But there hasn’t been a technical notion of matter for centuries, despite your feelings. — Xtrix
I also said nothing about “fully understood.” — Xtrix
Plenty of people argue the same thing about God, incidentally. God isn’t “fully understood,” but not mysterious. I don’t find that very convincing. — Xtrix
The thread topic is enlightenment. Since when does philosophy concern itself with enlightenment or should have the final say over it? — baker
There is indeed a combination of physical constants (h, c, and G) that gives rise to that lengthscale but that doesn't mean space is not continuous beneath that scales. — Cartuna
That's the case according to loop quantum gravity. According to general relativity and string theory it's continuous. — Michael
That's popular science, which is maybe the best suited for this forum. — Cartuna
If I watch TV, the TV merely functionss as an intermediary, a sophisticated medium, like air, by means of which information is sent to you. It's in principle the same like the air between you and me if we directly talk to each other. — Cartuna
misunderstanding or inability to undestand. — Cartuna
The problem is that individual, separated quarks, cannot actually be observed. — Metaphysician Undercover
It seems most natural to me to think of space as infinite. — Gregory
There is no end to how small something can shrink. — Gregory
If TV were to play movies without any understanding of how, I think that too would qualify as a mystery. — Xtrix
Regardless, the main point is that the entire idea of matter (which includes brains) is a mystery. — Xtrix
In Gnomon's defense, he offers definitions and glossary links to every term he uses. You don't have to agree with him but you can't say that he's not trying. — Wayfarer
Yet quarks are supposed to be the constituent parts of massive objects. Where does all that mass actually come from? — Metaphysician Undercover
Now, you're just getting nasty. So, I'll back-off the stinky word "Metaphysics", and present my aromatic turkey dinner in the form of Karl Popper's notion of non-falsifiable Worlds 2 &3 as noted in the reply to Janus below. — Gnomon
And I repeat is again too. The brain is no medium through which information flows to show it to the ones watching. — Cartuna
But we know how a television and computer work. — Xtrix
To the extent that the wood is identical to the camp fire. — DingoJones
To the same extent that a program is identical to a computer. — khaled
I've often heard of it - and was tempted to take a loo. A child of the 80's, I was a bit skittish about watching another The Day After, but I should be able to handle it now. Now I just need to find the time away from my 6 year old — Joshua Jones
The topic of this "philosophical discussion" is "what IS metaphysics", not "what is the correct or conventional definition of an obsolete Aristotelian concept". — Gnomon
Why should enlightenment be the same for each of us? — Banno
Good question. I'm not sure it is meant to be the same but I have a poor understanding of the idea, hence this OP. Would there perhaps be certain themes in common? — Tom Storm
Sorry for cluttering your thread. — TheMadFool
In the movie Dr. Strange they had Tilda Swinton play the role of "The ancient one", which in the comic books was always an old Asian man. This received a certain amount of backlash. But was it racist? Maybe having a martial arts master be an old asian dude is a archetype so isn't that almost racist in a sense? When is creative license allowed in matters of race? — TiredThinker
Who looks outside, dreams; who looks inside, awakes. — Carl Jung
1. Ontology
2. Identity & Change
3. Causality
4. Space & Time
5. Necessity & Possibility
It appears that metaphysics is the study of broad conceptual frameworks with which we make sense of our world.
I guess we could call metaphysics pre-science, not proto-science. Meta-science. — TheMadFool
I removed my link to the wrong Hoffman. — Wayfarer
which is pretty well what I've been saying since I joined this forum. — Wayfarer
ps//Oh - actually, wrong Hoffman. I was referring to Prof. Donald, you were referring to a Peter Hoffman. But I'll leave it in as it's relevant to the general subject. — Wayfarer
By which scientists, for example? — Wayfarer
Ever run across https://www.thethirdwayofevolution.com/ ? — Wayfarer
On the Beach (1957) by Nevill Shute — Bitter Crank
Maybe attachment can be added to the list of provocative trigger words. — Tom Storm
I don't think it's uncommon for notions like unattachment and detachment and apathy to merge into a maelstrom of studied indifference in mainstream Western eyes. — Tom Storm
I never found the "million monkeys' idea compelling. — Janus
His argument is that until now, scientists simply assume scientific laws, without exploring why they are the way they are. That's why he is saying science 'rests on faith' - faith in scientific laws. — Wayfarer
I think scientific laws are formulated to describe observed invariant phenomena. So, for example, minimally,the law of gravity is just the observed invariability of unsupported objects falling until they are supported. — Janus
I take it as axiomatic that the predominant belief in secular culture is that 'life arose by chance'. Once you dispense with the idea of divine creation or emanation or a divine origin of some kind, what is the alternative? It can only be physical or chemical necessity, a kind of chain reaction that starts and then simply grows according to natural laws. — Wayfarer
Can you say more? Do you mean to say that unattachment is a less pejorative manifestation of apathy? — Tom Storm
Tell me why I'm wrong. Show me your viewpoint why I should feel like society is collapsing, or that winter is coming. Challenge me, and we shall discuss your assumptions and see if they hold up when detailed. — Philosophim
As someone who claims to be educated and a counsellor no less, you seem to have a penchant for emotive and passive aggressive language. Could it be that as a counsellor your work is overshadowed by your own anxieties? All this talk of burning books and burning people, Joshua - just how helpful do you think this might be? — Tom Storm
I have no new tales to tell, just a desire to see the darkness for what it is, and some companions to share in the light. — Joshua Jones
To be enlightened is to find out that you were wrong in thinking a particular thought and instead of doubling down you change your mind. — Harry Hindu
Then enlighten me about enlightenment. Am I enlightened now when I'm "wrong", or when I change my mind and agree with you? — Harry Hindu
Then what enlightenment is is subjective? — Harry Hindu
Dear Harold Bloom said of Emerson: "Emerson is the mind of our climate; he is the principal source of the American difference in poetry and criticism and in pragmatic postphilosophy." Do you think this holds? — Tom Storm
Metaphysics, in my opinion, is supposed to be focused on ideas that literally transcend the scope of empirical scientific methods, such as "what caused the Big Bang?" — Gnomon
Those educated guesses are what we call "Hypotheses", and when some guesses survive the scrutiny of peers, or lead to some replicable evidence, we may even call them "Theories". But even the best of our Theories, such as Thermodynamics and Evolution, are based on incomplete evidence. Hence, they are subject to falsification or revision in the future*1. Consequently, understanding the difference between Theory and Practice is essential to my understanding of Meta-Physics. — Gnomon
General concepts and Universal Properties are Meta-Physical — Gnomon
But that's not what I mean when I use the hyphenated term "Meta-Physics". By that I simply refer to the same difference that Descartes formalized between a physical Brain and a metaphysical Mind. — Gnomon
In my theory of Philosophy, Meta-Physics is about models and theories that are not currently verifiable. — Gnomon
What is the impetus for transformation - is it being who you really are, which may not be an improvement? — Tom Storm
Metaphysics is about first principles which, from a scientific standpoint, are theoretical frameworks or theories in short. — TheMadFool
