Comments

  • What is meant by the universe being non locally real?
    But trying to sort out what it means exactly has been...knotty. I get conflicting accounts on how it says that reality can be real or local but not both.Darkneos

    There's an entire section of publishing and media devoted to explaining, exploiting, or denying ‘quantum weirdness’. The best book I’ve read on it is Quantum, Manjit Kumar, which goes into the history and implications in depth. It’s accessible to the non-physicist reader too. But there are no easy answers to these conundrums.

    I'm pretty sure physics doesn't really have anything to say about realism, anti-realism, or idealismDarkneos

    Don’t be. Physics was at the center of the Copernican ‘scientific revolution’ and that had massive philosophical impact. The ‘quantum revolution’ was arguably even more impactful, especially considering the central role of physics in science and technology.

    Pre-WWII, there were two very influential British scientists and science communicators, Sir James Jeans and Arthur Edfington. They’re not mentioned much nowadays but their books sold in the millions in their day, and both of them presented cases for forms of idealism based on physics. There is still a thriving school of idealist-leaning physicists among other schools of thought.
  • The Mind-Created World
    Apokrisis always said it can be understood in terms of a semiotic model of physicality, if I read him right. I don't have the background to properly assess the soundness of Apo's posts, and I freely admit that.Janus

    I learned a lot from Apokrisis, including the whole field of biosemiotics, which I've read quite a bit about by now. But I also learned that he tended to dismiss the idealistic philosophy of C S Peirce on the grounds of him being 'a man of his times' and obviously not able to benefit from later scientific discoveries. After many earnest and open discussions with Apokrisis, I believe he too expresses a certain fear of religion. It means that if you question the naturalist account with its physicalist underpinnings, then you're opening the door to ideas associated with religion or philosophical idealism, which no self-respecting scientist should admit.

    However, if we are to be justified in thinking that such imaginings are anything more than fictions then we need some substantive evidence or reason for thinking so.Janus

    Our willingness to accept scientific claims that are against common sense is the key to an understanding of the real struggle between science and the supernatural. We take the side of science in spite of the patent absurdity of some of its constructs, in spite of its failure to fulfill many of its extravagant promises of health and life, in spite of the tolerance of the scientific community for unsubstantiated just-so stories, because we have a prior commitment, a commitment to materialism. It is not that the methods and institutions of science somehow compel us to accept a material explanation of the phenomenal world, but, on the contrary, that we are forced by our a priori adherence to material causes to create an apparatus of investigation and a set of concepts that produce material explanations, no matter how counter-intuitive, no matter how mystifying to the uninitiated. Moreover, that materialism is absolute, for we cannot allow a Divine Foot in the door. — Richard Lewontin, Review of Carl Sagan Candle in the Dark

    It (neuroscience) deals with the brain, which is physicalJanus

    I dispute that the brain is physical. The human brain, in context, is the most complex natural phenomenon known to science, with more neural connections than stars in the sky.

    substantive evidence or reasonJanus

    See the original post.
  • Can One Be a Christian if Jesus Didn't Rise
    the Origenst Crises that came after his deathCount Timothy von Icarus

    I looked up this phrase, which I had only hazy recollection of. From the Wikipedia entry:

    In 399, the Origenist crisis reached Egypt.[1] Theophilus of Alexandria was sympathetic to the supporters of Origen[1] and the church historian, Sozomen, records that he had openly preached the Origenist teaching that God was incorporeal.[13] In his Festal Letter of 399, he denounced those who believed that God had a literal, human-like body, calling them illiterate "simple ones".[13][14][3] A large mob of Alexandrian monks who regarded God as anthropomorphic rioted in the streets.[15] According to the church historian Socrates Scholasticus, in order to prevent a riot, Theophilus made a sudden about-face and began denouncing Origen.[15][3] In the year 400, Theophilus summoned a council in Alexandria, which condemned Origen and all his followers as heretics for having taught that God was incorporeal, which they decreed contradicted the only true and orthodox position, which was that God had a literal, physical body resembling that of a human.

