That is different from saying that 'metaphysical positions have no truth value'. That is very much the line of the 'vienna circle positivists' for whom metaphysics are nonsense. Collingwood's concern is more with interpretation: how are we to interpret metaphysical statements, so as to better understand those who made them? It's not dismissive of metaphysics in the way the positivists were. — Wayfarer
As Collingwood says, metaphysical positions are not true or false. They have no truth value.
— Clarky
:up: — 180 Proof
A bit simplistic. That belongs more to Carnap than Collingwood, of whom SEP says: — Wayfarer
I don't think we are in a survival prison. There is more to life than eating and shitting. — Jackson
I think I largely agree with you but I suspect this is because I am not a philosopher or an academic. — Tom Storm
So, in the end who (except the hobbyist and academic) really gives a rat's arse about 'noumena' or 'being' or the 'really real'? — Tom Storm
I think that the primitive hunter who masters the art of hurling a stone over a long distance "understands" gravity extremely well. — Pantagruel
but we aren't on the same page either.... — Pantagruel
I think the more sophisticated version of the question is, can quantum effects manifest within our "classical" framework and I think the answer is that under certain conditions they can. Quantum phenomena are utilized for a variety of technical purposes. — Pantagruel
We note only that the concept of normal perceptions have no bearing on reality. — Hanover
My comment about you referenced how I suspected you had a notion of normal, which was in reference to your internal standard. — Hanover
What is the the normal response to hot peppers? Are they really hot or mild? — Hanover
It seems to me that phenomenological and postmodern approaches recognize the metaphysical and the real, the formal and the empirical, the subjective and the objective, the ideal and the real , the valuative and the factual as two inseparable poles of each moment of experiencing. — Joshs
He talks about presuppositions in terms of the space of reasons, and makes use of Sellars’ distinction between the manifest image and the scientific image. — Joshs
But in what way can we disentangle the metaphysical from the factual? — Joshs
A fact is what it is by virtue of its role within a value system. But the fact doesnt just reside within this system, it also alters this system. There is a reciprocal dependence between the metaphysical and the factual which allows each to change the other. — Joshs
I think the more sophisticated version of the question is, can quantum effects manifest within our "classical" framework and I think the answer is that under certain conditions they can. — Pantagruel
So would you extend this observation to the ‘facts’ of an empirical science as well? That is, is it a problem that people believe factual correctness in science asymptotically approximates ( through Popperian falsification) an ultimately true reality? — Joshs
10 Examples of Quantum Physics in Everyday Life — Pantagruel
Welcome to the phenomenological school of thought! — Tobias
We do not interact with the ground structure of reality of a day to day basis. — Tobias
At least even us do not consider being, nothngness, essences and properties as our daily fare. — Tobias
I tend to look at this sort of questions historically and I think we are in an epoch in which our metaphysics is indeed changing. — Tobias
I am an anti-metaphysical metaphysician though. Ultimately all such truth claims are speculative and the only thing we can do is trace the historical, social and political processes of their emergence. — Tobias
We deduce from seeing a baseball that it is comprised by particles. We do not see the particles. — Jackson
The term purports to do exactly what you intuit, postulate that what occurs on a different scale than that of humans, is what is actual. — Tobias
That is exactly my critique, the mistakes the metaphorical for the real and jump from the level of presuppositions to the ontological nature of reality. We are not in disagreement. — Tobias
Maybe not. But we don't see the objects of science no matter what the model is. We see things, not physical particles. — Jackson
Perhaps. But I think all people have a metaphysic whether they articulate to themselves or not. — Jackson
Perhaps. But I think all people have a metaphysic whether they articulate to themselves or not. — Jackson
I am not sure to what extent people think there is one way of seeing reality. — Jack Cummins
We do not see the entanglement of existence. It is a judgment about what the real looks like; a conceptualization about the whole of existence is metaphysical. Those concepts might be derived from empirical sciences, but if employed to describe what 'existence' itself is, they are put to metaphysical use. — Tobias
