It means what it says. — Wayfarer
There is a fundamental sense in which reality is constructed by the brain/mind on the basis of sense data, but also on the basis of our intellectual and even biological faculties. — Wayfarer
So you are arguing against the principle of indifference by telling me all about how you personally choose to apply it. Congrats. — apokrisis
Right. So as I was saying about the principle of indifference.... — apokrisis
Reality appears composed of concrete particulars. But the emphasis is on appears. It isn’t really. — apokrisis
your ontology of vagueness — Metaphysician Undercover
How are we to distinguish between a memory of past experience and an imagination thereof? — creativesoul
I think that attempting to qualify knowledge as direct and/or indirect is useless. — creativesoul
If direct knowledge is everything I have experienced in the past, then what would indirect knowledge be? — creativesoul
Sometimes differences don’t make a difference. And that is determined by the context. — apokrisis
All real things are never absolutely the same, nor absolutely different. They are just relatively alike or relatively unalike. — apokrisis
We don't see the world directly — apokrisis
I agree. Though I understand the practical and emotional reasons for seeking this mechanism. — 0rff
I suspect that we are all reductionists whether we like or not, but I like philosophy that strives against our tendency to clamp down on a particular mechanism. — 0rff
As usual, you missed the fact you also had to mention the "you" that has "the experience". — apokrisis
OK, I hear your assertion and await the supporting counter-argument. What could be more accurate than saying the past constrains the future? — apokrisis
It is inaccurate to say the past absolutely determines the future - that there is no actual quantum grain of free spontaneity. — apokrisis
And it would be even more inaccurate to say the past leaves the future completely undetermined, or radically free and spontaneous. On the whole - as you agree about stability - the future seems pretty classically predictable. — apokrisis
So why is my constraints-based view of causality incorrect when - strictly speaking - it covers both the classical determinism and the quantum indeterminism? — apokrisis
How is it sufficiently stable? — apokrisis
So now you show you don't get that to be constrained just means to be constrained, not to be determined?
Saying the past shapes the possibilities of the future is quite different from saying the past determines the future. — apokrisis
My point was that constraints-based causal thinking works better than talk about absolute laws or mechanical determinism. So my stress is on the evidence for a fundamental indeterminism in nature - the quantum facts. And then how that gets resolved by a constraints-based or contextual understanding of why the world seems classically determined on the whole. Classical regularity and predictability emerges due to large numbers and an emergent regularity that is probabilistic. — apokrisis
Well duh. Why is it sufficiently stable? Has change been regulated by a past that is an absolutely stable context? — apokrisis
Better yet, can you transform Evolutionary Biology into data sets? I'd love to see how natural selection falls out of that. — Marchesk
Then scientists are dogmatists and absolutists, because they certainly go beyond brute particulars just happening to behave a certain way to overarching theories explaining how living things came to exist, or starsy formed, or how stellar fusion results in heavier elements, which gravity acts upon to form rocky planets and so on. — Marchesk
Of course the past constrains the future in terms of what is possible. If you break your leg, you won't be running any races. History is the accumulation of a whole lot of events that limit the scope of the future in a definite way. — apokrisis
Right, but the point was that Kant saw a big problem with Hume's view of causation, which was that it led to widespread skepticism, and made science impossible. — Marchesk
Or to show how correlation differs from causation. — Marchesk
It's not that there are brute particulars that happen to always behave a certain way, it's that all the particulars are related in a way that necessitates their common behavior. And that's why physics has been so successful in unifying phenomena, such as electricity and magnetism. — Marchesk
In short, there are fundamental underlying relationships to the cosmos that explain the observed regularities. — Marchesk
I declare to the love of my life that she is the love of my life for the sole purpose of manipulating her mind into believing and/or knowing it, because she doesn't.
According to your (mis)conception of what counts as a lie, I am lying... — creativesoul
Assuming sincerity, a speaker believes what they say. An insincere speaker does not. The former is honest, and the latter is not. The former is not lying, the latter is.
It's that simple. — creativesoul
History has a way of constraining possibility. — apokrisis
So it is true that the world seems to be fundamentally causal in this fashion. We can describe some general law that must be obeyed by every particular material event. Regularity gets locked in by a context. — apokrisis
However physics also now tells us that at the fundamental level - once history and context have been stripped away - then action seems to become a-causal or indeterministic. — apokrisis
So this does not support what you call a Humean view of causation - that it could all be just one mass of amazing coincidences. — apokrisis
That still doesn't answer the question as to why the sun would rise hundreds of billions of times in a row. — Marchesk
The claims is that there is no reason for the sun to continue to shine, it just does. — Marchesk
This is at odds with scientific explanation, which posits reasons why the sun shines, and thus it's perfectly valid for us to expect it to continue to do so. — Marchesk
This isn't because of habit, it's because of gravity and nuclear physics. — Marchesk
I find this view of causality to be extremely impoverished. — Marchesk
Thus Wittgenstein/Hume can preserve necessity (if B does end up always following A), while not introducing any mysterious causality. That sounds absurd. — Marchesk
Let's take a gander at our respective notions of a lie. On my view, a lie is a deliberate misrepresentation of what one thinks/believes. That is the criterion, which when met, that counts as being a lie. I compare/contrast that to being honest, which is to not misrepresent what one thinks/believes. More simply put, a liar does not believe what they say, and an honest speaker does. It could also be talked about in terms os being a sincere speaker and/or being an insincere speaker. Speaking sincerely is precisely what one is doing when they're being honest, and vice-versa.
So... that's my take. What about yours? What exactly is the criterion, which when met, that counts as being a lie, and moreover how does it relate to being honest? — creativesoul
Democracy is a system where the people are in power. — Zoneofnonbeing