    A literal 'sky father', then. Origen's writings are voluminous and take some background to understand, but it seems to me he was on the right side of the argument.
  • The Mind-Created World
    If you wish to question the neurological account, which is a physicalist account insofar as it looks for explanations in terms of neural patterns and activity, then you need to come up with a compelling alternative.Janus

    I'm saying the neurological account is not necessarily physicalist. It's a leap from saying that there are neurological processes involved, to materialist philosophy of mind.

    Instead, you say proponents of physicalism are suffering from fear of religion.Janus

    Because you often express it. You said it in the post I responded to - 'what are we to do, believe there is "another realm?"

    What's the alternative? Posit the existence of another realm?Janus

    So get this clear - you believe that to question physicalism requires positing of another realm? You said it: do you believe it?
  • The Mind-Created World
    So you say.

    The meaning arises as a brain (containing neural networks trained to recognize the written language the book is written in) detects patterns in the writing which are associated by that brain with the meaning that arises.wonderer1

    What about this causal relationship is physical? How is it explainable in physical or molecular terms? How do physical interactions cause or give rise to semiotic processes? Those are the precise questions that the quotes you referred to as ‘red herrings’ are seeking to address.
  • The Mind-Created World
    The nature of the causal relationship is physical.wonderer1

    So you say.
  • The Mind-Created World
    Perhaps we just don't understand the physical well enough. What's the alternative? Posit the existence of another realm?Janus

    A pretty poor post, I have to say. Just because something can be attributed to neurobiology, doesn't necessarily mean it can be understood solely through a physicalist lens. As you kind of admit, the problem is that to question the physicalist account is to open the door to - well, what, exactly? That's why I mention Thomas Nagel's essay, Evolutionary Naturalism and the Fear of Religion. Fear of religion drives a lot of this conversation, whether that's acknowledged or not. As if the door has to be slammed shut on anything that's not 'scientific' or 'neurobiological' or else.... :yikes:

    Take the time to read that Steve Talbott essay. It's philosophically solid and doesn't appeal to anything supernatural. But, as I also said, even biosemiotics, which I learned about from Apokrisis, is not physicalist in the reductionist sense (although some of what Apokrisis writes is also driven by that fear). But as soon as you start considering intentionality, sign recognition, and semiotics, then none of that is really physicalist in my view.
  • Can One Be a Christian if Jesus Didn't Rise
    Origenst CrisesCount Timothy von Icarus

    Can you say some more about that?
  • The Mind-Created World
    suppose we found that specific patterns of brain activity in Yo-Yo Ma’s brain reliably correlate with his playing Bach’s Cello Suite No. 1. This finding wouldn’t be surprising, given his years of training and expertise. Although that information would presumably be useful for understanding the effects of musical training and expert performance on the brain, it would tell us very little about music, let alone Bach. On the contrary, you need to understand music, the cello, and Bach to understand the significance of the neural patterns. — Why I am Not a Buddhist, Evan Thompson
  • The Mind-Created World
    Wayfarer is not going to attack you physically, by sending bullets over the internet. Instead, he could affect you metaphysically, by causing you to believe that you have been psychically injured (offended).Gnomon

    Correct. To physically affect someone would be to give them a drug or injure them, as you say. But if you say something that annoys them - I do this a lot! - then the causation is on the level of meaning. 'Why did he say that?' 'How could he think that?' These are active on the level of meaning, but which may have physical consequences. It's an example of top-down causation. (I often think about the placebo effect in this context, another example of top-down causation, as according to physicalism, it really ought not to happen.)

