupposed - there is not proof of the presupposition).. But not all sciences, physics being an example of a science where the study of cause and effect has yielded to "field" theories and the like. — tim wood
So, same question - or, please try again. Please exhibit a piece of "metaphysics" or a "first principle" that is free of presuppositions. — tim wood
That was your claim. Mine was that clocks measure physical time (duration), and they do so accurately. Furthermore, I assume (cannot prove) that human experience is a physical (natural) process that measures time similar to clocks, so what we experience is physical time, not metaphysical time. — noAxioms
Agree that they're measuring the very same thing, but none of it is metaphysical. — noAxioms
I think we are talking past each other. — noAxioms
That means there is no metaphysical time in eternalism. — noAxioms
No i don't agree that concepts or abstractions are metaphysical, if we only use them because they have utility, and don't believe they literally exist. And I think that platonic realism is a prime example of metaphysics because there the concept are seen as real. — ChatteringMonkey
And i don't think that concepts in physics are metaphysical for the same reason, because they don't pretend to make claims about what is real. They only really care, or are supposed to anyway, about models having predictive value. The models are just equations, and like a map, they are not the world itself. — ChatteringMonkey
Have we put to bed the issue of whether lipids and lipid membranes can spontaneously form in the right conditions through atomic forces? — Read Parfit
I'll start my critique of C2 by pointing out that “inanimate” can have multiple meanings. — Read Parfit
I suspect you mean the old school ‘there is no life in an element on the periodic table’ kind of definition, but that does not explain how lipids can spontaneously form, in the right conditions, and then organize themselves into membranes. If you peer into the world of protons and electrons, one finds their actions far from inanimate. — Read Parfit
Every so called “inanimate” component inside a ‘living’ cell physically acts and reacts on its own, in accordance with the atomic forces of the molecules they are comprised of and surrounded by, and the cell itself is acting and reacting with atomic forces in its environment. — Read Parfit
Physical time is the concept time used in physics. — ChatteringMonkey
Physics as an empirical science doesn't make metaphysical claims, but only makes models that have predictive value. — ChatteringMonkey
How we use clocks and agree upon time, also don't necessarily make metaphysical claims about time. It's just a convention that has pragmatic value if you will. Let's call that conventional time. — ChatteringMonkey
We do not experience time as such, we experience change or motion. — ChatteringMonkey
Anything that makes definate claims about time goes beyond that and is metaphysics, because it cannot be veryfied or falsified by physical phenoma. That is metaphysical time. — ChatteringMonkey
I chose to talk about the same general distinction in another way so as to broaden the view you were taking. So try to understand it that way rather than setting things up for further confusion. — apokrisis
The discrete and the continuous do map to this view. Continuity becomes the global container - the constraints. And discreteness describes the now locally countable, because crisply individuated, degrees of freedom that are being "held" within the container. — apokrisis
When we speak of them, we are only pointing to the fact that reality must exist between these two reciprocally-defined extremes. Both represent the measurable limits to existence. And so existence itself has to be the bit that stands in-between. — apokrisis
To be unaware of this view (or for that matter, the name of the view that you do hold) seems pretty inexcusable for someone who makes metaphysical interpretations (they're not theories) their business. Look up Eternalism. Spacetime is an eternalist model if you take it as metaphysical, which you seem to. — noAxioms
Absent argument, it presupposes itself. You refer to an argument: it presupposes the argument. You describe the argument as comprising logic and empirical evidence. No presuppositions in logic? No presuppositions in empirical evidence? — tim wood
I never claimed the principle is free of presuppositions. As a principle, established before my time, if I accept it as a principle, it is a presupposition and therefore cannot be free of presupposition. What I said is that if one is to properly carry out the activity, metaphysics, whereby such first principles are established, one must free oneself of any such presuppositions. So I gave that as an example of a first principle, not an example of the activity, metaphysics, whereby first principles are established.. It cannot be "my" first principle without being a presuppositionPlease make explicit how your principle is free of presuppositions or try again. (Or find out what presuppositions are, and thereby how they're part of the machinery of thought.) — tim wood
Tim Requarth, reviewing The Vital Question for The New York Times, notes that Charles Darwin had speculated that life might have begun in some "warm little pond", but Lane shows this could not have happened. Instead, Lane argues that, in Requarth's words, "life emerged from towering rock formations on the ocean floor, where heated, mineral-laden water spewed from the inner Earth through the rock’s hollow network of cell-size compartments. These rocks contained the ingredients necessary for life’s start, but most important, their natural temperature and energy gradients favored the formation of large molecules." The resulting proton gradient drives "a remarkable, turbinelike protein, ATP synthase" to rotate, capturing energy in usable chemical form. "This bizarre mechanism, as universal as DNA, is as counterintuitive as anything in science", observes Requarth, who finds the book "seductive and often convincing, though speculation far outpaces evidence in many of the book’s passages. But perhaps for a biological theory of everything, that’s to be expected, even welcomed.