For physicists, the most important lesson is that their deeply held commonsense intuitions about how the world works are wrong. — Quantum Computation and Quantum Information - Nielsen and Chuang
But there comes a time, always, when these Gods fall like meteors from the sky, to crash in a crater of mundanity. These Gods are human, all too human, utterly fallible, utterly nondivine. The child's worldview crashes into tatters, because it was merely the child's delusion, the tapestry becomes stretched and torn until it must crumble into dust. — hypericin
God and Gods fill such a vast, and largely unexamined, need, that they will never go away. Their services will always be required, by some. — hypericin
Indeed. And ironically (or not) even those committed to perspectivism and the notion of there being no correct viewpoint - no totalizing metanarrative - seem to elevate this evaluative framework as somehow true, in itself a kind of totalizing metanarrative. — Tom Storm
It is however, fiendishly hard to pin-point what it actually is, outside of saying that it's about the nature of the world. — Manuel
I am actually wondering if we are not seeing a new metaphysical turn. One indeed based around 'Quantum entanglement'. — Tobias
Those who see metaphysics as being nonsensical may just be making metaphysical assumptions invisible. — Jack Cummins
If anything, the idea that metaphysics can be eliminated may be a form of concrete thinking, as if there is one way of seeing reality rather than the plurality of possibilities. — Jack Cummins
Epistemology deals with general rules, structures and categories of meaning. — Joshs
You don’t ‘ get rid of’ or ‘get away from’ such concepts, you deconstruct them by showi f how the general always manifests itself as a unique and particular contextual sense. — Joshs
It certainly can’t be done if you hold onto concepts like epistemology and reason as the ground of philosophy. It is precisely such traditional notion a that have been put into question by contemporary philosophers. — Joshs
I do read the thinkers which I referred to. Recently, I have been reading Schopenhauer and do find his ideas on the way in which Kant's idea of the thing in itself can be about human will, or consciousness. It is a form of demystification — Jack Cummins
I am aware that you have your own thread on the Tao de Ching, which is a text which I have not read still. However, I do see the value of Eastern metaphysics generally. In particular, I find some Eastern ideas on the body and mind useful. — Jack Cummins
Will you give a definition of metaphysics? — Jackson
The branch of philosophy that attempts to construct a general, speculative worldview; a complete, systemic account of all reality and experience, usually involving an epistemology, an ontology, an ethics and an aesthetics. — Jack Cummins
The branch of philosophy that attempts to construct a general, speculative worldview; a complete, systemic account of all reality and experience, usually involving an epistemology, an ontology, an ethics and an aesthetics. — Jack Cummins
In the twentieth first century, I am wondering how much further is philosophy going in the elimination of metaphysics. This is in relation to the emphasis on the importance of understanding of language as being essential to philosophical analysis. However, there is more and more focus upon science as a source of 'truth'. It could be that philosophy is becoming more a matter of critical thinking in terms of understanding concepts and the empirical understanding through science, with reflection on personal values. — Jack Cummins
Certainty about the ambiguity, how will this fit into the practicalities of life, which often require firm action or unambiguous behavior? What practical value can we assign to the ambiguity? — Frankly
Some philosophers question the very concept of subjectivity as deeply flawed. — Jackson
Subjectivity is that which, generally speaking, pertains to the 1st person experience of an individual. — Bob Ross
Why did Aristotle and the ancient Greeks never talk about self-consciousness? Was there some huge leap in evolution where the brain developed self-consciousness? I think not.
— Jackson
The stuff we call "inner" they called divine. They thought the universe was alive with lust and arrogance.
We say those things only reside between our ears.
Who knows how our descendants will describe it. — Tate
Example? And please don't cite Homer. We are talking philosophy. — Jackson
Spot on. As it happens, most physicists choose locality over realism [*]. This rejection of realism (precisely, counterfactual definiteness) is well summed up by physicist Asher Peres, one of the original developers of quantum teleportation, as "unperformed experiments have no results". — Andrew M
