You are making conclusions based on data that proves you "to know the truth", when in physics we still don't have data to complete a unification theory. — Christoffer
We know that the universe expanded quickly, referred to the Big Bang, we don't know what came before, we have no data to conclude what the cause was so we don't know what was before. — Christoffer
I'm not disputing your point, I'm disputing its relevance. I think that your interpretation of Rovelli was uncharitable. — S
You would have seen this if you read a few more sentences in the SEP article. Somehow, you missed the part of the article rebutting Rovelli. — Dfpolis
More uncharitable assumptions. Thanks. But you're mistaken. I did read further, and I didn't miss anything. — S
My intention wasn't to discuss the general ideas of each philosopher, but only those ideas relevant to the topic of teleology. — S
Within philosophy, the connection between teleology and Aristotle is well known, and its faults are well known also. — S
So, it is unclear which, if any, of Aristotle's ideas created "obstacles to the growth of knowledge." — Dfpolis
The misguided emphasis on seeking teleological, or "final cause", explanations. The key word here is "explanation", by the way. — S
Now imagine a person A who comes across T's. What would be the rational thing to do? To consider two explanations:
1. Coincidence
2. Teleology
You're ignoring option 1 in favor of 2 and that's a mistake. Isn't it? — TheMadFool
Well so conferring new value via re-purposing is something different than instrinsic purpose/teleology. Are you implying here that the ends of things [e.g. the end of an enzyme - to catalyze reaction, the end of a seed is to become a plant] are human designated? — aporiap
Of course. That is one reason free will is possible. There are multiple paths to human self-realization.
I don't understand this since we are speaking about objects here and not people. — aporiap
I also think, if anything, a teleological framework would necessarily be limiting compared to a teleologically blank humanity since it rigidly identifies some set of ends as natural to an object/person. Humans wouldn't have the freedom to not self realize if their nature was to self-realize, for example. — aporiap
I'm unsure what free will has to do with teleology. Secondly this is a human specific thing, free will doesn't have anything to do with physical systems, they cannot choose actions because they lack brains — aporiap
Well my point in that excerpt was to just highlight that ends are not intrinsic to objects alone. A gene, for example, can NOT give rise to a protein all by itself, despite the function [or end] of a gene being to give rise to a protein. It's the gene plus the cellular machinery which gives rise to a protein. — aporiap
But I think teleology definitely entails determinism or at least 'probabilistic determinism' [given initial conditions + context A --> 80% chance of P]. How else would ends be reproducibly met? — aporiap
You are attaching attributes to what's at the end which is assuming you know what it is and how it works, — Christoffer
And if there's a possibility that time is circular, if the cosmic collapse has a probability of being true, then there is no first mover or cause. — Christoffer
A deductive logical argument cannot be false and if it can be false you cannot claim it as truth, evidence or logic. — Christoffer
"Aristotle is adamant that, for a full range of cases, all four causes must be given in order to give an explanation. More explicitly, for a full range of cases, an explanation which fails to invoke all four causes is no explanation at all". Moreover, "Aristotle recognizes the explanatory primacy of the final cause over the efficient and material cause". — S
Aristotle is not committed to the view that everything has all four causes, let alone that everything has a final/formal cause. In the Metaphysics, for example, Aristotle says that an eclipse of the moon does not have a final cause (Metaph.1044 b 12). What happens when there is no final/formal cause like in the case of an eclipse of the moon? ... The interposition of the earth, that is, its coming in between the sun and the moon, is to be regarded as the efficient cause of the eclipse. Interestingly enough, Aristotle offers this efficient cause as the cause of the eclipse and that which has to be given in reply to the question “why?” (Metaph. 1044 b 13–15).
