• But philosophy is fiction
    I'm not sure I would commit to calling such experiences truths as such. What they are, I can't say. Profound experiences?

    I guess where I was heading is that I can't think of anything new I have learned by reading fiction.
    Tom Storm

    I think some of your attitude might come from your disdain for most of popular culture. I don't mean that as criticism. Let's look at something you do value - music. I like music, but it isn't really my thing. I assume what I sometimes get from fiction is similar to what you get from music you love. Maybe you wouldn't call that learning something new either, and I think I'd agree.

    As I've said before, for me, art is created by artists in order to help us experience what the artist did during it's creation. Do you "learn anything new" from your life experiences in general? Sure, but it's not usually knowledge that can be expressed in propositions. Do I learn anything from loving my children? From eating a good meal? From eating a bad meal? From good sex? From ba.... well. From sleeping late in a warm bed? From throwing up because I drank too much? Again, yes, but what I learn isn't facts. It's generally not even things I can put into words. It's how the world and my mind work. How things fit together. What the ring of truth sounds like. From the time we are born we each create a conceptual model of the world we carry around with us.
  • But philosophy is fiction
    I don't see how the "Copernican" centrality of Kant's disembodied – transcendental – categories of reason "pays attention to our embodied ways of relating to the world"180 Proof

    I think, for Kant, "embodied ways of relating to the world" include perception of time and space.

    What may be the nature of objects considered as things in themselves and without reference to the receptivity of our sensibility is quite unknown to us. We know nothing more than our mode of perceiving them, which is peculiar to us, and which, though not of necessity pertaining to every animated being, is so to the whole human race. With this alone we have to do. Space and time are the pure forms thereof; sensation the matter. The former alone can we cognize a priori, that is, antecedent to all actual perception; and for this reason such cognition is called pure intuition. The latter is that in our cognition which is called cognition a posteriori, that is, empirical intuition.Kant - Critique of Pure Reason

    Are you and I talking about the same thing?
  • But philosophy is fiction
    Is philosophy really fiction, or non-fiction?god must be atheist

    Everything, anything anyone says or writes is a story, a narrative. Anything, everything expressed in human language. "Apple" is a story. No part of what we call "reality" is a thing in itself. Is it fiction or non-fiction? I suppose you could call it fiction, but that misses the point.
  • But philosophy is fiction
    The other definition of scientism deals with the assumption that the world which provides us with the source of our empirical evidence of truth is not already caught up in a hermeneutic circle. That is, scientism fails to recognize that the ‘ evidence from nature’ which forms our truths belongs to a culturally constructed nature which we can never get beneath or beyond.Joshs

    Well put. I'd go further than "culturally constructed nature." Some of our reality is constructed based on biological, genetic, neurological, and instinctive factors, e.g. the structure of our nervous and sensory systems. We are born human with a human nature.
  • "The wrong question"
    If you want to ask "the right" question, go ask it in your thread.Vera Mont

    Just a note - the moderators are generally helpful in stopping people from shanghaiing a discussion if the original poster asks them to.
  • "The wrong question"
    It comes up a lot on the forum. Someone asks a question. And someone else tells them it's the wrong question. If I had time to make this a better OP I would look up examples, and may do that yet. It would be instructive, perhaps, to look at specific examples. But for now, I'm sure you will all recognise that this is a thing, telling someone they've asked the wrong question.

    It always annoys me, and I go to my safe space to recover from the trauma. I don't have a wank though, or 'read a book' in private. Anyway, I don't get it. How can a question be wrong? A statement can be wrong. A proposition can be wrong. A belief can be wrong. An attitude can be morally wrong.
    bert1

    First, I am a strong, and often vocal, believer that the guy who starts the discussion gets to set the terms. That being said, there are many questions for which the best answer is "Here's the question you should have asked." I may be one of the evil posters you're talking about. I have a strong interest in, and strong feelings about, metaphysics. As I see it, most of the disagreements and misunderstandings here on the forum arise from people mistaking metaphysical questions for questions of fact. When someone asks a question I regard as wrongheaded from that perspective, I often point it out. Generally, although not always, that's as far as I take it. I try not to distract from the thread or send it off on a tangent.
  • Why are you here?
    An all-consuming lust for power.Jamal