    The meaning arises as a brain (containing neural networks trained to recognize the written language the book is written in) detects patterns in the writing which are associated by that brain with the meaning that arises.wonderer1

    'Arises' from what, exactly? What is the nature of the causal relationship? If meaning arises purely from physical causation, as described by physical and chemical laws, how to account for the gap between these deterministic processes and the open-ended, adaptive nature of life? Even rudimentary organisms exhibit an agency and intentionality absent in inorganic matter—the ability to heal, reproduce, evolve, and maintain homeostasis. From the moment life begins, biological systems exhibit a kind of semiotic agency that transcends the deterministic causal nexus of physics and chemistry. Life doesn't defy physical laws, but requires principles that can't be reduced to that level of explanation. Recognition of this is one of the drivers behind the emergence of biosemiotics, and of the connection between information and biology, none of which is strictly physicalist, although it falls within the ambit of an evolving naturalism. That's the sense in which biology is evolving beyond physicalism, as physics did with the advent of quantum mechanics. And all the same questions apply to the relatonship of neurobiology and semantics.

    refs: From Physical Causes to Organisms of Meaning, Steve Talbott

    What is Information?, Marcello Barbieri
  • Suggestions
    Perhaps 'canonical texts' might be the description. Might help to narrow it to pre 20th century as there is such a proliferation of sources nowadays.
  • What would an ethical policy toward Syria look like?
    When listening to Tulsi, she is the best thing ever that could happen to Putin, especially if she will lead the US intelligence community.ssu

    Her confirmation hearings will be wild. She should go on a double ticket with Kash Patel. ‘The enemy within’ will be more than Trumpian hyperbole, although of course, he will be responsible for it.
  • The Mind-Created World
    Don't you see something wrong with this?

    How then does a whirl of particles inside a head - which is all that a brain is— — Greene

    All of Greene's books, of which I've read The Fabric of the Universe, consist of paper and ink. Is that all they are? How does the meaning they convey arise from the combination of ink and paper?

    The 'all it is', is physicalist reductionism (i.e. 'it's nothing but....') Even worse, Greene, a physicist, knows that it's not even strictly correct to describe atoms as 'particles'. They are particles in some contexts, and waves in others. In others again, they're described as the excitations of fields, and the nature of fields is far from obvious.
  • The Mind-Created World
    Seems to me that attitude refects nothing other than your own prejudices.Janus

    Never! :yikes:
  • The Mind-Created World
    Do you think we can demonstrate that feelings are not the product of physical events?Tom Storm


    What is 'physical event'? There's not much use saying that it's neural or neurological, because there's no reason to believe that neuroscience ought to be necessarily physicalist. Some well-known neuroscientists, including Wilder Penfield and John Eccles, have published books against it. One of the canonical books on the subject,The Philosophical Foundations of Neuroscience, Hacker and Bennett, comes out strongly against materialist philosophy of mind (and Bennett was a neuroscientist, Hacker being a philosopher). Besides, in what sense is the brain a physical organ? It's an object of study for neuroscience, but the brain in situ is embedded in an organism, in an environment, in a culture. What does it mean to say that it's physical? That it falls at the same rate as other objects if you drop it? Other than that, it simply means commitment to materialism as a philosophy or metaphysic.

    'Physical events', then, ought to be considered as those events that can be described in terms of physics and arguably chemistry. That's what materialists are committed to defending. But

    The really hard problem of consciousness is the problem of experience. When we think and perceive, there is a whir of information-processing, but there is also a subjective aspect. As Nagel (1974) has put it, there is something it is like to be a conscious organism. This subjective aspect is experience. When we see, for example, we experience visual sensations: the felt quality of redness, the experience of dark and light, the quality of depth in a visual field. Other experiences go along with perception in different modalities: the sound of a clarinet, the smell of mothballs. Then there are bodily sensations, from pains to orgasms; mental images that are conjured up internally; the felt quality of emotion, and the experience of a stream of conscious thought. What unites all of these states is that there is something it is like to be in them. All of them are states of experience.David Chalmers, Facing Up to the Problem of Consciousness

    It's not even clear what Janus is arguing about. For instance:

    Sure we enjoy drinking the beer or whatever, sometimes more sometimes less consciously. Drinking the beer may initiate feelings in the body that we can be more or less aware of. I don't see any reason to think machines have such experiences. The redundant feature is that these feelings are reified as a kind of entity we call qualia, which are over and above the drinking of the beer or whatever.Janus

    Here, it is acknowledged that machines don't have 'such' experiences, although really a machine doesn't have any experiences, and nowadays we have machines that are smart enough to tell you that (as I've already demonstrated).