That's consistent with what Carlo Rovelli was talking about. He was talking about explanations. Both Plato and Aristotle were wrong on this one. — S
Plato and Aristotle were familiar with Democritus's ideas, and fought against them. They did so on behalf of other ideas, some of which were later, for centuries, to create obstacles to the growth of knowledge. — Reality Is Not What It Seems, by Carlo Rovelli
But if my attribution of motives to others is considered to be objective , then the motives of others must be describable in terms of behavioural regularity, for the personal feelings I have regarding other people's behaviour is subjective. — sime
So I can accept the reason/cause/motive distinction, but only if the subjective-objective distinction is rejected. Otherwise I cannot see how these distinctions can be maintained. — sime
Both insisted on rejecting Democritus's naturalistic explanations, in favour of trying to understand the world in finalistic terms - believing, that is, that everything that happens has a purpose; a way of thinking that would reveal itself to be very misleading for understanding the ways of nature - or in terms of good and evil, confusing human issues with matters which do not relate to us. — Reality Is Not What It Seems, by Carlo Rovelli
The conclusion of the uncaused cause could mean anything, it could be a substance of particles that are unbound by spacetime and in that higher dimension produce our dimensional universe. — Christoffer
It could therefore just be a dead "nothing". — Christoffer
So, for God to do any possible act, He must know all reality -- including us. — Dfpolis
Therefore, by the most logical conclusions of the only arguments that try to point to a God with pure deduction, the ontological argument, it doesn't point to there being any God aware of us. — Christoffer
There is no other evidence for any interaction between God and us or God and the universe. — Christoffer
Consider the sentence "Animals eat in order to survive". How is this different from saying "survival tends to follow eating"? — sime
a given situation, to predict a person's motives is to predict their behaviour. — sime
Teleology should therefore be considered true, or at least meaningless. — sime
How does teleology without God work? — TheMadFool
I also think you're conflating coincidence with teleology. Let me refer to the example of the spider web you gave in the last post. To say that spiders build webs to catch insects would be question begging - you're already assuming telos in that statement. — TheMadFool
One explanation for spider webs and their ability to catch insects is simple coincidence. — TheMadFool
Dfpolis, thanks for this OP — aporiap
For the simple reason that it just seems short sighted to ascribe one specific goal [or even a set of goals] to a physical object or biological entity [it's something like functional fixedness]. — aporiap
Secondly, different objects can perform the same function — aporiap
It's not the object that intrinsically has an end or goal, its the context with the object and their relationships that makes the object repeatedly reach a particular end. — aporiap
I think I'd be fine with the idea of ends if they're restricted to a given contextual relationship [given the context: the setting of cold weather, the man who is cold, the blanket in the room -- the blanket will reach end of keeping man warm]. — aporiap
What I was referring to is that if I were to play devil's advocate with the idea of a god, it would in that case, most probably, be one who has no idea of our existence. — Christoffer
I do not believe in god since there is no evidence for there to be — Christoffer
But, the optimal function of a system or object can still reach its optimal form within the system it exists within at the moment. That, however, doesn't mean it has reached its final form. — Christoffer
we, as we are now, are not the final form and not intended because we are still evolving. — Christoffer
But, the optimal function of a system or object can still reach its optimal form within the system it exists within at the moment — Christoffer
I recommend that you try and understand the conclusion drawn from my entire text instead of deconstructing singular sentences, that is not how the text should be read. — Christoffer
If a god has the all-power knowledge to create at an instant, knowing what is the optimal form of anything, that god would have created that form directly and not allow for evolutionary processes both in biology, — Christoffer
There are no sound arguments for god in the first place. — Christoffer
But people seem to be too biased in their own faith and will only argue within their realm of comfort. — Christoffer
Openness is not the same as being skeptical of the answers given or the observations made. To be skeptical is more scientific than any other way of thinking. Just being "open" means you are never critical and if not, you never try and test your own ideas. — Christoffer
In relation to the existence of God, I will never accept the existence of a god if we can't prove it. — Christoffer
So, the fact that a bulk of a pyramid's substance is not in its capstone is an argument that the capstone is not intentionally placed? — Dfpolis