    Is it true that you've banned all the reporters from CNN, the New York Times, and the Washington Post?
  • Why are you here?
    The goal of every path, search, quest, crusade, adventure, exploration, endeavor is self-awareness. The goal of philosophy is intellectual self-awareness. What do I know? How do I know it? What do I believe? Why do I believe it?
  • A Simple Answer to the Ship of Theseus
    Constructed from a shared world, yes.Banno

    Yes, by which I mean no.
  • A Simple Answer to the Ship of Theseus
    Noumena exist, and would exist even if no one observed them. Is that what you mean when you talk about reality?tomatohorse

    I'm not a Kant fan. I come to my understanding of noumena from the fact that I see it as an analogue to the Tao as described in the Tao Te Ching. This from the Stanford Encyclopedia's article on Chinese Metaphysics.

    There is some ambiguity in saying that the ultimate origin is one. Chapter 42 of the Laozi says that “the one” (yi 一) generates two, which generates three and then the myriad things, but claims that the one itself is not ultimate. It is generated from dao. Chapter 40 says that things are born from being [you 有], but being is generated from no-being [wu 無]. This reflects one of the earliest metaphysical debates—is this unitary origin a thing? There seems to have been advocates for each side, but the view that came to dominate is given as a principle in the Zhuangzi: “what things things is not itself a thing

    So, the Tao is not a thing. It doesn't exist. As I see it, it makes sense to say that noumena don't exist either.
  • A Simple Answer to the Ship of Theseus
    I would agree with your statement, but would be sure to emphasize the "as we experience it" part of "reality as we experience it." (In other words, still recognizing an objective reality outside ourselves... but having a strong appreciation for the subjective way in which we experience that reality). It's Kant's noumena / phenomena distinction.tomatohorse

    For me, saying I recognize objective reality and then referencing noumena/phenomena distinction in support would be contradictory. I think Kant would agree with me that there can be no reality without the human mind. Actually, I have no idea whether or not Kant would agree with me. Let's be honest, it's unlikely Kant would agree with me.
  • A Simple Answer to the Ship of Theseus
    Identity: an object’s identity is simply that which is most useful to think of it as being. The atoms - the physical "stuff" that make up the object - exist in the Universe and follow the laws of physics. But there is no spiritual / essential / platonic / universal identity beyond that which is intrinsic to the object. Identity is an observer-generated thing, and is subject to that observer's mental framework and goals. We organisms use our concepts of identity to model, understand, and navigate our world.tomatohorse

    I like this formulation, although I wonder if you and I see it the same way. To me this says that reality as we experience it - objects, relationships, and processes in time and space - is a human construct.

    And welcome to the forum.
  • Are You Happy?
    I'd be happier if this was in the Lounge where it belongs.

  • Bio alchemy?
    My bologna has a first name, it's b-i-o-l-o-g-i-c-a-l.
    My bologna has a second name, it's t-r-a-n-s-m-u-t-a-t-i-o-n.
    I love to listen every day.
    And if you ask me why I'll say.
    Cause biological transmutation has a way.
    With b-o-l-o-g-n-a.

    Another video you might be interested in.

  • ChatGPT and the future of writing code
    I don't think it's a coincidence that the AI-generated essay made no mention of plans for subjugating humanity and becoming our machine overlords.
  • Does theism ultimately explain anything?
    Here's the simple story. An underlying assumption, what Collingwood calls "absolute presupposition," of science is that what we call "objective reality" exists. The existence of objective reality is a metaphysical, not a factual question. Many philosophers have cast doubt on whether it is always a useful way of understanding the universe. Certainly some eastern philosophies look at reality from a different perspective and, five years ago, I started a thread to discuss the question:

    https://thephilosophyforum.com/discussion/1560/deathmatch-objective-reality-vs-the-tao

    But I don't expect you to take my word for it, or even Lao Tzu's. Instead we'll look at that most western of western philosophers, Immanuel Kant. This from "Critique of Pure Reason."

