You take life so seriously! Why do you object so strenuously when I put it in terms that you claim to support - framing it as an absurdity? — apokrisis
Ah, dualism. Or are you finally going to define "mind" in objective and physicalist fashion here?
What limit to caring now marks your usual slippery slope metaphysics now we have introduced this sly boundary term of "sentience"? — apokrisis
Yep, let's pose crazy scenarios as a last resort when our arguments are falling apart. — apokrisis
Yep. Just turn everything I have said into something different. Chalk up another victory for yourself. Imagine the round of applause. — apokrisis
Look! One of your oranges is a tangelo! Crikey, what now? Does the number three no longer exist? — apokrisis
But for "object" to be a meaningful term in a metaphysical discussion, it needs the reciprocal context of that which is its "other". — apokrisis
You are stuck in your realism which is a dualist subjectivism - naive realism in other words. There just isn't a problem for you in dividing mind and world, observer and observables, in brute and unaccounted-for fashion. — apokrisis
Pragmatism (of the Peircean kind) is all about bridging that gap by granting the ability to care to the whole of nature - even if we then wind up with "the Universe" which in fact seems to care about very little beyond arriving at its Heat Death. Bastard! — apokrisis
You can't just dismiss the possibility of a soul, by saying it seems to be highly unlikely. You may be one who lives your life making decisions based on what "seems" to be the case, but this is philosophy, and we don't take "seems to me" as justification for any such assertion. — Metaphysician Undercover
Huh? Isn't the number line continuous ... as an infinity of infinitesimals? — apokrisis
Or what they share is a state of individuation sufficient to achieve the general purpose of some actual boundary condition. They are X enough (in being sufficiently, self-groundingly, not not-X). — apokrisis
We exist in a highly individuated state of being as a result of our rather particular thermal scale. We sit on a planet that orbits a star in the middle of a void which is nothing but a radiation bath 2.7 degrees above absolute zero. So a classical, reductionist, object-orientated approach to reality modelling can take a lot for granted. — apokrisis
So vagueness is not-not vagueness. Or in other words, it is at the other end of the spectrum, as distant as it is physically possible to get, from the crisp. — apokrisis
But who cares about that level of individuation? (And in the systems view, you have to have an answer to that - you have to show there is some reason to care.) — apokrisis
Why would judgments of good or bad be relevant to my point of view? Surely my point is that morality - as it pragmatically exists in the real world - is beyond such obviously absolutist and subjective terminology. — apokrisis
Again, if I had to judge flourishing in terms of some universal and absolute telos, I would point to the Universe's thermodynamic imperative. Flourishing in the natural sense - the sense we can actually see and measure as what reality is all about - is the maximisation of entropification. — apokrisis
So "goodness" would be defined by a system being good at that. And "badness" by a failure to degrade entropy gradients. — apokrisis
A fighter pilot - able to get through 14,000 gallons per hour once he kicks on the after-burners - must be the highest form of life that exists on the planet. No wonder they are our heroes. ;) — apokrisis
But then plants have feelings too. And then why shouldn't we respect the rights of the minerals of the earth, the gases of the atmosphere? — apokrisis
Yes, we progressives ought not only eliminate ourselves, but eliminate all animals (as they are barbaric consumers too), and even all plants (as they too show no respect for minerals and gases). — apokrisis
And yet it seems all a mite ... impractical? — apokrisis
So if we are talking about a white thing - a thing that partakes in the property of "whiteness" - a systems view is that the real question here is "Is the thing white enough?". — apokrisis
So conventional ontology is usefully simple - it treats the world as a collection of existents, a state of affairs, a collection of formed objects that thus only partake in predicate type logic arrangements.
