I wonder to what extent anger is a response or something more. — Jack Cummins
You cannot say that something is objective because it "refers to a body."
— Pantagruel
Well, that is quite literally the meaning of objective.
Unicorn refers to a body in that sense too, but it is not objective, it is a construct of the imagination
— Pantagruel
If you mean that 'unicorn' is subjective insofar as it only exists as a thought inside the mind, yes.
Moreover, the perfection of what you are describing explicitly precludes its material instantiation.
— Pantagruel
Not always. — Lionino
t is not instantiated, sure, but it is objective, as it refers to a body. — Lionino
This is what makes paradigm shifts revolutionary rather than evolutionary. — Joshs
Unlike others, I don’t see anything wrong with the wording of the question. It’s out of Hume. — Jamal
Moral goodness, as described in the OP, is actual perfection; which is not contingent on agency itself — Bob Ross
No one, because it requires 0 friction, 0 heat leakage, among other things. — Lionino
The machine does a perfect Carnot cycle, here replacing perfect with efficient would turn a fine sentence into a nonsensical one. — Lionino
The machine does a Carnot cycle, which makes it the most efficient machine possible under the current laws of physics. That falls just fine under the definition of perfection. — Lionino
↪Gregory
But as Lionino explained in his Carnot cycle example there are certain operations that are produced which are perfect with little room for dispute so how do you account for that ? — kindred
Yes, but pragmatic goodness applies to everything: it is just goodness in the sense of utility. — Bob Ross
The usage of 'esoteric' relevant to this thread is in connection to religious or spiritual teachings and metaphysical claims, not to disciplines like quantum mechanics and relativity; the latter are disciplines that yeild predictions whose obtaining or failure to obtain are observable. — Janus
To sum it up, Kant is a metaphysician without knowing it (and therefore is an incomplete metaphysician). — LFranc
The art of philosophy is important but it involves all of these facets of life. The 'esoteric ' may involve the 'rejected', especially ideas of subversity. It is such an area for thinking, and may involve many aspects of critical thinking about religion, politics and so many assumptions which may exist in the nature of human social life. — Jack Cummins
A mathematician surely believes in the laws of probability more than he believes in physics (being fallible and all) or most other things, and yet, it may be that in a Quiz show for one million euros, nervousness may take over and he may answer to the Monty Hall problem that he does not want to switch based on common sense and instinct, but probabilistic analysis will give us that you should switch each time: — Lionino
↪Pantagruel Seems to me the Jungle is already at harmony in its various gradations of life death growth and rot such that it thrives and new forms of life can even be found within such a teeming and toiling ecosystem. — Vaskane
Goodness is not normative: it is the property of having hypothetical or actual perfection. — Bob Ross
The noumenon? It’s a critical concept: philosophers like Leibniz built systems around noumena, and Kant is diagnosing this disease. He also thinks he can’t just ignore it, because he regards it as an unavoidable product of the understanding. — Jamal
The noumenon is the concept of a purported thing beyond possible experience, and as such cannot be distorted.
That is to say, there is nothing there to be filtered or distorted. Simply to be an object of knowledge is for a thing to be known via the senses and understanding. If there is no possible disembodied, unperspectival way of apprehending a thing, then the idea of distortion has no meaning. — Jamal
If upon transcendental contemplation we determine X,Y, and Z are the conditions for our knowledge, doesn't X,Y and Z become the lens upon which we view the noumenal and what we then actually perceive we refer to as the phenomenal?
I get that science will only concern itself with the phenomenal, but I don't see how you reject the suggestion that the phenomenal is a distortion of the noumenal. Isn't the phenomenal just the noumenal filtered through X,Y, and Z as you described it? — Hanover
So, what do you think counts as esoteric knowledge then? Or can you give an example of what you would count as an esoteric tradition? — Janus
Esoteric knowledge is usually claimed to be knowledge by revelation or enlightenment, and hence.
by implication, to be infallible. — Janus
I don't believe that many people actually have "deep personal commitments", but even if they do, they are just that, personal, subjective, and they are beliefs, and hence don't count as knowledge in the intersubjective sense. — Janus
But firstly, I don't believe any intuitive (or propositional for that matter) knowledge is infallible, or context-independent, and secondly such "knowledge" is by its very nature personal, subjective. — Janus
I don't see many Christians living up to Christ's ethical teachings — Janus
Afficionados of esoterica generally don't want to admit that, though — Janus
That most people probably just pay lip service in the actual living of their lives to their basic assumptions about the nature of reality is a telling point. — Janus
Scientists "make" working or methodological assumptions which themselves presuppose "metaphysical" commitments — 180 Proof
But that is the knowing of acquaintance, familiarity, not the kind of propositional knowing I had in mind when I asked the question. — Janus
It seems more accurate to say that science makes pragmatic, that is methodologically determined, assumptions — Janus
Doesn’t any viewpoint or theory implicitly lead us in certain directions and prove useful in the sense that it organizes our world in some fashion? What does it mean to ask if a metaphysics is ‘accurate’ in its depiction of the real? Can’t different metaphysical systems be ‘accurate’ in very different ways? — Joshs
Is mathematics metaphysics now too? — Lionino
Valid, no metaphysics can make a married man a bachelor. — Lionino
You don’t think the history of metaphysics has to do with the changing ways we think about the sense of meaning of what is real? In other words, isn’t metaphysics more about sense than reality? For instance, if one can claim that the change in physics from Newton to Heisenberg is a change in metaphsical presuppositions, then this involves a subtle transformation in the sense of meaning of terms like mass and energy, rather than whether mass and energy are real. — Joshs