Why do you keep referring to it? — unenlightened
" :fire: " usually means I find the quote or entire post illuminating — 180 Proof
I didn't read it that way. The OP states the supernatural is an empty useless term, but the existence of the supernatural isn't necessary for the term to have meaning or use. — Hanover
If the world consists entirely of X and only X and we speak of there being exactly two categories of X, X(a) and X(b — Hanover
:fire: — 180 Proof
I learned everything I know about prehistory from the Flintstones. Yabba Dabba Do — Clarky
I'm an engineer with a strong interest in science. That has a lot to do with my interest in philosophy. — Clarky
Unless you are very unusual, perhaps unique, you don't examine every fact rationally and test if for validity. You make assumptions, listen to what other people tell you, follow your intuition. While I think intuition ultimately comes from experience, in my experience it and it's contents are not rational or logical. — Clarky
Ohh, no, it is everything but the scientific method. It is a version of scholasticism — Tobias
However what I will not do to substantiate the common expected reasonable conduct norm, is to ask 10.000 people what they think in this case reasonable conduct would be — Tobias
But metaphysics as a term for 'the search for the supernatural' has really nothing to do with philosophy. — Tobias
What I use the example for is to show you made a metaphysical move, namely reduce all our knowledge to physical knowledge and all 'science' to the positivistic natural sciences, whereas in law we deal with a normative science (or art, the judgment is still out) which is not (and arguably cannot be) conducted with the same natural scientific concepts. — Tobias
The judgment that we o ultimately displays the metaphysical assumptions inherent in law, that people have a choice to open or close the tap, that if they possess a modicum of rationality, they should figure out the concsequences, that the world is not a deterministic place because otherwise it would not make sense to hold people morally culpable on normative grounds, but only on utilitarian grounds etc. — Tobias
Therefore you are wrong because you limit supernatural to undiscovered natural without knowing the limits of natural, no? — SpaceDweller
We don't know such is impossible because we can even clearly define what such IS yet.but we know it's impossible to reach the ends of the universe and fathom beyond smallest thing which is singularity. — SpaceDweller
Your statement here is performative contradiction. Go and ask your bank what it means to have nothing in your account, and they will explain it to you. — unenlightened
Yes, correct! Including all knowledge that humans have yet to discover!So if the supernatural does not exist, it seems to follow that everything is natural. — unenlightened
This just seems like desperation to hold on to your own attraction to or need for the supernatural.Saying 'everything is natural' is equivalent to saying 'everything is', and the term 'natural' adds nothing, because it has no meaning. But you continue to use the term as if you are saying something profound, and as you say, deeply felt. It's not your fault, it's the result of the religious thinking out of which science was born and which it now usurps without much understanding. — unenlightened
This is called 'agnosticism', and allows you to be sceptical of other folk's claims about the supernatural and yet keep the meaning of the natural world coherent. — unenlightened
Yes, but that one decision does not come about williy nilly. It is not solely my decision. There are procedures I follow. I check the legislation, I check jurisprudence and I read up on the opinion of the authors in cases alike. If I am feeling very meticulous I might even look up the opinions of courts in other jurisdictions. I read up on the state of the art concerning standards of care and try to gauge the meaning of the legislators behind the article at stake. I present my opinion not as my gut feeling but as informed legal judgment, the steps of which everyone can follow. — Tobias
There are however metaphysical assumptions made in law. For instance that I should follow the supreme court's judgments. (Not mandatory in NL though, but still often done) That I should care about what learned scholars had to say about such a matter. That the goal of the legislator can be deduced from the parliamentary documents. Moreover law also assumes people have a choice in doing what they do and so are liable for tort when they make a choice that harms others. Those are a lot of assumptions revealing the rationalistic metaphysics behind law. — Tobias
Yet... reformulating the problem in physical terms brings me nowhere. That shows that metaphysics cannot be reduced to physics. There is more to 'being' than mere particles moving about. The humanities may not be capturable in your physicalist metaphysics. That is: what a thing is, is perhaps not ultimately decided upon by the matter it is made of — Tobias
Tom storm and universeness suffer from enlightenment. It's highly infectious and most people here have it. — unenlightened
What a bizarre and somewhat illogical concoction.The ancient regime had a triple concept at its root of God, Man, and Nature. (Or the supernatural, the human, and the natural.) Having a three legged philosophy is always a good idea for stability, — unenlightened
Thus if 'supernatural' refers to nothing, 'natural' refers to everything, and both terms lose their meaning — unenlightened
Everyone knows dinosaurs were the biggest threat to humans. — Clarky
We differ. I disagree with each point, but let's not let a little thing like faith come between us — Tom Storm
We know countless things like "Paris is the capital of France", — Janus