    But then:

    I'm not saying that our feelings and creative imagination have no value but that there seems no substantive reason to believe they are not real, physical, neuronal, endocrinal and bodily processes.Janus

    So, here, 'real' is said to be physical, neuronal, endicronal. We can take it that all of those are metabolic processes. But again, that is no answer to Chalmer's challenge - he would not deny that feelings have physical correlates or give rise to metabolic processes, as I've already acknowledged. But that as they occur within or to subjects as qualities of experience, then no objective description of metabolic processes can capture their first-person nature. And that is indeed a 'substantive' reason.

    (his?)Patterner

    :up:

    I'll add that the reason that this argument can even be entertained, is because being - the being that you are, and I am - is never an object of consciousness. You can never find it in the natural world, nor in the discoveries of the natural sciences, because it is that which discovers, it is the subject of experience, not an object of analysis. It can be debated only because we ourselves are beings. But if asked to prove or show what being is, then we cannot, for those very reasons.

    I have the feeling, from what small amounts of Heidegger I've read, that this is something he would concur with, as he wrote extensively on the 'forgetting of being', and I think this is what he was talking about.
  • The Mind-Created World
    No, mainly on account of the kinds of things they post.
  • The Mind-Created World
    ‘Materialism is the philosophy of the subject who forgets himself’~ Arthur Schopenhauer
  • The Mind-Created World
    I have no emotional investment in believing what I believe.Janus

    Right, and furthermore, as you also often say, it doesn’t matter anyway.
  • The Mind-Created World
    I'm afraid I still disagree. Intentional activities, interpretations and affects can all be understood to be neuronal processesJanus

    Well, as you never tire of telling me, people tend to believe what suits them. And just because something can be described as 'neurological' doesn't mean that it's wholly physical, unless you're into neural reductionism, which you may well be.
  • The Mind-Created World
    That's why I deliberately called it out. We're having a debate about whether 'qualia' are real or not. Janus is saying that they are not, they make no difference or have no significance. So I put the 'thought-experiment' to ChatGPT because by definition, an AI system lack qualia or subjectivity. The excerpt I quoted was illustrative of that point. I thought that would be regarded as fair use in the context.

    Anyway - the point is made, I'll remove the text and refer to the link.
  • The Mind-Created World
    But, as you well know, that would be described as an intentional activity, revolving entirely around interpretation of meaning, and how that would affect you. As I'm sure you are doing now, as you already said earlier in the thread that you experience 'frustration and impatience' in some of the discussions. They too are not physical states, although they have physical correlates. None of what you're describing can be reduced to, or explained in terms of, physics or physical mechanisms. It would require analysis in terms of linguistics, semiotics, and psychosomatic medicine. The letters and binary code may be physical, but their meaning is not, nor their effects.

    I haven't spoken with ChatGPT in more than a year.Patterner

    Well, just for a lark, I asked ChatGPT about whether it is possible to detect the physical correlates of emotional states, such as anxiety, and whether it might be possible to devise an AI system which could derive such results all by itself, both of which questions it answered in the affirmative. (You can review the interaction here.)
  • The Mind-Created World
    What effects do you think our (purported) experience of qualia has over and above the effects of the neuronal and bodily processes which seem almost unquestionably to give rise to it?Janus

    I could say something to you right now which would raise your blood pressue and affect your adrenal glands. And in so doing, nothing physical would have passed between us.
  • The Mind-Created World
    Discussion of qualia and the nature and significance of subjectivity are subjects for the numerous threads on David Chalmers and the 'hard problem'.
  • Exploring the artificially intelligent mind of GPT4
    The thought does cross my mind that the chatbots you interact with respond to your recondite philosophical questions with considerably more depth and subtlety than would many of our esteemed contributors ;-)
  • The Nihilsum Concept
    It’s taken some doing!
  • The Mind-Created World
    Despite what some Westerners like to believe, Buddhism is not a philosophy and is not intended to be discussed at philosophy forums, in the manner of Western secular academia.baker

    Says you, who just this minute has pasted an entire paragraph from the Pali texts into another thread.