I see no relation with this example since I was talking about the massive scale of the universe compared to our existence. — Christoffer
If we were the point of the universe, by a creator, there's a big lack of logic in creating that scale of the universe just to have us in it. — Christoffer
You compare that scale to the foundation of a pyramid. If you add nearly an infinite scale to that foundation, then it would show just how irrational that shape would be. — Christoffer
Historians, anthropologists, psychologists and sociologists all point to how gods, God, religion and so on, formed based upon an inability to explain the world around us at the time we couldn't explain through facts and science. — Christoffer
It took us to the 20th century to truly be able to explain the world through the methods we came up with. — Christoffer
it's easy to see how people still try and argue for the existence of God. But it's irrational, illogical, unsupported by evidence and in psychology, it's easy to see how the concept of no purpose or external meaning to our lives frightens us into holding on to a belief that gives us purpose and meaning. But that doesn't mean it's the truth. — Christoffer
No data-based arguments show anything that prove God in any way. Sloppy logic in all these arguments that does not work when deconstructed. — Christoffer
To call my breakdown of the concept of God within the realm of science to be a strawman because it doesn't include your personal perception of the concept of God is seriously flawed as an argument. — Christoffer
The theistic concept of the classical God has changed over and over every time science proved something to be something else than what that religious belief thought at the time. — Christoffer
Philosophers before we established scientific methods, worked within the belief of those times and within the history of science, there was a lot of progress shut down by the church if they couldn't apply the science onto the religious concepts at that time. — Christoffer
I can easily reject any concepts of god through a proper philosophical deconstruction of those arguments. Which has been done by many philosophers throughout history. But it's convenient to ignore them in order to support your already established beliefs, right? Isn't that a biased point of view? — Christoffer
so they programmed the physics of its function and let a computer test them on a form over and over, just like evolution. — Christoffer
If there was a God, that god would most likely just have "started the universe", the simulation argument. We haven't been specifically created, we would be the result of the evolution of the universe. — Christoffer
In that case, our known universe, in which our laws of physics etc. exist, would be its own and the existence of a God is irrelevant to us because we are most likely irrelevant to that god. — Christoffer
it's illogical that a God would specifically design something over letting it evolve itself. — Christoffer
If there was a god, it would exist outside of this universe and wouldn't care for the internals of this universe. — Christoffer
I'm a constant skeptic so I would never accept the idea that there is a god even outside our universe, — Christoffer
In general, logic still points to there being a physical reaction or change that made the big bang since the mathematical statistics points to dead matter being the majority of our universe and organic matter or thinking creatures/beings to be in so low quantity that it's illogical that its likely there to be an intentional creation and more of a reaction. — Christoffer
This concept is why I reject any notion that God has any link or guidance towards us humans because it's a self-indulgent, narcissistic delusion of grandeur about ourselves and our meaning to the universe. — Christoffer
If there was a god, he logically and statistically wouldn't know about us, at all and he wouldn't care. — Christoffer
Imagine two worlds of fish and water, A and B. World B has a God but world A doesn't. World A corresponds to only mechanism and world B corresponds to teleology. — TheMadFool
In world A, random mutations in genes colliding with the environment would be able to produce streamlined bodies for fish.
In world B, God would purposefully make fish bodies streamlined. — TheMadFool
To an observer from outside the two worlds would appear indistinguishable but, in the absence of knowledge about God's existence or non existence, the observer would choose the simpler theory and say mechanism, not teleology. — TheMadFool
There is no claim that the goal of the cosmos is a single species. — Dfpolis
That means the universe has no teleology. Shouldn’t it be having one if your theory is true? — TheMadFool
So, if every living thing has its own goal then isn't the one single purpose, which I think would vindicate your claim, missing? — TheMadFool
Very small and irrelevant point. In a vacuum. In media light travels slower. Cherenkov radiation is an example of something traveling faster than light in that medium. Mix the media and under the right circumstances, I travel faster than the speed of light! — tim wood
Then why are you putting mechanism and teleology in the blender - trying to mix it so we can't tell the difference? — TheMadFool
No but teleology = mechanism + purpose — TheMadFool