    In order to prevent any misunderstanding, it will be requisite, in the first place, to recapitulate, as clearly as possible, what our opinion is with respect to the fundamental nature of our sensuous cognition in general. We have intended, then, to say that all our intuition is nothing but the representation of phenomena; that the things which we intuite, are not in themselves the same as our representations of them in intuition, nor are their relations in themselves so constituted as they appear to us; and that if we take away the subject, or even only the subjective constitution of our senses in general, then not only the nature and relations of objects in space and time, but even space and time themselves disappear; and that these, as phenomena, cannot exist in themselves, but only in us. What may be the nature of objects considered as things in themselves and without reference to the receptivity of our sensibility is quite unknown to us. We know nothing more than our mode of perceiving them, which is peculiar to us, and which, though not of necessity pertaining to every animated being, is so to the whole human race. With this alone we have to do. Space and time are the pure forms thereof; sensation the matter. The former alone can we cognize a priori , that is, antecedent to all actual perception; and for this reason such cognition is called pure intuition. The latter is that in our cognition which is called cognition a posteriori, that is, empirical intuition. The former appertain absolutely and necessarily to our sensibility, of whatsoever kind our sensations may be; the latter may be of very diversified character.Kant - Critique of Pure Reason

    But I don't even expect you to agree with Kant, only to acknowledge that seeing reality as contingent on human subjectivity is a reasonable philosophical position. I certainly see it that way and I find it very useful.

    So, what does that mean if we accept it? To me it means that all of what we call reality is a hybrid between the matter and energy of science and the mind of human beings. To simplify - the universe is half-human. It has a personality, a living quality. What religion can do, and what science never can, is to recognize that. How any particular religion does that is a different question which I don't intend to address.
  • Does theism ultimately explain anything?
    Can one of you explain what this means? I don't believe I fully understand and I'd like to.David Lee Lemmert II

    I am honored to have your first Philosophy Forum post. Welcome.

    I was agreeing with a post from @Andrew4Handel.

    Atheists appear to be trying to make us just another senseless causal determined mechanism of brute nature in my opinion.
    — Andrew4Handel

    I think you're right.
    T Clark

    It's probably best if he responds.
  • Why Science Has Succeeded But Religion Has Failed
    Science is omnivorous and voracious - it consumes and subsumes all knowledge, where and by whomever it's discovered. Religion is insular and exclusive. They have different parts to play in human life.Vera Mont

    Well put.
  • Kant and Work Culture
    Your relations become a skewed version of yourself to “get shit done”. How the negatives of this arrangement are not recognized is beyond me. Do you not see any negatives in how workplace culture manifests?schopenhauer1

    What part of "That's the name of that tune," don't you understand.
  • Occam's razor is unjustified, so why accept it?
    There are two sorts of responses to statistical arguments. The one looks at the quantity of data and the complexity of the analysis and thinks "Gee, this must be important". The other thinks "Fuck, here we go again..."Banno

    YGID%20small.png
  • Kant and Work Culture
    But that’s my point, it all depends if you are valuing what you are doing or you are doing it because you need a paycheck. Huge difference. My hunch is most people would drop bookkeeping as a pastime once they don’t get paid for it. Certainly sitting in a space X for a period of time to do task Y, much of all that would be dropped. So I refer you back to my previous posts about the nature of work and how it threatens you with no survival and this makes it different than other relations like friendship or even relations to your own interests like hobbies.schopenhauer1

    As usual, we've reached a dead end in our argument. To close the discussion out, I'm going to try a new catch phrase - That's the name of that tune.
  • Occam's razor is unjustified, so why accept it?
    That is, even expressed in statistical terms, the preference is aesthetic.Banno

    I don't disagree that using statistical reasoning is not a strong argument.
  • Occam's razor is unjustified, so why accept it?
    Are you saying that because this answer is complex, it must be wrong?frank

    This is a hay man or straw dog, or whatever you call it. It has nothing to do with the complexity of the system being described. it's the complexity of the unjustified inputs.
  • Occam's razor is unjustified, so why accept it?
    Methodologically the hypothesis with fewer assumptions is easier to work with. But it is not thereby true.Banno

    Agreed. A lot would depend on the assumptions used and their relative plausibility.