Well yes, but knowing that brain activity is neurons firing and all kinds of cellular activity simply does not tell me whether I should rule that Mrs S needs to compensate Mr P for the damages she has caused by leaving a tab running. — Tobias
Very little of what we know is based on "studied empirical evidence." — Clarky
I generally agree. Personally I would never use the word faith to describe reasonable actions taken in the world. When I catch a plane or go travelling I don't base the decision on faith but a 'reasonable confidence' that the plans will work out and the plane won't crash. This is a rational position based on the fact that travel and planes generally work safely. Faith, on the other hand, is an excuse for believing something when there is no good reason — Tom Storm
It follows then that a word like faith should not be left solely in the hands of theism.I certainly don't want to leave language about spirituality in the sole hands of science. — Clarky
Metaphysics is commonly used as a synonym for supernatural or religious. I don't really like that, so I try to avoid the discussion because I don't think it is easily resolvabl — Clarky
Your post for instance contains hidden assumptions, for instance you equate knowledge with the physical world. However when I want to enlarge my legal knowledge, physics does not bring me much. — Tobias
I'm with universeness. The scientific method isn't science, it's metaphysics. — Clarky
People with mystical leanings, of which I am one, have as much right to use the English language as anyone else. The way they use it is as legitimate as any other. I certainly don't want to leave language about spirituality in the sole hands of science. On the other hand, yes, we should be clear about what we mean by the words we use — Clarky
Well, you agreed with 'overburdened,' which was the extent I was suggesting. The quotes just demonstrated a ' wideness of range,' which I thought was enough for illustration purposes.I don't see that any of the posts you've quoted are necessarily inconsistent with each other — Clarky
I tend to see it as the framework for knowledge and understanding, which I guess is what you mean by "beyond" in this context. — Clarky
Meta-physics is reflection on what it means, or what must be the case for it to have the meaning it does, and so on. So for example in current physics, the metaphysical debates revolve around the meaning of quantum physics - what the quanitifiable observations and predictive theories mean about the larger reality, what is implied by the theory. — Wayfarer
As for the supernatural, that's always given me pause when the subject is metaphysics — Clarky
Can you give me an example of a metaphysical principle which is neither true or false?One of the most important ideas for Collingwood, one that I strongly endorse, is that metaphysical principles are not true or false. — Clarky
Do you think the god posit is a metaphysical concept?That works fine for talking about God or gods in general — Clarky
I would not use "reliable" as a test for truth — Jackson
I always find it amusing when people come to a philosophy forum to say physics is really where truth lays — Jackson
The trick of modern physics, energy has inertia, without mass. But we need to be careful not to confuse the inertia pf energy with the inertia of mass. — Metaphysician Undercover
I accept your opinion, as your opinion and I am sure you return that accommodation. But that which manifests in reality and that which are mere manifestations of a curious human imagination regarding that which is currently misunderstood or is currently unknown, should never be conflated.I think you are making the same mistake I already said: — Angelo Cannata
Any material object can be understood in an infinity of ways, from an infinity of perspectives, that make it really infinite. — Angelo Cannata
(To my fallibilist mind, the alternative is to hold all beliefs to at the end of the day be fallible, and thereby remain open to revising them if evidence or reasoning gives warrant to so doing.) — javra
For me, metaphysics is context. — Clarky
Metaphysics, to me, is about how you think about the world. Not in terms of truth, but what kind of thing it is. — Jackson
If you think about your own metaphysical leanings, do you detect emotion? What are they? What are they connected to? — Tate
Kant critiqued metaphysics. But he reduces metaphysics to epistemology. — Jackson
So traditional metaphysics can't be accomodated within that framework, as it's like trying to fit a three-dimensional form into a two-dimensional plane. — Wayfarer
Dawkins and Sheldrake are poles apart. Read about this encounter between them. (I'm a Sheldrake admirer, actually had the good fortune to meet him and hear him speak in the early 90's. Of course he's regarded by establishment science as a maverick and crank, as many of those who argue against scientific materialism are. — Wayfarer
I don't know what you mean by 'massless photonic energy'. Perhaps you mean the radiation (the blue line in the pic. It arguably has mass since it has momentum — noAxioms
It arguably has mass since it has momentum. If it goes into a black hole, it stays there and adds its energy to the black hole's mass. — noAxioms
In inertial coordinates, (in Earth's inertial frame) that galaxy cannot move faster than c (per special relativity) and is moving away from us at about 0.98c. The light we see was emitted from about 6 billion light years (GLY) away, and it is currently about 13.5 GLY away.
In comoving coordinates (an expanding metric), that same galaxy is currently about 31 GLY away, is receding at about 2.3c (technically a rapidity, not a velocity), and the light that we see now was emitted only about 2.5 GLY proper distance from here — noAxioms
Germany was very cruel to Belgium citizens and mistreated or murdered many. — Ken Edwards