If this theory predicts that some set of physical circumstances will produce intentionality in neurons, and we cannot observe intentionality in neurons, doesn't that make the theory unfalsifiable, and so unscientific? In short, I have difficulty in seeing how such a theory can be part of science. — Dfpolis
That's how bad our understanding of Consciousness is. We can't even conceive that there could be a Scientific explanation for it. But I think there probably is a Scientific explanation. We just need some smart Mind to figure it out someday in the future. — SteveKlinko
We pretty much know what various kinds of intentions do. So, in what way do we not know what they are? — Dfpolis
We know what they are from our subjective Conscious experience of them. But since we don't know what Consciousness is, in the first place, being Conscious of them is not an explanation. — SteveKlinko
I guess you are making a distinction now between Laws of Nature that apply to Intentional Phenomenon and Laws of Nature that apply to Material Phenomenon. So you should not say the Laws of Nature are Intentional but only a subset of the Laws of Nature that apply to Intentionality are Intentional. — SteveKlinko
I don't think the Brain is the Consciousness aspect. But rather I think the Brain connects to a Consciousness aspect. — SteveKlinko
I think every instance of Consciousness actually does involve some sort of Quale. — SteveKlinko
There are all kinds of Qualia besides sensory Qualia. — SteveKlinko
Teleology = mechanism + purpose (extra weight) — TheMadFool
I'm not asking the general question. I'm asking the specific one: why teleological explanations at all? I'm not talking about a universal skeptic, just a teleological one. For there could be the possibility of someone inventing a fifth form of causation. One compatible with the others, yet used specifically because the other forms of causation under-determine it's form of explanation. However, the form of causation is used ad-hoc. The person then can't appeal to "I'm just asking questions! Just the facts, please!" — Marty
I'm also looking for a reason why future mechanical explanations could not replace teleological predictions. — Marty
Why does under-determination stand as an argument at all? — Marty
Yes, but then one could just tailor teleological causation to things agents have and not the entire world. — Marty
The further question is whether or not we should apply this to the natural world. — Marty
How do we form a criterion to know which one is teleological and the other one not to be? — Marty
I'm not sure why I would have to accept this. Some deflationist view could just say "to exist" is used in a variety of ways depending on what you mean. For example, numbers "exist" in some sense, idea exist in some ways, middle earth in the LOTR "exists" — Marty
However, Kant had already demonstrated causation to be ideal at the point he addressed the idea of existence not being a real predicate. — Marty
If indeed existence wasn't a real predicate, then the application of concepts like, "the ability to act" could have applied t — Marty
It is not "the ability to act" in a being that's existence, it's merely existence itself separate from any predication for Kant. — Marty
how can their be a reality at all to experience, unless we have transcendental tools to experience it in the first place? — Marty
That is why in order to form knoweldge, we cannot have concepts alone but also use our sensibility in receptivity. — Marty
The question is worked backwards for Kant: how can their be a reality at all to experience, unless we have transcendental tools to experience it in the first place? — Marty
You would have to somehow create a theory in which we readily just receive the world without any cognitive tools. — Marty
However, Kant has already told us that intuition without concepts are empty, as concepts without intuitions are blind. Such content could never get us any form of justification without the other, and never enter into the logical space of reasons. — Marty
The categories of space-time are constitutive of all experiences, as all experiences will include them. In terms of the pure concepts of understanding: quality, quantity, modality and relation are also contained as forms of existence. — Marty
It's not only that we have no concept of existence, it is that existence isn't a concept! — Marty
For even you yourself changed the prediction of "existence" to mean "the ability to act" — something, in which for Kant, would have been independently applied to existence. — Marty
It means what I have now written above. — Marty
If we do have such humility, it would already seem to point out some utter limitations. Thus creating the Noumea. — Marty
As I take it the only reasonable interpretation of Kant is the dual-aspect interpretation. — Marty
The pure concepts of understanding don't "exist". They are transcendental. — Marty
They merely create the conditions of possibility for us to understand/experience nature. — Marty
We realize the form of the concepts in the possibility of any experience whatsoever being constitutive of them. — Marty
They are natural insofar as nature is just merely the phenomenal character of these concepts applied. — Marty
