According to quantum mechanics the passage of time is discrete and can never be shorter than 10^-27s and if there is such a thing as a present moment it can't get any shorter than that and supersymmetry implies this could be the actual moment of the Big Bang. — wuliheron
I'm lost for words. — Sapientia
What you describe reminds me of what the Buddhists say, that the world ends and is remade from moment to moment, as you say, like a movie. — Punshhh
That's true, but what is change other than that we notice things to be in a different state, at a different time. That's the thing, we describe the world in terms of states, and assume that change necessarily occurred between two consecutive, but differing states, so we conclude that time has passed between these states. We deal with change by applying mathematics, and this creates the illusion that the mathematics is actually describing change. But that is not the case, the descriptions still describe states, and the mathematics simply establishes the relationships between these described states.Observation of time is inextricably linked to change. — Mongrel
You see?! You've just done it again! Why would you ask me to justify an assertion that I haven't made? — Sapientia
But I am saying that the case for considering temperature to be objective is stronger than the case for considering morality to be objective, because the former has been demonstrated scientifically, and the latter has not, and therefore they are not analogous in that way. — Sapientia
Let's take a look, for example, at the first post of yours that I replied to, which began our discussion: — Sapientia
Now, let's compare that to your own claim about what truth deals with: — Sapientia
Furthermore, I already said that this criticism about appealing to the consequences stands - even if it isn't about truth, but instead about a reasonable means of accepting one over the other, in the meta-ethical context of our discussion - but you haven't addressed this counter point. Either your intention is to be reasonable, in which case you would have failed, or your intention is not to be reasonable, but instead go with whichever one you prefer based on how appealing you find the consequences, which you're free to do, but which would be no good reason for any reasonable person to do likewise. — Sapientia
So you're saying that time is discontinuous? If so, what separates the past from the present? — Mongrel
My angle was that eternity is in the now, and it is our limited awareness and experience of time as a series of moments bleeding into each other, like a strobe light, that makes us think of time passing. — Punshhh
You have misunderstood, and then attacked your own misunderstanding. I am not saying that we should not follow ethical rules. — Sapientia
Please stop with these straw men. — Sapientia
But I am saying that the case for considering temperature to be objective is stronger than the case for considering morality to be objective, because the former has been demonstrated scientifically, and the latter has not, and therefore they are not analogous in that way. — Sapientia
Justification for what?! It is just as fallacious as a justification for reasonable acceptance over an alternative, even if we put truth to one side. So, basically, if you're trying to be reasonable, then no, it isn't irrelevant at all. It is very relevant. — Sapientia
I have just suggested that there is reason to believe that in at least some cases, such as that of a perfect circle, they might not actually exist, and that the same might be true of God, if conceived of in this way. — Sapientia
I don't really care whether or not God is necessary if God is just a definition or a concept. I care whether or not God actually exists. — Sapientia
Consequentialism is a normative ethical theory for determining the moral value of an act, whereas you were talking about the truth value of meta-ethical theories. — Sapientia
No, that isn't what really matters. It doesn't really matter if it can't be knowingly applied, and it can't be knowingly applied if all you know is that there is an absolute good, or that there is an objective standard, without knowing what it is, or how to make comparisons to it. — Sapientia
Yes, if you can produce such a scale. But that is a big if. The temperature scales we use are scientific, and, the last time I checked, ethics wasn't. So this analogy of yours only goes so far. — Sapientia
Another point is that the concept of an absolute can form part of a scale, but need not exist in actually. In fact, it can even be the case that, not only does it not actually exist, but cannot possibly exist. Consider a perfect circle, for example. Perhaps God, like a perfect circle, doesn't actually exist - even if we can use the concept as part of an objective scale. — Sapientia
And, like Brainglitch rightly noted, and which should not be glossed over, the desirability or benefit that having recourse to such a scale would bring about cannot be a reasonable basis upon which to judge the truth of a proposition. It is a known fallacy. — Sapientia
No, such a principle need not be absolute. It can be fallible. And the assumption of the absolute does not allow you to know that one is higher than the other. That would be begging the question. It only really allows you to assume that one is higher than the other. — Sapientia
That's kind of odd. You could also pick "centimeter" as your thing. Neither of those could be the ultimate subject of a predicate, so thinking of a moment as a thing is mistaking time for something absolute. — Mongrel
And, in answer to your last question, the ability to judge and to form hierarchies are natural human abilities that don't depend on there being an absolute of any kind whatsoever, nor even on it being possible, which is all that really matters. — Sapientia
If you are of the opinion that there is an absolute good, then you can never reasonably seek goods higher than that. But you can seek goods higher than others whether you believe that there is an absolute good or not. — Sapientia
This reasoning strikes me as an appeal to consequences. — Brainglitch
Sure, our beliefs have consequences, sometimes consequences that are widely judged to be positive, inspiring, life enhancing--as indeed many religious beliefs are. But desirable consequences do not entail that the proposition driving the behaviors is true, they indicate simply that belief that the proposition is true motivates behavior. — Brainglitch
It's not that every moment is a return. You have to name the thing. — Mongrel
Right, science cannot identify, explain, or prove an asdolute good.