    I don’t see any ‘bad blood’. Hostile reactions are only to be expected when people’s instinctive sense of reality is called into question. I know mine is a minority position but that in itself gives me no concern.
  • The Nihilsum Concept
    One area would be the idea of prime matter as sheer, indeterminate potency with no actuality, no eidos (form), and thus absolutely lacking in any intelligible whatness (quiddity)Count Timothy von Icarus

    Perhaps that’s a precursor for what was to become the ding an sich of Kant (I don’t know if that’s a recognised theory.) The many arguments I’m having about idealism revolve around the idea that in the absence of the order which an observing mind brings to bear, nothing exists as such. Not that it doesn’t exist, but there is no ‘it’ which either exists or doesn’t exist. The delineation of forms and the differentiation of things and features one from another is what ‘existence’ means, it is the order that ‘brings things into existence’, so to speak. (For which the ‘observer problem’ is an exact analogy.)
  • The Mind-Created World
    But unless one is enlightened, one cannot talk about these things with any kind of integritybaker

    My reference to Buddhism was in respect of a glossary term in Buddhist lexicon which was relevant to the question. I’m not ‘offering teachings’ or putting myself up as enlightened. This is a philosophy forum, and this thread a discussion of a philosophical topic, if it makes you uncomfortable then perhaps you shouldn’t involve yourself.
  • The Nihilsum Concept
    The "Nihilsum" represents a state that defies conventional logic by existing in a realm between what we establish as being and non-being. It cannot be fully categorized as something or nothing; it is also the absence of either.mlles

    Aristotle beat you to it.

    Quantum math is notorious for incorporating multiple possibilities for the outcomes of measurements. So you shouldn’t expect physicists to stick to only one explanation for what that math means. ... One of the latest interpretatations appeared recently (September 13 2017) online at arXiv.org...

    In the new paper, three scientists argue that including “potential” things on the list of “real” things can avoid the counterintuitive conundrums that quantum physics poses. It is perhaps less of a full-blown interpretation than a new philosophical framework for contemplating those quantum mysteries. At its root, the new idea holds that the common conception of “reality” is too limited. By expanding the definition of reality, the quantum’s mysteries disappear. In particular, “real” should not be restricted to “actual” objects or events in spacetime. Reality ought also be assigned to certain possibilities, or “potential” realities, that have not yet become “actual.” These potential realities do not exist in spacetime, but nevertheless are “ontological” — that is, real components of existence.

    “This new ontological picture requires that we expand our concept of ‘what is real’ to include an extra-spatiotemporal domain of quantum possibility,” write Ruth Kastner, Stuart Kauffman and Michael Epperson.

    Considering potential things to be real is not exactly a new idea, as it was a central aspect of the philosophy of Aristotle, 24 centuries ago. An acorn has the potential to become a tree; a tree has the potential to become a wooden table. Even applying this idea to quantum physics isn’t new. Werner Heisenberg, the quantum pioneer famous for his uncertainty principle, considered his quantum math to describe potential outcomes of measurements of which one would become the actual result. The quantum concept of a “probability wave,” describing the likelihood of different possible outcomes of a measurement, was a quantitative version of Aristotle’s potential, Heisenberg wrote in his well-known 1958 book Physics and Philosophy. “It introduced something standing in the middle between the idea of an event and the actual event, a strange kind of physical reality just in the middle between possibility and reality.”
    Quantum Mysteries Dissolve if Possibilities are Realities

    If you think about it, the same general logic applies to the 'domain of possibility'. At any given time, in any situation, there is a finite but incalculable number of possible outcomes. All of those are real in one sense, but not existent, by definition, and ultimately only one of them becomes actual. Which is pretty well the same thing that happens in observations in quantum physics.
  • The Mind-Created World
    But do you believe I can find in your critical comments something more insightful than the willful non-engagement I've found in Strawson, Nagel, Searle, etc.?goremand