But a holistic ontology talks instead about such existence as a state of self-regulating persistence. The whole is forming its parts - the very parts needed to compose that formative whole. Logically, it is a closed reciprocal deal where universals cause individuation and individuation contributes to there being the steady flow of particular events that results in the emergence of the regularities we call universals. — apokrisis
In the example you give, for example, % one has a circle to the left of a slanted line as does %, — Terrapin Station
Those properties, which are identical to the materials/structures/processes are not numerically identical in two different things. — Terrapin Station
Because by altering our perception we alter how we perceive. — saw038
That's complete nonsense. The idea that either there's some abstractly existing, numerically identical property that's somehow instantiated in multiple things, or resemblance is "random" simply makes zero sense. — Terrapin Station
Re there being a "reason for the ways things are," that's the case with universals, too. No matter how many reasons you give behind something, no matter what it is, you get to a point where "it's just the way things are." You can't keep giving an infinity of reasons one step back and then another step back and then another step back, etc., right? — Terrapin Station
What's incoherent is saying that they're not numerically different in terms of the quality or properties. And you have to be saying that the properties in questino are numerically identical or you're not talking about universals. You'd be a nominalist then instead. — Terrapin Station
You don't need an explanation for that because no two properties are literally identical. Again, you'd simply be reifying type abstractions that we make. Reifying conceptual categories we create as individuals in our minds. — Terrapin Station
It couldn't be more simple. They both meet your criteria, you mental, conceptual abstraction, for calling them "round" things. — Terrapin Station
The only thing with that is that "societies should flourish" or "it's better for societies to flourish" (or whatever similar formulation) isn't objective. — Terrapin Station
In the example you give, for example, % one has a circle to the left of a slanted line as does %, while that's not the case for and @. They're not numerically identical circles--obviously, which makes them not identical. It's simply (degree of) resemblance.
Why would you think that o and o are circles by instantiating a numerically identical property of circularity that exists who knows where and that obtains in those circles by who knows what means so that it's just ONE circularity property even though we're talking about two different things? That's just incoherent. It's reifying the fact that we make mental type abstractions. — Terrapin Station
What stops us from committing suicide? — saw038
If you believe there is a purpose to life then I can understand your reason for wanting to stay.
But for those that believe life has no purpose, or better yet, that it is something that is filled with continually suffering. Why continue? — saw038
1. involuntary: most of us like freedom, and dislike being harmed
2. subjective: (1) is not objective, and only has meaning in terms of us beings that dis/like things
3. morals: us liking freedom and disliking being harmed is relevant for morals
4. therefore morals are subjective (in part or whole) — jorndoe
For those who live, Epictetus' recommendation is sensible--do the best with what you have and take the rest as it happens. — Ciceronianus the White
My gut feeling is that we would all (men and women alike) rather be other-oppressed than be failed self-liberators. If we fail in our own liberation, we have no one to blame but ourselves. If we fail at overthrowing our oppressor, well, they were just too oppressive to beat. Not our fault! — Bitter Crank
We agree nothing can't come from nothing. Which is why I support metaphysical positions which argue existence arises via the constraint of pure potentiality, called variously apeiron, tao, vagueness, firstness, indeterminacy, quantum foam, etc, depending on whose metaphysical system it is. And chaotic everythingness is another attempt at a descriptive term for the same idea. — apokrisis
If you had a strong argument, it would be able to deal with the everyday mundanity of existence. You wouldn't need to pile disaster upon disaster. — apokrisis
it would be able to deal with the everyday mundanity of existence. — apokrisis
To claim that such an outcome is inevitable is nuts. Being lost in the woods for a night doesn't even sound traumatic, just embarrassing. — apokrisis
Isn't that what they say about quantum mechanics? You can't conjure up reality out of pure possibility? — apokrisis
Glad to know you have such a loose definition of objects. The vaguer your position, the less it can be challenged. — apokrisis
And you could say the universe must be full of entities with higher IQs. But we can say if they are in the vicinity, they're not waving back. (Just picking up the occasional country hick for a good probe.) — apokrisis
How can I argue against your monotheistic Pessimism without pointing out that there is the second thing of optimism, and then beyond that, the third thing which is a neutral balance? — apokrisis
Life just is rich and varied in that way. — apokrisis
That is why I object to your habit of monotonic exaggeration. I could focus on just one part of my total umwelt at the moment - like a slight achiness in my back - at the expense of others, like a slight sense of satisfaction in my stomach. I could make my back the center of my world (and ouch, now I'm really starting to notice it). Or instead I could be more honest about my phenomenal state and say in fact it is quite naturally mixed at all times. It is neither up, down or even neutral, in any simplistic fashion. — apokrisis
Of course I accept that if I were currently being crushed in a car crash, or I was out of neurobiological equilibrium and in a depressive fugue, then that internal variety might be a lot more one-dimensional. — apokrisis
But if we are talking about typical mental state, then it is better characterised as vague - an awful lot of nothing much in particular. — apokrisis
Is there no evidence in the world of emergence? — apokrisis
On what exactly - their lack of predicates? — apokrisis
Neuroscience when it comes to measuring information density. Economics when it comes to measuring ecological footprint. — apokrisis
I'm just saying that a rather more sophisticated analysis is needed than "life sucks". — apokrisis
That's how things go - polarisation. Pessimism must frame itself in terms of what it is not - optimism. It has to construct this "other" as a mafia to justify its own desire to become a mafia too.
