The cauliflower case is directly out of Heraclitus, label it 'relational' if you like. The problem is old, the solution is nowhere in sight. — magritte
But, again, if your main aim is to say that all of them are simply subjective or social myths, then sure, their differences can easily be exploited for that argument. — Wayfarer
Just to be sure it is clear empirical data, although they may be directly known by observation don't count as direct knowing in the sense I mean; I am talking about "inner direct knowing" in the sense promoted by Zen Buddhism for example). — Janus
Please explain how direct knowing that yields inter-subjectively corroborable beliefs is possible. — Janus
As I have said the case with science, logic and the empirical is different, because the corroboration can be achieved with an unbiased observer. — Janus
I actually used to think as you do — Janus
I used to think like you. I in all honesty don't believe that thinking (regarding direct knowing) is rationally supportable, and I think I have good reasons for thinking that. — Janus
you completely lost me with your reference to 'genocide'. — Wayfarer
the very idea that humans can directly know the nature of reality is itself an article of groundless faith, no matter how "enlightened" a person, or some tradition, finds that person to be. Intellectual honesty demands that this be acknowledged, and yet it so seldom is by adherents. — Janus
‘persuade me that these traditions contain anything real, beyond the subjective edification they have on believers'. That's the argument this is not worth having. I'm not going to attempt to change your mind on that, I can't see any point. If you do change your mind, then it's something I would be more than happy to discuss. — Wayfarer
religious faith (and faith generally, since we don't know anything at all with absolute certainty) has an important place in human life.
My argument with Wayferer is just that he won't admit the difference I am pointing to, insofar as he wants to claims that religious experience yields inter-subjectively determinable knowledge, and yet is unable to say how that could be possible. — Janus
Many assume that it is simply the way the world really is, once superstitious beliefs about it have been removed. — David Loy
gold and bitcoin will be the major winners — Baden
I think the paper's a battle on all fronts — fdrake
And that is why Idealism is not used in science. — Philosophim
What if unicorns are just really good at hiding?" You need some evidence, or its not a point of discussion. — Philosophim
What is physical is matter and energy.
There are living brains, which are chemically self-sustainable, active, and produce neuronal activity, and dead brains, which don't. — Philosophim
True. Same for idealism though. — frank
Materialism is waning. But the pendulum just keeps swinging. — frank
I think he meant that physicalism morphed into something its earlier adherents would have rejected. Remember Newton's cohorts wanted to reject gravity on the basis that it was mystical. Newton gave up and retired to his basement in the face of the dogma. — frank
It's not the Red Army, its just a useful category.
— frank
Lol. It is from the materialists I've dealt with. But it is a useful category, I give you that — Merkwurdichliebe
He has said that, though, that Physicalism 1.0 died with the acceptance of electromagnetism. — frank
It's not the Red Army, its just a useful category. — frank
due to its [physicalism's] history of subsuming whatever we came to accept as real (in a bodily sense), has lost its original meaning? — frank
But isnt Chomskys point that physicalism, due to its history of subsuming whatever we came to accept as real (in a bodily sense), has lost its original meaning? It's the few flat earthers among us that feel the need to get dogmatic about anything. — frank
Seven, with the sense of equilibrium. — Olivier5
You access these (reflexively) through some sense, in my view, through self-awareness, rather than directly. — Olivier5
"...Any intelligible theory that offers genuine explanations and that can be assimilated to the core notions of physics becomes part of the theory of the material world, part of our account of body. If we have such a theory in some domain, we seek to assimilate it to the core notions of physics, perhaps modifying these notions as we carry out this enterprise."
[~Noam Chomsky)
Physicalism, such as the kind you naturally assume, is the default philosophy of the culture we live in; 'presumptive materialism', — Wayfarer
Then, I suppose, you don't subscribe to the five senses tradition. How many senses have you identified?I consider introspection as a sense. — Olivier5
Yes. To our own sensing, to our own perceiving, and to our own thinking. Everything else is always experienced indirectly - that is to say, anything that can be apprehended through those faculties must be mediated from what it is in-itself, to what it is for-me, viz. a sensation, a perception, or a thought.Do we have direct access to anything?
Sweet Jesus! It started with him, not since him! — tim wood
I suspect you also know something about your own mental phenomena, and this knowledge is based on a capacity for introspection. The distinction between knowing and sensing is weaker than you seem to think: you know because you sense. — Olivier5
And yes, mental phenomena are subjective by definition. But MRI of brains can detect emotions, so self-reporting is not the only tool we have to study these things. — Olivier5
You cannot perceive your own mental events? That's odd. — Olivier5
That sort of complacency will let the commies in.
Or in other words, it's ok to chop your own head off in a world without commies, but not in one where they lie in wait. — Punshhh
anything that doesn't apply to elephants and atoms? — Olivier5
What you say is not specific to perception of of mental phenomena, it applies to elephants and atoms too. And yet scientists go somewhere that has not been 'gotten' by studying their perceptions of elephants and atoms. So there's a gap in your logic. — Olivier5
What's the difference? — khaled
The field of aesthetics is endlessly fascinating, whether it's about sound, visuals, tactile stuff, the way all of it mixes together with ideas and emotions, cultural influence, and philosophy. Yes, it's very complex. Nobody ever said it wasn't. — frank