The argument to prove this is just transcendental: X is a necessary condition for the possibility of Y—where then, given that Y is the case, it logically follows that X must be the case too. — Marty
They have no Being. They are ideal. — Marty
Being isn't a real predicate in Kantian metaphysics. — Marty
We reason from existence, and not to it. That is, we don't apply it. — Marty
We know it as a form of limitation of our understanding — as something that we're not. — Marty
I sometimes think of it in the way Aquinas conceived of what God is by what he's not. The difference is that Kant just bars the idea of any positive description. — Marty
I wasn't talking about divine psychology. I'm merely stipulating that subjects do not have the power to know in the same way that a God would — that includes intellectual intuition. Which if we don't, we run back towards the noumenon for Kant — Marty
I'm not saying mechanistic and teleological explanations are at odds. I'm asking why even have teleological explanations at all? — Marty
You said earlier because the complexity of certain phenomenon would be too complex to explain mechanistically, but that seems to appeal to the under-determination of the relevant facts. That isn't enough to then say that we ought to have teleological explanations. — Marty
That isn't enough to then say that we ought to have teleological explanations. — Marty
How do we know the heart was selected for too circulate blood throughout the body, as oppose to it being a by-product of another form: the heart going "bump-bump-bump". How do we devise a hypothesis that can test for which was selected instead of merely being a by-product? — Marty
The question was how do we differentiate between non-teleological ends such as the one I mentioned, and teleological ones? — Marty
How do we know whether something has a result of x, rather than x is the intended consequence of certain processes? — Marty
1. Why would the complexity of mechanical explanation be a reason to then opt out for teleological explanations? Wouldn't that be a form of appealing to consequence because our mechanical explanations as of now under-determined the relevant facts? Many mechanists claim that there have been advances in biology/evolutionary theory that replace teleological explanations before. Could it not just occur later? — Marty
2. How do you generally answer people who offer the argument that we couldn't differentiate between something in evolution as being a by-product of selection (spandrels), or an actual form of adaptive selection? That is, what is adapted for, or what can be a suppose end of adaption, is not falsifiable? — Marty
3. Similar to (2), how do we differentiate between seemingly teleological events, and teleological events? Such as a snowfall rolling down a hill isn't going down the hill because it's end is the bottom. But it seems like, say, metabolism is directed towards converting food for-the-sake-of energy. — Marty
4. How do you generally response to the statement that, "Given that things are set up in a certain way, x just happens." I know you could theoretically offer a compatible teleological explanation, but why would one want to even begin to do so? — Marty
5. What books do you particularly feel are the best for getting a handle on teleology? — Marty
The pure concepts of understanding are synthesized with the sensible intuitions. They are not projected onto nature, but have a structure such that there's continuity between the subject and object. — Marty
We can consider them neither as subjective, nor objective, as they are rightfully called transcendental — the conditions of possibility for either as such. — Marty
It then follows that we do have knoweldge of the world, simply through certain conceptual and intutional categories (always in pairs), just not things-in-themselves. — Marty
If by 'noumenon' we mean a thing so far as it is not an object of our sensible intuition, and so abstract from our mode of intuiting it, this is a noumenon in the negative sense of the term.
But if we understand by it an object of a non-sensible intuition, we thereby presuppose a special mode of intuition, namely, the intellectual, which is not that which we possess, and of which we cannot comprehend even the possibility. This would be 'noumenon' in the positive sense of the term.
When Kant says we can't know the noumenon he means we do not have the capacity of an intellectual intuition. Which is a type of non-conceptual, non-sensory intuition of the world as it is that God would supposedly have. — Marty
I don't think that's correct. Newton's theory of gravity isn't incompatible with Einstein's relativity. — TheMadFool
The choice between the two in favor of Einstein was, in part, based on the simplicity of Einstein's which explained away the force of gravity as a curvature of space due to mass. — TheMadFool
My understanding:
You're claiming that as an explanation, teleology is as good as the mechanistic.
Am I correct? — TheMadFool
If yes, then it must be a choice between the two explanations. Ockham's razor directs us to choose the simpler model. — TheMadFool
So, we reject teleology because it's more complicated than the alternative mechanistic explanation. — TheMadFool
Well, both mechanistic and teleogical explanations seem derivable from known facts. — TheMadFool
Ockham's razor is in order.