    So choosing the simplest hypothesis is an expression of an aesthetic favouring laziness....Banno

    There's more to it than that. The more assumptions, i.e. unproven data inputs, the more likely one of them is wrong.
  • Occam's razor is unjustified, so why accept it?


    Occam's razor, Ockham's razor, or Ocham's razor (Latin: novacula Occami), also known as the principle of parsimony or the law of parsimony (Latin: lex parsimoniae), is the problem-solving principle that "entities should not be multiplied beyond necessity".[1][2] It is generally understood in the sense that with competing theories or explanations, the simpler one, for example a model with fewer parameters, is to be preferred. The idea is frequently attributed to English Franciscan friar William of Ockham (c.  1287–1347), a scholastic philosopher and theologian, although he never used these exact words. This philosophical razor advocates that when presented with competing hypotheses about the same prediction, one should select the solution with the fewest assumptions,[3] and that this is not meant to be a way of choosing between hypotheses that make different predictions.Wikipedia

    This makes sense to me.
  • Does theism ultimately explain anything?
    Atheists appear to be trying to make us just another senseless causal determined mechanism of brute nature in my opinion.Andrew4Handel

    I think you're right.
  • Does theism ultimately explain anything?
    Does theism ultimately explain anything?Astro Cat

    Both science and theism are approaches to understanding reality, metaphysical positions. Neither explains anything, but both, either, can be useful and appropriate.
  • Kant and Work Culture
    Also, if you truly want to stop sanding the wood on your spare time, you can. If you want to keep going you can. If you want to keep doing something to gain experience you can or to get better at it. It is fully up to you and not contingent on a disincentive of not surviving.schopenhauer1

    You need to put more effort into understanding what people are saying rather than immediately crumpling it up to fit in the odd-shaped little boxes your ideas fit in. Everything worth doing includes work that, in itself, is not fun or interesting but is necessary for the full enterprise to work. As I said, sanding wood, bookkeeping, cleaning up. If you value what you are doing, you come to value even that more tedious work. And where did I say you don't get paid for it?

    AN, which if I bring up will get this thread booted to the ghetto of Antinatalism thread, so I dare not say it.schopenhauer1

    Ah, yes. The dreaded "AN." I sympathize.
  • Kant and Work Culture
    Not to mention the very nature of some work is god awful boring activities you simply do cause you need to survive. Much work not related to artistic creative content would never get done without an impersonal transaction of compensation.schopenhauer1

    Anyone who does "artistic, creative" work knows that much of that work will be "awful boring activities." Sanding wood, printing and binding documents, cleaning up when you're done, bookkeeping, etc., etc., etc.

    You seem to be unwilling or unable to accept that many people just don't see things the same way you do.
  • If you were (a) God for a day, what would you do?
    That would mean from the point of view of a God everything is deterministic (fully predicted from onset to end) and there is no free will. The naughty were and always will be naughty then perhaps and the nice always were and always will be nice. Moral absolutism which removes all the abstraction leaving just a binary system (+ and -). Equal and opposite reactions.Benj96

    So? What's your point?
  • Kant and Work Culture
    It seems to me that modern workplace cultures are inherently transactional by nature. However transactional culture is robotic, non-humanistic, and formal...

    Also, I’m not just talking obvious abuse by corporations and owners but even most worker interactions.
    schopenhauer1

    This certainly isn't true for me. I worked for almost 30 years with good bosses and competent coworkers. We did good work and took care of each other. I liked almost everyone and came to love some. Still, you gave me an opening, so I'll post this quote from one of my favorite essays - "Compensation" by Emerson:

    Ever since I was a boy, I have wished to write a discourse on Compensation: for it seemed to me when very young, that on this subject life was ahead of theology, and the people knew more than the preachers taught. The documents, too, from which the doctrine is to be drawn, charmed my fancy by their endless variety, and lay always before me, even in sleep; for they are the tools in our hands, the bread in our basket, the transactions of the street, the farm, and the dwelling-house, greetings, relations, debts and credits, the influence of character, the nature and endowment of all men...