    They're all different. We've had debates here about Strawson's panpsychism, which I've never agreed with. I think he tries to rescue materialism by injecting matter with some kind of 'secret sauce'. The same goes for Philip Goff. (Actually, Goff once signed up for this forum, purely to respond to my criticism of one of his articles, which I was chuffed by.) Searle, I've only ever read the Chinese Room argument, but I think it stacks up. As for Thomas Nagel, he's been a pretty vociferous critic of Dennett. But the best overall take-down is The Illusionist, David Bentley Hart, in The New Atlantis, in which he says some of Dennett's arguments are 'so preposterous as to verge on the deranged' (although a close runner-up would be The God Genome by Leon Wieseltier, a review of one of his books).
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    "Our immensely sophisticated hominid forebrain generates the world in which there is space, time, and perspective", then there is an immensely sophisticated hominid forebrain, logically prior to there being a generated world. I can't imagine how you could reconcile these two things. The brain is a part of the world it supposedly produces.Banno

    That is indeed the 'strange loop': logical priority is a product of the brain, which in turn is a product of evolution.

    270px-DrawingHands.jpg

    Because you understand temporal sequence, you can imagine a world that would exist as if there were no observer in it - but that still is dependent on the mind. That's what I mean (and Husserl means) by 'implicit perspective'. 'Before man' or 'before I was born' are still mind-dependent. We can talk about them because we both possess the conceptual and linguistic resources within which it's meaningful to do so. But to us, the world is idea - not in the sense of representative realism, where the idea 'represents' but is separate from 'the object'. The whole process of the understanding comprises assimilating percepts and concepts into coherent wholes which are ideas (gestalts in Pinter's book). We believe that all of that would continue to exist outside that process, but being outside that process is, to all intents, being unconscious (or dead) - so we don't really know. As long as we're alive, that is what the mind is doing. We're not seeing it from no perspective, as it really would be with no observer in it, because then it wouldn't have any form, scale or perspective. It would not be a world. Which is not the same as saying that it would pass out of existence or that everything would dissappear.

    See Schopenhauer’s Idealism: How Time Began with the First Eye Opening.

    They first set up the objective/subjective dichotomy and then ignore half of it.Banno

    That is not inconsequential, I think it's a factor of considerable importance. That is the hallmark of the modern era beginning with Descartes. The very word 'objectivity' only came into use in the early modern period. And scientific naturalism has tended - I use past tense, because it is changing - to try to analyse everything from 'the view from nowhere' as Nagel says in his book.
  • What's happening in South Korea?
    This is no longer a country where belief in democracy prevails.frank

    alternatively, the voters don't really understand what is at stake. There is after all unprecedented amounts of misinformation and commercially-sponsored state propaganda, to all intents and purposes. Turns out you can fool most of the people, most of the time.
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    The part on which it seems we disagree is that since not just any understanding will do, there is something else that places restrictions on the understanding we construct.Banno

    It is determined by both external and internal factors. There are definitely 'facts of the matter' as I've acknowledged.

    I'm considering the idea that while there are inummerable objective facts, the existence of the world is not one of them. Our immensely sophisticated hominid forebrain generates the world in which there is space, time, and perspective, and within which individual particulars have features, location, composition, and the other attributes.

    The complaint I have is against those philosophies that seek explanation only in objective terms, as they don't take the role of the mind (or brain) into account in what they consider to be real. The self-other division is implicit in all objective philosophies, but it is not acknowledged. It is, as Schopenhauer says, the philosophy of the subject who forgets himself.

    This is the background to that exclamatory statement in the Critique of Pure Reason, 'take away the thinking subject, and the whole world must vanish'. Your instinctive response to that is 'tosh' - and I really do understand that. It sounds utterly outlandish or fantastic in isolation. But taken against the background of the rest of the critique, it is compatible with the overall insight of the constructive role of the mind in the world.*

    Without that initial construction, 'gold, 'boorara' and 'exists' would all be meaningless noises. There would be no locations, no objects, nothing to speak of whatever.