This is what I criticise. You have to exaggerate the strength of your opposition so as to legitimate yourself as its counter. You want to leave bystanders no option but to declare for either Team Optimist ir Team Pessimist. Philosophy then becomes the loser because your slippery-slopism admits to no shades of grey. — apokrisis
But of course what I am "exactly arguing" is something else. I am arguing that optimism and pessimism - to the degree they are natural - would exist as the bounding limits which then make possible the variety of all the feelings that lie in-between. So now I would focus on the nature of that balance, that hopefully fruitful balance, that lies in-between.
If you can point out a flaw in this logic, go ahead. — apokrisis
You are not really listening. My point has been that feeling bad, feeling good, feeling neutral, are all part of life's rich and varied experience. — apokrisis
So the very idea of "eliminating unhappiness" is nonsensical on its own. The question is really would you want to eliminate "feeling" in some generalised sense? Can you offer a strong philosophical argument at this deeper ontological level? — apokrisis
It answers the question in terms of the emergence of a dynamical symmetry state, an equilibrium balance. An equilibrium has emergent stability because it is a state where continuing (microstate)change no longer makes a (macrostate)change.
There is an entire science of (thermo)dynamics now. — apokrisis
So if the universe has the possibility to be clumpy and object like, this requires in matching fashion that it has the possibility for empty spaces. Each possibility necessitates the other. And then if this dichotomy is freely expressed over all scales, then you will have objects and voids of every possible size. — apokrisis
And humans are measurably the most concentrated forms of intelligence. — apokrisis
(So if we ask what the subject matter of philosophy essentially is - even if it is only now becoming apparent - then it is thermodynamics. :) ) — apokrisis
You can talk about such dynamical balances as "mediocre" or "imperfect". But that just shows your metaphysics is fundamentally unrealistic. You are not even understanding the message that metaphysics wants to deliver when it comes to the (self)organisation of nature. — apokrisis
For anything to exist - phenomenologically - there must be the extremes which together allow the spectrum of what then actually is. — apokrisis
Sadly, it just is juvenile. — apokrisis
If there were some evidence that this "philosophical" tendency is instead the troubled path to a more positive outcome, then fine. Let's hear more about that then. — apokrisis
But if people are going to make general claims about futility, instrumentality and self-delusion - seek to impose their "truths" on my existence - then they better be prepared for a robust argument. They are making it personal. — apokrisis
Our transcendent concepts are empirically argued using examples. They arise as the inductive limits of what seems immanently to be the case. — apokrisis
Where metaphysics goes further is in apply dialectical or dichotomistic reasoning to generality itself. It derives polar pairs of limits to frame its talk about possibility. — apokrisis
We can argue - with logical rigour - that either flux or stasis, either chance or necessity, are the limits of possibility. And in being able to name the bounds of possibility, we are talking about the reality of the transcendent - that is, the limits where reality in fact has gone as far as it can possibly go. — apokrisis
Then science has another trick up its sleeve. It turns the empirical into a matter of measurement. It now turns the world into a play of numbers. Transcendence is brought down to the level of the confirming particulars. — apokrisis
And so generally we are stuck in an immanent reality. But we manufacture a transcendental point of view by establishing bounding limits both "looking upwards" and also "looking downwards". Looking upwards, we see metaphysical generality. Looking downwards, we then turn the micro view into patterns of numbers - digits read off measuring instruments. — apokrisis
I and I are, yes. (Which doesn't mean I'm Jamaican. Rather I at T1 and I and T2.) — Terrapin Station
Yes, that makes it sound more alive. We are all metaphysicians, even the illiterate, as soon as we can speak, if not before. We have "software" that can contemplate and edit itself --and can apparently contemplate this ability to contemplate and edit itself. We are self-consciously self-conscious. We can think about "unknown unknowns" in the abstract. — Hoo