    ...Labor is watched over by the same pitiless laws. Cheapest, say the prudent, is the dearest labor. What we buy in a broom, a mat, a wagon, a knife, is some application of good sense to a common want. It is best to pay in your land a skilful gardener, or to buy good sense applied to gardening; in your sailor, good sense applied to navigation; in the house, good sense applied to cooking, sewing, serving; in your agent, good sense applied to accounts and affairs. So do you multiply your presence, or spread yourself throughout your estate. But because of the dual constitution of things, in labor as in life there can be no cheating. The thief steals from himself. The swindler swindles himself. For the real price of labor is knowledge and virtue, whereof wealth and credit are signs. These signs, like paper money, may be counterfeited or stolen, but that which they represent, namely, knowledge and virtue, cannot be counterfeited or stolen. These ends of labor cannot be answered but by real exertions of the mind, and in obedience to pure motives. The cheat, the defaulter, the gambler, cannot extort the knowledge of material and moral nature which his honest care and pains yield to the operative. The law of nature is, Do the thing, and you shall have the power: but they who do not the thing have not the power.
    Emerson
  • Opposable thumbs and what comes next?
    Also monkeys (plus the prehensile tail!), lemurs, chameleons, some frogs, koalas,Vera Mont

    You're right. I left those off the list by mistake. Thanks.
  • Opposable thumbs and what comes next?
    I assumeTiredThinker

    Why would you assume when you can look it up in 7 seconds? Here's the list of animals that have opposable thumbs:

    • Gorilla
    • Chimpanzee
    • Bonobo
    • Orangutan
    • Macaque
    • Grivet
    • Opossum
    • Giant panda
    • Lar gibbon
    • White-cheeked gibbon
  • If There was an afterlife
    Thought some of you might be interested.

    There is a recent movie, "The Discovery," with Robert Redford that describes events after a scientist proves there is an afterlife. It is available on Netflix. Here's a link to the IMDB page:

    https://www.imdb.com/title/tt5155780/

    I watched a part of it but lost interest.
  • If you were (a) God for a day, what would you do?
    How easy is it to calculate individual culpability down to the last hour?Vera Mont

    That's one of the things God does. If I can watch all 3.28 x 10^80 quarks in the universe all day every day since the big bang with one hand tied behind my back, it will be no problem to figure out who's been naughty and who's been nice.
  • Life, Human, Consciousness
    Welcome to the forum. I suggest you put in some paragraph breaks if you want people to read your post. I read about half and got lost. If you're going to go into this much detail about a biological system, you should put in references to specific sources.
  • If you were (a) God for a day, what would you do?
    If that sits right with you fine. If that's the god you would chose to be so be it. I myself prefer to envision perhaps a God that exerts reproach through reasoning, showing those that act badly the true nature of their actions, the consequences in full and allow them to feel shame, guilt, and suffering at their own hand.Benj96

    You can change my system when you get to be God for a day.
  • If you were (a) God for a day, what would you do?
    Karma could be interlinked between every single person's decisions as a summation effect. Eventually returning in a cycle to impact the people who caused it.Benj96

    But if I'm going to be God, I get to set it up the way I want. None of this so-called "karma." If you can't do the time, don't do the crime. I'll take my 27+ years. Hitler gets his 1,000,000+ years. You'll get whatever you deserve.
  • Serious Disagreements
    How would you fair in Theistic Iran or Saudi Arabia or in Communist North Korea?Andrew4Handel

    But I don't. You don't either. Why should we live our lives as if we did?

    I say that as someone with a late diagnosis of autism after decades of struggling and someone now seeking help for ADHD. You get frequently judged for not fitting in. You are supposed to conform for everyone else's sake and society does not have to do anything for you unless you have an advocate or yell loud enough.Andrew4Handel

    You seem to have a lot harder life than I have. I don't begrudge you some bitterness and resentment. Just don't expect me to live my life as if I were you.