But in the process view, how would the contents be more real than their container? — apokrisis
So you are trying to impose your own non-process view on an understanding of process philosophy. And yes I agree, it doesn’t work. But that is now your problem. — apokrisis
Well remember that here I’m using the conventional categories of Being rather than Becoming. So the discrete vs the continuous is talk about that which exists in static eternal fashion. This then creates the tension that bothers you - how can limits be part of what they bound if they are in fact the precise place where that internal bit ends and the external begins. — apokrisis
And that active view, one that sees reality as fundamentally a flux with emergent regulation, would avoid the kind of hard edge paradox that your own non-process metaphysics tends to encounter at every turn. — apokrisis
Name anything you think or do that does not involve presuppositions. — tim wood
Your use of the word “magic” in relation to membrane assembly reveals a lack of understanding in how atoms and molecules ‘want’ to act according to these forces apokriisis described.
If you take a spoonful of lipids and place them in a cup of water that is in the right temperature range, these lipids will quickly assemble into the same type of membrane that encase our cells. — Read Parfit
Your post seems to attempt to throw doubt on SR, like it does indeed threaten your position. Interesting that you feel the need to attack it when you say it is a metaphysical theory. — noAxioms
Again an attack, and dragging 'human' into it. You think light speed is different for humans than for other things? — noAxioms
Thing is, if time did not flow at all, we'd experience it exactly the same way. — noAxioms
You seem to think otherwise as you seem to feel the need to cast it into doubt in your above posts, like there is empirical evidence against your view. — noAxioms
Principle of relativity says you can't notice the dilation, but you would if you were experiencing a century of flow in only 10 years of high absolute speed travel. Indeed, nobody has tested this. It assumes that experience is a physical process, and you suggest it is a metaphysical process, that humans are metaphysically different than the rest of matter. Even your presentism doesn't assert this, but you seem to feel the need to add this to it. Yes, SR then would be a threat to your position. — noAxioms
I'm not talking about the age of the universe from a point of view. I'm talking about the objective age of it, which doesn't exist except in some metaphysical views, my own not included. — noAxioms
Your problem is that you understand only one metaphysical interpretation and process all my comments with only that interpretation in mind, so you can't separate the parts that are different between the various metaphysical views. — noAxioms
If it did, then yes, you are correct to attack relativity because it would indeed disprove your position. — noAxioms
Yeah. But I am arguing that both are practical conceptions. When we speak of them, we are only pointing to the fact that reality must exist between these two reciprocally-defined extremes. Both represent the measurable limits to existence. And so existence itself has to be the bit that stands in-between. — apokrisis
That is why every actual thing we encounter in the real world is never quite perfect like the model would suggest. The continuous things are still always a little bit discrete. And the discrete things are always a little bit continuous. And indeed most things will be far more obviously a mixture of the two possibilities. They will not be clearly divided in either direction. — apokrisis
This is easy to see if we look at any actual natural feature - the outcome of a dissipative process - like rivers, mountain ranges, coastlines, clouds. They express a fractal balance that puts them somewhere exactly between the discrete and continuous - in a way we can now also measure in terms of fractal dimension, or the notion of scale symmetry. — apokrisis
So you are taking the view that the world actually exists as either continuous or discrete in some black and white, LEM-obeying, PNC-supporting, fashion. — apokrisis
So modelling can play any game it can invent. And some of those games are surprisingly effective - as if we are actually encountering reality in a totalising fashion at last. — apokrisis
I think I object to 'be understood as'. SR was born of empirical evidence of constant local speed measurement, not an adjustment of understanding about it. The theory was a reaction to that evidence that did not fit current models. All of SR follows from constant light speed. — noAxioms
Constant light speed is an observation, not an assumption... — noAxioms
You asserted that metaphysical time is the same as physical time. The latter is that which is measured by clocks, but since clocks in relative motion do not measure the same value, they are not measuring metaphysical time (the actual age of the universe, a concept denied by spacetime metaphysical model). — noAxioms
If the universe suddenly aged at half the pace it did before, nothing physical could detect that change. That's why metaphysical time and physical time are not the same. — noAxioms
They're all variations on the same theme of constructing a continuum out of the discontinuous. — StreetlightX
So the mathematical debate seems to hinge on whether "the real" is discrete or continuous. — apokrisis
By presupposition I mean the grounds of any question. — tim wood
However, it is not the purpose or function of a presupposition to be right or wrong (or whatever); its business is to be presupposed (An Essay On Metaphysics, pp. 28-29). — tim wood
As such, it is nonsense to think of questioning presuppositions, the term being properly understood. — tim wood