Which theory is simpler? — TheMadFool
I'm missing your point here because I said that Science will need to have the Explanation for the How and Why, and not merely the fact that it is. — SteveKlinko
I disagree that we know anything about what Intentionality is. We know we have it, but what really is it? This is similar to how we Experience the Redness of Red. We certainly know that we have the Experience but we have no idea what it is. — SteveKlinko
If you have an intention to do something then that intention must ultimately be turned into a Volitional command to the Brain that will lead to the firing of Neurons that will activate the muscles of the Physical Body to do something. I believe you called that a Committed Intention. — SteveKlinko
When you say the Laws of Nature are Intentional, it sounds like you are talking about some kind of Intelligent Design. I'm not sure how this is even relevant to the discussion. — SteveKlinko
When you hang your argument for eliminating the Hard Problem on an abstract Intentions concept being Material you are setting up a straw man. — SteveKlinko
Even if your Intention argument is true, this Redness Experience Explanatory Gap must be solved. This is what the Hard Problem is really all about. — SteveKlinko
I think you are saying that there is only an Explanatory Gap if the Intentional Reality is found to be in the Neurons — SteveKlinko
But if it is found to be in the Neurons then that means that Science has an Explanation for How and Why it is in the Neurons — SteveKlinko
If Intentional Reality is not found in the Neurons then there would exist a Huge Explanatory Gap as to what it could be. — SteveKlinko
. How does this non-Material Intention ultimately interact with the Neurons, as it must, to produce Intentional or Volitional effects? — SteveKlinko
Am I correct in saying that Volition is the same as Intention in your analysis? — SteveKlinko
So I'm expecting that you are going to show how the Hard Problem goes away. — SteveKlinko
I think you are missing an important aspect of Consciousness by dismissing the experience of Qualia as you do. What is that Redness that you experience when you look at a Red object or when you Dream about a Red Object? — SteveKlinko
Sounds like you are saying that there are two separate subsystems of the Material Mind (the Neurons). — SteveKlinko
This sounds like you are saying that you are going to show that Intentional Reality cannot be found in the Neurons. — SteveKlinko
Sound like Ontological Dualism to me. — SteveKlinko
You are just assuming that Neural Activity must imply Conscious Activity in all cases. — SteveKlinko
Yes but this seems to imply that the Conscious Activity of Intention can not be found in the Neurons by Science yet. — SteveKlinko
I did not see any solution to the Hard Problem in all this. If Intentional Realities are not reducible to the Material Neurons then what are Intentional Realities? Where are Intentional Realities? How can this be Explained? There is a big Explanatory Gap here. This Explanatory Gap is the Chalmers Hard Problem. — SteveKlinko
This in effect re-grounds the knowledge of the thing into the process of the discovery of the thing, while demolishing the status of the knowledge as knowledge. — tim wood
Once done, and the thing known/defined/named, never again need it be discovered: we know it. — tim wood
Does that imply that all knowledge is a priori? I answer yes, with respect to the criteria that establishes the knowledge as knowledge. — tim wood
So far your argument is a claim. But I do not find that you have argued it in substantive terms. — tim wood
Is referencing <being> a flight to being, or an explication of experience/phenomena? — tim wood
You have <being> as "something that can act." (I note too you have <being> that we experience, and "a concept of <being>... there to help us.") How does it act? Would it both simplify and demystify to rebrand this <being> as just a capacity of the human mind? — tim wood
The problem is that consciousness is not at all emergent in the sense in which viscosity and surface tension are. — Dfpolis
No, but if viscosity and surface tension prove emergence itself is possible, and with the admitted lack of complete understanding of neurophysiology, neuroplasticity, must the possibility of consciousness emerging from mere neural complexity, in principle, be granted? — Mww
Interesting. Why would you qualify some truths as so-called “a priori”? Are you thinking the term is mis-used? It’s value mis-applied? The whole schema doubtful? — Mww
What do you mean by transcendental principle, and what is an example of one? — Mww
What is meant by “our experience of being”, and what additional/supplemental information could be packed into my own personal experience of being, that isn’t already there? — Mww
Abstraction from experience is adequate for a priori knowledge, but doesn’t address whether any other methodology is possible — Mww
Whether that matters or not depends on what we intend to do about how far astray we find ourselves in thinking about the world of things. — Mww