The "constraints" of the system, but then order takes shape, but then this creates the ultimate disorder of NO JUSTIFICATION. — schopenhauer1
There is no justification for why we must do anything, yet we act as if we do! — schopenhauer1
When meaning itself can not be justified, yet we "fear" the consequences of this or that, something went askew. — schopenhauer1
It all goes back to the Zapffe's break in nature. Talk about a break in symmetry! Humans have created a huge asymmetry. — schopenhauer1
That's right. But in the current lexicon, 'existence' is a univocal term - something either exists or it doesn't. — Wayfarer
But don't you think the requirement for there to be an argument for the indispensability mathematics says something? What makes it necessary to defend mathematical insight? Don't you think this is an ideological argument? — Wayfarer
But surely if you are into Hegel, you can’t have got anywhere without understanding how his triadic system describes logic as the holist would see it? — apokrisis
:up:This is standard social psychology. Not at all peculiar. How else could it have been? — apokrisis
Why would it be that one of the purportedly major 20th c philosophers wants to 'avoid any appeal to rational insight?' — Wayfarer
You see molecules, neurons, laws of the universe, thermodynamics, information. But none of it get at it. They are great for explaining p-zombies though. — schopenhauer1
Was it merely empirical for Darwin to recognise that evolution is the inevitable shaping hand of nature? — apokrisis
:up:But he's one hell of an entertainer and one hell of a psychologist. — Baden
He explodes and gives us the fragments. Some of them are lovely, others hideous. He reminds me of Hamlet, poisoned and poisonous and yet transcendent.I like reading Nietzsche better than I like Nietzsche I think. — Baden
I get the impression, having read a biography, he was overcompensating for his own social inadequacies and taking out his frustration on some easy targets at times. — Baden
I believe it was Quine who called the whole notion into question, saying that there is no clear boundary between what we can know a priori and what we can know based on experience. Rather, all of our knowledge is interconnected, and any belief can potentially be revised in light of new evidence. — Wayfarer
My problem with that is, well, pure maths, for starters. — Wayfarer
In physical Reality, everything is Particular, except that rational minds somehow "see" General (holistic) patterns, known as "Universals" & "Principles". — Gnomon
But where did those rules-for-Reason come from? — Gnomon
This one won't work for me.
The Second Law is simply a globally inevitable tendency or propensity. But recognising this as telos at its simplest possible level is still recognising that it is a universal drive that causes order in the Cosmos. — apokrisis
The point here is for the scientist to accept all four of Aristotle's causes and not pretend nature is reducible to just bottom-up construction by localised material and efficient causes. — apokrisis
We will need to rely on natural expressions and reactions to particular situations that humans typically harmonize to develop this concept of pain. — Richard B
The self is this side of our senses, and society is the other side of our senses. — RussellA
Also consider the fact that any explicitly defined linguistic convention can only be finitely specified, implying that there is always uncertainty as to the intended meaning of a convention. — sime
If meaning is considered to be use, as Humpty is suggesting, then how can meaning-as-use be grounded in linguistic convention? — sime
but working together to see the breadth of our world in openly, seriously "producing" the terms the other is using, by creating examples and imagining a context where they are valid (as pointed out by plaque flag); to, as Socrates says, stand in the other's place, their shoes. I take this "unfolding", as you say, of our unexamined (shared) lives as the purpose and skill of the philosopher — Antony Nickles
And then the Second Law was shown to be a special case of the more general thing of dissipative structure - at least in my view. — apokrisis
Consciousness is loaded jargon. It speaks to a Cartesian substance. — apokrisis
Yorck understands religious life in terms of its “freedom from the world” or Weltfreiheit (ST, p. 81 & 112). Psychologically, freedom from the world is the precondition for the consciousness of a world-transcendent God, or the consciousness of transcendence (ST, p. 105). — plaque flag
That life is historical means that each person is always already outside his or her own individual “nature” and placed within the historical connection to predecessor- and successor-generations. For Yorck, living self-consciousness is, to use Hegel's fortuitous phrase, “the I that is we and the we that is I” (Hegel 1807, p. 140). — plaque flag
I also find much resonance in the project to integrate ethics into the understanding of language, something I have been incoherently banging on about for some time. — unenlightened
The idea of the language game - the use of it, must be to communicate the truth and not to deceive, in the sense that though the business of a stick insect is to project "I am a stick", the business of the predator is not at all to understand, but to see through the visual claim. — unenlightened
"Naturalism" to my understanding is a position that denies the meaning of its name, in the sense that the claim his that everything is natural and there is nothing unnatural or supernatural. This reflects the sad fact that one needs ones' enemies to maintain one's identity. — unenlightened
Suppose there is someone who has lived their life alone on a desert island. — RussellA
My question is, where exactly is this public concept of pain, if neither of the individuals has the private concept of pain ? — RussellA
The idea that more than any other animal we live in a symbolic realm is something a supporter of Indirect Realism would say, something that I would say. — RussellA
I can't help but hold the view that reality is an act of constructionism - we can't identify absolute truth (which is likely a remnant of Greek philosophy and Christianity) and philosophical positions we might hold appear to be culturally located. This does not feel especially wise or clever to me. — Tom Storm
If you are interested, Brandom is great on Hegel (and it address what's above.)But in the end, we can only converge on a pragmatically “good enough” agreement in our collective behaviour. There is always a “residue” that is left vague and unspecified. — apokrisis
What is “fundamental” is the whole triadic shebang of the Peircean system. Holism says self organisation supplies it own ground of being. — apokrisis
What do you think Hegel was trying to argue? — apokrisis