Hitler and Nazi ideology can stand in as poster-child of metaphysics gone wrong. They didn't think of themselves as criminals (no doubt some did!). How could they? Their Nazi metaphysics excused, even grounded and required, their crimes. The same wind blows everywhere around the globe, though usually less catastrophically. Putin seems the current archetype, but even the fellow who litters with a candy wrapper is operating under defective metaphysics; i.e., "metaphysics" not grounded in understanding what it means to be. — tim wood
I think you need to review what a presupposition is. — tim wood
You're not attending to their function but instead covering up that function in your "metaphysics." "Metaphysics" in quotes because a metaphysics that fails to recognize presuppositions for what they are is not metaphysics. — tim wood
Here is a problem. You appear to hold that ontology just is metaphysics. Yet how can it be? — tim wood
Ontology is confronting the the question of what it means to be. Metaphysics: things. Ontology: what it means to be (not what it is to be, which is a metaphysical question). Two different inquiries with differing subject matter, methods, and purpose. It is as if you held that horses were to ridden, to be worked. I point out that to be ridden or worked they first must be cared for; there must first be a consideration of their being. And as it turns out, being concerned for that being, what it means to care for a horse, reveals some things about us as (in this case) caretakers. All of which is missing from your metaphysics. You can indeed ride or work a horse, but if not cared for.... — tim wood
But if a unity is resolved in ontology - what it means to be - then while it may be important to question in terms of metaphysics, it does not belong to metaphysics. — tim wood
And presuppositions have nothing to do with skepticism. — tim wood
What's missing is the account. The person is not missing. I think the easiest way here, instead of laboriously chasing you through old philosophies and in some cases yours and their errors - your briar patch, apparently - is to simply say that metaphysics itself is not grounded. The best metaphysics can do is work towards internal consistency. And this is just your point above. And for a remedy you would look for "principles." If you think about it, you'll see that any such principle you find cannot ground the enterprise. It's a little like a criminal undertaking to be the best criminal he can be, thinking he will thereby no longer be a criminal. And this would be a poor analogy and joke, except that history tells us this is exactly what happens time and time again! — tim wood
Here we are: we are here. It's useless to debate whether we're here: if we weren't, we wouldn't be asking. What are we going to do with it all? Squeezing this yields two questions: What is "we"? and what is the "it all" we're going to do with? Because the "it all" is the object to be done with (and indeed cannot be an "it all" without a "we"), the first question must be, what is the "we"? That is, the two questions are not equi-primordial. Think do-er and do-ee. Consideration of the do-er comes first. — tim wood
But here's the danger. If the grounding of metaphysics in dasein is forgotten. then it grounds itself, or is grounded, opportunistically to whatever is available, often culture, and within that, often enough a hi-jacked culture. In a sense, then, metaphysics doesn't need ontology, but without it, it is not grounded except within the illusion of a grounding. You note that this is a problem, and indeed it is. You look for solutions within metaphysics - but that cannot be. The only other place is within the concerns of dasein understood as care(ing), which can be understood only through an analysis prior to metaphysics. — tim wood
But the questions to you stand: can you, do you, distinguish between metaphysics and (fundamental) ontology, do you recognize in the ontology a ground? — tim wood
The logical problem with C is that it is not even wrong. C only argues that it is well known that no inanimate physical thing is capable of doing such organizing. — Read Parfit
I think that is your intended point, and gives you a more plausible line to keeping D intact? — Read Parfit
In the interest of giving you a concise response, can you give a couple of examples of artificially created things you are referring to? If you are talking about maths, for instance, I think abstract is more concise term than artificial. — Read Parfit
Your theory makes empirical predictions that have been falsified. — noAxioms
You're right, I wrote hastily. But here's the division: near as I can tell, you start with the thing and try to determine what it is, or why it is, or what it's for. I suppose at one end of a continuum you can call this science and at the other end metaphysics, or not. I find this online: — tim wood
What's missing is 1) any account of the person asking, and 2) any attempt to account for the presuppositions implied in the questions asked. Immediate examples: — tim wood
The questions "what is there?" and "what is it like?" presuppose that the "is" and the "there" are meaningful, as well as the notion that "it" is "like" something. — tim wood
But this is not our subject. Here's the question for us: do you believe or hold that any analysis of the being doing the metaphysics or science, or anything else for that matter, whom the literature calls dasein, is any proper part of philosophy? Heidegger does: he argues that fundamental ontology comes before metaphysics as ground. He is not at all saying that fundamental ontology is metaphysics. — tim wood