And neither can you or anybody else. You can just express your opinion, your own value judgement that something is an absolute good. And your defense of your belief can consist in nothing more than reasoned argument--which, by the way, is also part of what science does. — Brainglitch
How logical distinctions are defined. How is it there is difference between myself and the computer screen? Why is one me and the other one not? I'd say "selection" is used because it refers to the presence of one difference over another. If we consider the uniform (e.g. substance, the world) which has no distinction), any distinction that occurs is but one possibility over many.
How come within the unity the world, I am distinct from my computer monitor rather than not? Why are those logical meanings "selected" rather than not? What makes it so that I have a different meaning than the computer monitor? — TheWillowOfDarkness
You act like you don't know what I'm talking about, but I don't think this is true. I think you are aware of what I'm talking about and want to say it's impossible. What I think you want to say is that logical distinction depends on the act of experience. That for selection to occur, for difference to be defined, it has to be performed by an act of will. — TheWillowOfDarkness
So while my usage of "selection" is not yours, I suspect you think your usage of "selection" is the one which applies to the topic we are discussing. — TheWillowOfDarkness
The only reason why you are a "distinct thing-in-itself", is that the living functions of the creatures which apprehend you, their perceptive capacities, produce a separation, or distinction between that particular aspect, or part, of reality, and the surrounding environment. This is called individuation. You, as a thing distinct from the rest of reality are created by this process of individuation. That you, as a distinct entity, are called "Willow" is a matter of voluntary choice. Since all logic relies on the use of names and symbols, and the use of such is a matter of choice, then the necessity of logic is reduced to a matter of choice.The point is, more or less, than the identity of a thing is wider than merely empirical manifestation or idea. I am different to everyone else. A truth not defined by a a decision of will (e.g. "I now think the distinction of Willow the poster on ThePhilosophyForum" and it happens) or particular empirical distinction (The distinction of Willow is defined by their location in time and space, what other people observe of them, etc., etc.), but given necessary by logic. I am a distinct thing-in-itself. A non-voluntary difference. A "selection" in which I, nor anyone else, had any choice. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I know that's your point. Mine is that that doesn't make sense. Selection, as spoken about in this thread, cannot be an action. It's incoherent. Without a defined difference, there is no-one to act and no actions to take. The point here is the definition of "selection" you are using cannot apply. — TheWillowOfDarkness
OK fine, you want to talk about selection which is not selection at all, it is something different from selection. So what is it that we are talking about?Your usage of "selection" just doesn't get the topic of discussion and so fails to speak about it. — TheWillowOfDarkness
OK, selection is the subject of the inquiry.The subject of the inquiry is not "nothing." It is selection. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Now you ask what thing acts to make a selection.In both questions, the subject (God, selection) is treated as real and I am asking what thing acted to make it so. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Your answer, "nothing".For either question, "nothing" is a truthful answer because there is no thing which causes either. — TheWillowOfDarkness
For selection to be an action of something is a contradiction. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Selection must occur regardless of states of the world, else the different meanings expressed in the world would not be defined. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I didn't address this because I have nothing to say about 'free-will' that isn't disparaging. Nobody has any idea what a 'will' is, let alone a 'free' one. If 'free-will' is your (completely arbitrary) criteria for a metaphysics, then I've nothing to say to you. — StreetlightX
think I know what you're getting at, and part of the complexity here is that Deleuze ontologizes the selective principle. That is: if every metaphysics implies a selection, Deleuze's whole objection to the history of metaphysics is that it never sufficiently justifies it's particular 'method' of selection. — StreetlightX
"We call contraries (1) those attributes that differ in genus, which cannot belong at the same time to the same subject, (2) the most different of the things in the same genus, (3) the most different of the attributes in the same receptive material, (4) the most different of the things that fall under the same capacity, (5) the things whose difference is greatest either absolutely or in genus or in species.
