↪Joshs Interesting. Thanks. I kind of missed any exposure to science too, so there's no hope for me — Tom Storm
As someone who is here mainly to see what he may have missed in not reading philosophy what do you think you have gained from all this reading? What were or are you looking for? If it's awareness... what does that mean in practice? — Tom Storm
I had thought that creativesoul was claiming that there were other species who were capable of symbolic langauge, though, which would be something else altogether. — Janus
Only humans, as far as is known, are capable of symbolic language and linguistically mediated thought. — Janus
He provides evidence that Bohr was an entity realist
— Joshs
Could you explain what that means? — frank
It says that and also speculates on “a direct Kantian influence on Bohr”. So it is suggesting both.
— Joshs
Didn't exactly demonstrate that, did it? — frank
That quote isn't saying that Bohr was influenced by Kant. It's just saying people have noticed parallels — frank
The Copenhagen interpretation (especially John von Neumann's view) is not Kant. There is no thing in itself. There is no determinate thing prior to wave function collapse, and we have a clear idea of the math that describes what's there prior to collapse. — frank
Just to clarify, in terms of our folk notions of reality, QM goes far beyond saying that things work differently on a small scale. QM suggests that there is no distinct reality outside measurement events (which don't require consciousness, but human activity is a kind of measurement.)
So when you say physicists are realists, that doesn't necessarily answer the OP. If the OP had some sort of Newtonian picture of the world, then the answer is yes, QM says that a fair portion of that absolute realm is not real. — frank
The world works differently at different scales. Why would we think that wouldn't be true. Different metaphysical regimes apply at different scales. That's the thing about metaphysics - there's not just one appropriate view of reality. The philosophical lesson of QM is that what works at human scale doesn't work at all at nano-scale — T Clark
If you search for "real" in your Schaum's Outline of Quantum Mechanics you will find nothing, save mentions of the real number system. "reality" is in the domain of speculation by both experts and quantum mysticists. — jgill
Human nature more than ever has become more and more susceptible to degrees of corruption that has become so widespread in current society as to be normalised, go uncriticised and go unchecked.
And it’s not just the base vileness of most human beings to be nasty to each other that is the problem it’s the platform to do so in this ever increasing fragmented society. — Deus
Is your first thought aware of itself? Or is your second thought a reflection on your first thought (as mine is).
My feeling is that thought distracts awareness away from the present into the labyrinth of thought — unenlightened
But would you agree that someone like Nietzsche or Kierkegaard , who spent their whole lives with no recognition of their ideas, benefited from the guidance of those ideas as much in isolation as they would have if the ideas had formed the basis of a community paradigm?
— Joshs
You tell me. In what way did they benefit in their isolation? In what way would they have profited more if everyone else had joined them in applying the same existential analysis?
I have so little interest in them that I simply couldn’t even guess. I never saw anything of pragmatic use, although perhaps you mean how their writings function as romantic spectacle or popular entertainment? — apokrisis
↪Joshs You mean can paradigm shifting genius exist? Sure, why not?
But paradigm shifting means bringing the community with you. Otherwise nothing has happened — apokrisis
Positive psychology is about recognising that reaching higher levels of mind is a collaborative enterprise. Team work. A collectively developing community of minds — apokrisis
Everyone becoming their own world is another way of saying the same thing.
And when plurality is taken to its own logical extreme, it becomes wokism. We see the hard, fixed and eternal becoming the enforced collective norm that tolerates no diversity when it comes to its diversity. — apokrisis
I'm talking about those in power, whether in an organization or the whole country. — L'éléphant
Semiosis is the explanation for how such "first person" points of view arise as part of the information economy of a dissipation-driven enterprise. Meaning and value is what emerges as a result of that thermally embodied modelling process. — apokrisis
Peirce already takes us into another world where nothing is eternal and fixed, all is co-emergent and developmental. — apokrisis
The self can seem to exist as it own hard centre of value and meaning. Otherwise how else would Romanticism and PoMo find their claims to metaphysical legitimacy? — apokrisis
There are few who view themselves as explicitly immoral. There is always a way to rationalize. But this fact does not impact the legitimacy of our own judgements of them. — hypericin
Joshs You have to understand that greedy individuals do not try to hide the fact. Arrogance comes with greed. Love of power and wealth with no cap is displayed amongst them. It is understood. But for good PR, of course, they're going to say they're building communities and wealth for everybody. — L'éléphant
You ask rhetorical questions without giving hints as to what I should be contemplating here — Deus
And an example of this is...what? — L'éléphant
My point is that intellect and morality are not intrinsically linked.