I feel like we got closer - but not quite there. I don't think that someone finding something interesting makes it meaningful in a philosophical sense; the reason interest has come up is because you've linked the two together and I was trying to follow the chain to explain my position. However, you've certainly centred whether this question is meaningful around whether it is interesting which does nothing to counter my position that this question is completely un-grounded. — angslan
Logically, C could be tossed. Whether or not something is “well known” does not make it true or false, and we have already established a physical body needing an “organizer” in A and B. — Read Parfit
Logically, D is pulled from thin air. You made no case why the “organiser” “must be non-physical”. — Read Parfit
Your use of the word “must” in D is further called into question given an alternate "organizer" has been described as alkaline hydrothermal vents in a broadly plausible scientific theory that does not require any non-physical entities. — Read Parfit
I think I owe Wayfarer a response on this subject a few pages back. Regardless, I don’t think you are going to get to a “must” in D from “non-physical in right there within our own minds”, but try me :) — Read Parfit
Yes, and I thought your use of the word "magical" was an attempt to substitute sarcasm for an actual counter argument. — Read Parfit
Just exactly so. I'd continue, but I suspect you do not understand what you wrote. In short it means that metaphysics presupposes being and context - world - and without a preliminary analysis of that as ground, metaphysics has been - will, can only be - incomplete and error ridden. — tim wood
Any argument you have is with Heidegger. And it is easy to argue against Heidegger, if you have neither read nor attempted to understand his thinking. — tim wood
For clarity's sake, I take metaphysics to be, generally and mainly, the methods and techniques for finding answers to questions in the form, "What is that?" Example: a metaphysician answers "What is a gun?" — tim wood
It is the analysis of these beings and what it means for them to be that is primordial, the analysis being in terms of a priori elements of being. — tim wood
That is, fundamental ontology is not to be confused with metaphysics. I am pretty sure you're good on this distinction - but are you?! — tim wood
The right way (it seems to me) is through a recovery of fundamental ontology, which once recovered is certainly subject to review. — tim wood
*Can you add a well-crafted sentence or two or three on the exact difference between epistemology and metaphysics? The best I can do is that epistemology is about knowledge and metaphysics is about the asking that produces knowledge. And it seems perhaps ironic, from the standpoint of fundamental ontology, that neither is about understanding. — tim wood
To cycle back through and redo metaphysics and epistemology* without re-establishing fundamental ontology is simply to repeat errors in new and frightening ways. — tim wood
No, it is just a way of relating two events. SR only says that the ordering of two non-causally related events is frame dependent. — noAxioms
Nope. SR works whether simultaneity is real or not, or if actual simultaneity is objective or relative. SR is an empirical theory, which makes it non-metaphysics in my book. — noAxioms
By “the living body” do you mean the first living bodies? By that I mean bacteria and their predecessors existing ~3 billion years ago? — Read Parfit
Relativity theory IS a non metaphysical theory, so it doesn't render an opinion on say what is real. — noAxioms
There is no logical “need” to conclude the existence of “non-physical” entities being the cause of physical activity. That is just a theory with without meat on the bone. — Read Parfit
You find broadly plausible scientific theories related to abiogenesis “uninteresting”, and “don’t like that” I refer you to the source of my claims. — Read Parfit
This whole time I've been trying to understand why it is meaningful. Is it interesting to you simply because it is interesting to you? Or is there something more... — angslan
Or is there something more... And is there likely some meaning that many people share, or are you just intent arguing that, "Well, angslan asked Devan99 and people in general how this question came about, and the answer is that it is meaningful to Metaphysican Undercover." I mean, that would be something pretty interesting if Devan99 wrote it out because it was meaningful just to you... — angslan
Because my initial criticism was about how grounded this question was in something non-abstract, but the answer appears to be, well, it is meaningful to Metaphysician Undercover for some vague reason... — angslan
But I have asked you relevant questions, and, each time, your response isn't to try an engage me in how to answer the question, but to proclaim that you are interested, and that your interest is sufficient explanation of the question's meaningfulness. — angslan
Look at all the energy we've expended! I think I remember why I stopped posting here. — angslan
I asked what I consider to be a relevant question regarding the significance of this question and I suggest that this is linked to the foundations of the question. Apparently exploring this is being disrespectful and arguing, as though being in philosophical discussion and disagreement is something reserved for other forums. — angslan
I think that this is one of those "the question is wrong" type of questions. There are just so many premises and conceptualisations of power, potential, time, intention and other things to be even able to frame this question.
This reminds me of the question: "What is the difference between a duck?"
How do we get to questions such as these?
...
I guess my point is - the question in the joke is nonsense, and the answer is nonsense.
...
So I guess where I'm going is - why do we think that this is a meaningful question? — angslan