    I've been reading up on Hilary Putnam, who is referred to in the SEP article. HIs focus is narrower but not entirely incompatible: that the same phenomena can be explained in different and even incommensurable terms. He gives examples from mathematics, logic and science.

    For Putnam, metaphysical realism boils down to the idea that the facts of the world (or the truth of propositions) are fixed by something mind-independent and language-independent. As a consequence of this idea, Putnam suggests that the Metaphysical Realist is committed to the existence of a unique correspondence between statements in a language or theory and a determinate collection of mind and language-independent objects in the world. Such talk of correspondence between facts and objects, Putnam argues, presupposes that we find ourselves in possession of a fixed metaphysically-privileged notion of ‘object’. Since it is precisely this possibility of dictating a right notion of concepts such as ‘individual’ and ‘object’ that Putnam takes the phenomenon of conceptual relativity to undermine, he naturally concludes that conceptual relativity presents a deep and insurmountable challenge to Metaphysical Realism.Hilary Putnam and Conceptual Relativity, Travis McKenna

    ----

    *I have briefly perused Bounds of Sense in the past, but I understand Strawson's critics (e.g. Henry Allison) to be saying that his analysis flattens out or naturalises Kant and in effect discards the baby with the bathwater.
  • What's happening in South Korea?
    this conversation is drifting towards The Trump Thread, although that thread is of course ghosted by our own dedicated MAGA fanatic.
  • What's happening in South Korea?
    I'm still hopeful that American democracy will hold, although of course it's still day -44. But when DJT begins to try and enact his revenge and deportation agendas, and dismantle environmental protections - that's when we'll see.
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    As asked previously, where do you differ with the SEP description? ‘According to metaphysical realism, the world is as it is independent of how humans...take it to be. The objects the world contains, together with their properties and the relations they enter into, fix the world’s nature and these objects [together with the properties they have and the relations they enter into] exist independently of our ability to discover they do. Unless this is so, metaphysical realists argue, none of our beliefs about our world could be objectively true since true beliefs tell us how things are and beliefs are objective when true or false, independently of what anyone might think.’ Doesn’t the ‘there is gold at Boroora’ argument fall under this heading?
  • The Mind-Created World
    I'd love to read an attack on physicalism, especially of the eliminativist varietygoremand

    I have a long history of posting critical comments about Daniel Dennett, who is the main representative of eliminative materialism.

    Bernardo Kastrup is strident in his criticism of materialism, with titles such as Materialism is Baloney. But he’s not well-regarded on this forum either, the consensus being in threads posted in years past that he’s dismissed as an eccentric or a crank. I don’t in the least agree with that description, but I also mention him only sparingly from time to time.
  • Is the distinction between metaphysical realism & anti realism useless and/or wrong
    who introduced "If everything remains undisturbed then there will be Gold", quoting someone else.Banno

    You’re referring to the abstract of the introduction of Pinter’s book Mind and the Cosmic Order, which I quoted, which says in the early Universe, ‘There is no human or animal eye to cast a glance at objects, hence nothing is discerned, recognized or even noticed. Objects in the unobserved universe have no shape, color or individual appearance, because shape and appearance are created by minds.’ When intelligent life evolves, then it will discover that gold is amongst the constituents of the Earth. I don’t read that as supporting metaphysical realism.
  • In defence of the Principle of Sufficient Reason
    Mind or nous as the governing principle, arranging things according to what is best, is not the same as a world governed by reason.

    For Aristotle, the question of the intelligibility of the natural world faces two problems, the arche or source of the whole and tyche or chance. We have no knowledge of the source and what happens by chance or accident does not happen according to reason.
    Fooloso4

    Thanks, interesting distinctions. Tyche shows up as Pierce’s ‘tychism’ which I too believe is intrinsic to the order of things.
  • What's happening in South Korea?
    So the positive side here might be the democratic system in South Korea prevailed. At least for now.ssu

    It seems to have.