The misuse of high IQ for example has produced some of the US most prolific serial killers. — Deus
Good point. It is greed that is one of the big factors of the rationalised and unrationised aspects of ego — Deus
↪Deus Serial killing is not "misuse of high IQ"; that's psychpathy (or antisocial sociopathy) — 180 Proof
Our consciousness is the sum of all four levels of semiosis or self~world making. And each level imposes its own mechanistic kind of measurements on the world — apokrisis
How have you established that you have have a fair interpretation of his choices/situation?
— Tom Storm
What we have is the public, actionable discourse, The stuff philosophy doesn't do. — Banno
How have you established that you have have a fair interpretation of his choices/situation? Is self-medication a reaction to suffering, a form of suffering or something else in your view? — Tom Storm
I have noticed that people who are homeless often have chronic and severe depression - it often presents after becoming homeless (but may also sometimes be a cause of homelessness) and i generally see it as part of the suffering intrinsic to many people's experience of living homeless.
that 'stalled creativity' or frozenness seems to eat people alive and I certainly recognise this in the lives of many folk I have worked with (and colleagues, but that's another story). — Tom Storm
↪Tom Storm The challenges of how one might keep warm and dry living rough present splendid opportunities for creativity, for fresh projects and directions. — Banno
Interesting and I am sympathetic to this view. How do you understand the kinds of suffering generated by abject deprivation or illness - living homeless on the streets with addictions and mental ill health or terminal cancer? — Tom Storm
So the purpose of suffering is to avoid suffering.
— Banno
When we look for meaning in suffering, we are looking for some use in it, are we not? Looking at suffering as a teacher about what not to do seems very practical. — Yohan
You are treating this like some kind of cultural power struggle. But that is a bad lens for understanding the sociology at play in the scientific community. — apokrisis
Mechanics itself needs a proper metaphysical foundation. Atomism was always just the convenient story that fitted with a particular mathematics. — apokrisis
The indirect influence of Kantian Idealism , and more recently, of Hegelian and post-Hegelian metaphysics on the outlook of physicists is what made the formulation of QM possible. This doesnt mean that physicists needed to have read a word of Kant or Hegel , but these ways of organizing the world have slowly made their way into the general culture. Your favorite philosopher , Peirce, who has closely been influenced by both writers, wouldn’t seem to have any trouble in synthesizing classical and quantum models within his metaphysics.
So from my own point of view, my own interests, QM interpretations are a part of that much bigger adventure. Which also drags it back towards metaphysics as the conversation to be had. What ontology can have both the classical and the quantum as its dichotomous faces? — apokrisis
what does it mean that there are a whole bunch of QM interpretations that try to demystify its mathematical success in one way or another?
Well, the thing they all have in common is that they want to assimilate QM to a more familiar everyday metaphysics – the classical view which is founded on determinism, composition and locality.
This simply shows the prevailing metaphysics in scientific circles is out of step with the prevailing physics — apokrisis
Individuals who form unsound beliefs will "disagree" with the sound beliefs. Many of them will try to assert that it is merely a "difference of viewpoints, opinion and outlook" or whatever other disingenuous rationalizations that they may dream up — ThinkOfOne
But it's mainly about outlook. Offering people more experience or information does not suit the case. People may have equal knowledge, experience and information and still disagree. — Cuthbert
. I did not take it as an attack per se, but on one level a very poor response, philosophically/discussion-wise. On another rude. It's as if I didn't write other things which I did write. It took a position and instead of responding to it, plucking one quote out of context as if one is responding to the post — Bylaw
You'll pardon me if I ignore your posts from here on out and also please pardon me for hoping you never end up on any important regulatory body or find work as a debating coach or editor. — Bylaw
OK, I think that was a pretty crappy response. I also said
OK, no one is making a mistake about those
— Bylaw
referring to the neutron bombs. and I also pointed out that they didn't exist. I also mentioned that we are generally dealing with less immediately easy to track effects. — Bylaw
Some of the problems and potential problems with tech and non-neutral humans is not easy to track and predict like loaded guns on the floor of apartments with kids or teenagers being able to order neutron bombs online, say. — Bylaw