Assuming they can stay free of philosophical assumptions. — Marchesk
So basically your criticism is, metaphysics is empty because it’s not physics. — Wayfarer
Fair enough. But that's a fundamental problem, isn't it? We can't even agree on what makes a statement meaningful. I don't know what that means for philosophy and whether we have to nail down a theory of meaning first before having these debates. — Marchesk
And idealist can make this move for experience, but that differs significantly from the move the materialist is making. Let's take the double slit experiment. What does the idealist say? We have two different kinds of experiences depending on how the experiment is setup. What does the materialist say? Well, they come up with things like pilot waves and multiverses. — Marchesk
Are you saying that all meaningful things are descriptions? — creativesoul
It means other animals can perceive things we can't. It means X-Rays can pass through solid objects. It means a beam of photons can produce either a wave or particle pattern depending on whether you detect which slit they go through. And so on. — Marchesk
Is that not verificationism? — Marchesk
I think it has naive realist claims. — Marchesk
Material things would be different since their properties and behaviors are not exhausted by our perception of them. — Marchesk
What is the minimum criterion for being meaningful? — creativesoul
But that's not quite right. The unreflective way we take the world to be is physical. — Marchesk
Idealism would say the perceiving is all there is to it. And things only persists when we're not around if there is someone like God or a universal mind to perceive. There is no mind-independent material stuff that may or may not be like what we perceive. — Marchesk
Lucretius used erosion as a justification for atomism. — Marchesk
Metaphysics isn't just a language game. It's also looking around at our experience of the world and asking how things are the way they are, and whether our concepts about those things make sense. — Marchesk
A counter point might be that if you take any popular unsolved mystery, there will be endless argumentation spanning many different theories. Take Fermi's Paradox and the question of whether technological alien life exists as a good example of this. There are even debates over what to search for. The problem is that we don't know the answer, not that it's meaningless. — Marchesk
What would it mean for there to be no physical objects? It would mean everything exists as an idea in someone's mind. What does that mean? Dreams are a good example. Everything would have the same fundamental status of dreams, except as different kinds of experiences. Experiences themselves would exhaust what a thing is. — Marchesk
What support do you have for that assertion? It simply sounds like an assumption to me, an 'everyone knows that...' statement. — Wayfarer
Let's go back to the 'first layer' and 'second layer' model. It makes a valid point - that metaphysical enunciations (or claims or whatever) appear to be meaningful, but on analysis, they're actually not. Whereas if we say 'the sun rises in the East' or any other purely factual statement, this can be validated by observation, metaphysical dicta cannot be, often by definition. (This leads to the positivist position of 'verificationism'.)
But I think this is well understood in metaphysical traditions themselves. — Wayfarer
it is literally meaningful because it is lived. But those outside that 'domain of discourse' will not be able to understand the references or meaning, and will be inclined to say that they don't refer to anything, or mean anything. But I think it's a very presumptuous attitude. — Wayfarer
magine a visitor from another planet which has developed without any conception of music. — Wayfarer
So, sure, for those with no understanding of the original significance of such discourses, — Wayfarer
It doesn't take into account that there might be a truly intellectual and experiential foundation to metaphysics which has been deliberately bracketed out of philosophy by modernist thinking, which then completely forgets what it originally referred to, and simply declares it all 'meaningless talk'. — Wayfarer
I think it still starts from essentially positivistic presuppositions, that presume that naturalism describes the world as it really is — Wayfarer
Any real scientist will tell you you’re “doing science” wrong, not actually doing science at all; and if they give you the time of day further, may tell you some reasons why that is an inferior way to do things than the proper scientific way. At that point, they are doing philosophy, even though they’re not a professional philosopher. — Pfhorrest
The most influential physicist of the scientific revolution was Isaac Newton, who titled his seminal work as being about “natural philosophy” — Pfhorrest
Look at the definition of philosophy the OP begins with: it’s about trying to figure out HOW to “figure out broad truths“, not necessarily figuring them out itself. — Pfhorrest
That is a sign that progress has been made, a satisfactory answer had been found, and all that’s left are minor quibbles. — Pfhorrest
If you think this is not an accurate definition of philosophy in the OP, maybe take it up over at the What is philosophy? thread that this thread spun off from. — Pfhorrest
If you were to justify your origin story for science, would you do so by appealing to science? — path
But any argument about why to do things the scientific way instead of some other way is philosophy. — Pfhorrest
And the sciences spun off from natural philosophers — Pfhorrest
This is an excellent way to hedge your position and avoid thinking. — fdrake
how do we know that "All sets that do not contain themselves as subsets" is a set? — EnPassant
First of all, to be clear: you are for PII, — QuixoticAgnostic
That there is some substance underlying the properties that gives things their identity? — QuixoticAgnostic
Secondly, and this is a rudimentary question, but what do you understand properties, predicates, and relations to mean, and how are they related or unrelated to PII? — QuixoticAgnostic