...Things are said to be other in species if they are of the same genus but are not subordinate the one to the other, or if, while being in the same genus they have a difference, or if they have a contrariety in their substance; and contraries are other than one another in species (either all contraries or those which are so called in the [5] primary sense), and so are those things whose formulae differ in the infima species of the genus (e.g. man and horse are indivisible in genus, but their formulae are different), or which being in the same substance have a difference. ‘The same in species’ is used correspondingly." (Book Δ, 10).
And in book Zeta: "Nothing, then, which is not a species of a genus will have an essence--only species will have it, for these are thought to imply not merely that the subject participates in the attribute and has it as an affection, or has it by accident; but for everything else as well, if it has a name, there be a formula of its meaning--viz. that this attribute belongs to this subject; or instead of a simple formula we shall be able to give a more accurate one; but there will be no definition nor essence" (Book Z, 4). — StreetlightX
As I said to Moliere earlier in the thread, the associations of language here might lead us astray, because despite it's 'voluntarist' tenor, 'selection' is anything but voluntary in Delezue, and selection is always the result of an 'encounter' with or 'interference of' a 'question-problem complex' which forces one to creatively engage and fabulate responses as a result (the quoted phrases are Deleuze's). The kind of 'phenomenology' - if we may call it that - of Lewis being 'gripped' by the necessity of imposing the sorts of divisions he does is very much in keeping with the Deleuzian conception of philosophy as involving a 'pedagogy of the concept', where creation - or in this case selection - is very much a matter of imposition, of 'subjective dissolution', if we may put it that way. — StreetlightX
It a bit like answering the question "What causes God?" Yes, we can say that such a notion is incoherent. But saying "nothing" is also truthful. — TheWillowOfDarkness
Does being selected by nothing somehow mean a selection hasn't occurred? — TheWillowOfDarkness
In this respect, I'd read "eternal return" quite literally here. Selection always returns. No matter what is (or is not) a difference is defined. Expression of form is necessary. I'd say it's almost a combination of the two you are asking about: that which selects (eternal return-- "nothing") and that selection is necessary. — TheWillowOfDarkness
I probably can, but I really don't want to. — StreetlightX
This is why univocity becomes so important: univocity 'ontologizes' selection, it gives it the status of being itself. Thus re: the 'hinge' of selection in my post above, Deleuze's own 'hinge' will be the eternal return: it's the eternal return that 'selects' what returns, and of course what returns is 'difference'. — StreetlightX
As far as selection is concerned, it takes place at the level of the first and second syntheses of time (contraction of habit and synthesis of memory), while the third synthesis (eternal return) ensures that a selection must be made at every point. It's basically the imperative of an inescapable 'NEXT' which forces the affirmation of selection at every 'point' in time. — StreetlightX
I don't think the argument intended zero-dimensional "moments", or a particular quantification, as such.
It was given to me in a much less formal format; it's also possible my rendition remains a bit hokey. :) — jorndoe
1. if the universe was temporally infinite, then there would be no 1st moment — jorndoe
What I meant, though, and should have said, is that as far as most people are converned, their own personal experience is the gold standard--"Seeing is believing." It is notoriously difficult, to the point of impossible, to change some people's minds about certain beliefs, particularly of the kind that are not repeatable, even if others who witnessed the incident contradict the belief. Disoutes about remembered events are a common example. — Brainglitch
And personal, first-hand experience is the epistemic gold standard--"I KNOW what I experienced." — Brainglitch
Only problem is that there is much reason to be skeptical about certain kinds of beliefs, even if they are based on personal, first-hand experience. — Brainglitch
I haven't said that "we have sufficient reason to reject the claim that an experience could cause one to know that God exists. — Brainglitch
Rather, I have offered an alternative explanation for the experience, in which people's brains are producing the experience and casting it with beings they already believe in.
We have, as I argued in some detail a post or two ago, much reason to be highly skeptical of such claims. — Brainglitch
The way I think of it is this: "our particular kind of processing system" is phemomemal--a conceptualization, a mental construct--based on certain phenomena which are grounded in the noumenon/ And the noumenon also is a mental construct, one inferred from phenomenal experience as a realist hypothesis to explain the source or ground of phenomenal experience. — Brainglitch
You've said both (1) that unless there's internal inconsistency or blatant contradiction in what a person claims, the experience can be assumed to be no other than the description of it, and we have no grounds for saying it's false, AND (2) that we can reject a person's claim if we think we have "sufficient reason" to reject it.
So which is it? — Brainglitch
What you've demonstrated here is that you really think that if we think we have sufficient eason to reject a person's claims about contact from the supernatural, then we reject their claim, and explain what they say they experienced according to our own alternative explanation. — Brainglitch
