• on the matter of epistemology and ontology
    so the idea here is this: True, reality ha(s) an intrinsic intelligibility, not just in each of its parts but as a whole, but reality is phenomena. All phenomena. Anything posited beyond this is just bad metaphysics. Where is the justification to invent realities beyond what is given?Astrophel

    You're familiar with the 'myth of the given'? It critiques the view that knowledge is based on a foundation of given sensory experience, saying that all perception is conceptually mediated; that is, our understanding and interpretation of sensory data are always shaped by our prior knowledge, beliefs, and concepts. So there can be no pure or immediate knowledge derived directly from sense data. I don't see how that can be avoided. And your reference to 'bad metaphysics' sounds like A J Ayer!
  • Discussion on interpreting Aquinas' Third Way
    Sorry about that, got caught by an editing glitch. I was only going to add that the image of 'our father in heaven' is ubiquitous in ancient religions, as I think I've said before, the name 'Jupiter' is an adaption of the proto Indo-European 'dyaus-pitar', which means 'sky-father'. (A 'pagan' deity but nevertheless what many have in mind.) But then for a great part of its history, Biblical religion was addressed to illiterate agrarian and farming communities, and had to be presented through myth and allegories that this audience would understand. It's anachronistic in our post-industrial technocratic culture. The mystical stream within Christianity is somewhat detached from that, which is why the mystics often skirt with, or even are accussed of, heresy.
  • Discussion on interpreting Aquinas' Third Way
    The meaning of Aquinas ceasing from writing is conjecture but it has parallels in other religious traditions.
  • on the matter of epistemology and ontology
    My bad for mentioning qm. It has derailed many a thread.
  • Discussion on interpreting Aquinas' Third Way
    f god is the creator and sustainer of our reality then it must be that case that before creation, before existance and causality, there was nothing but god.Tom Storm

    (I'm bracketing this response as I don't want to derail the conversation about the OP. The popular image of God as a kind of cosmic director or literal sky-father is deeply entrenched in culture and is typically the target of athiest polemics. But it's telling that David Bentley Hart, whom you mentioned, is generally dismissive of theistic populism and personalism and its representations in such movements as intelligent design and creationism. The crucial and difficult thing to understand, is the sense in which God is not any thing. The 'nothing' that is at the ground of 'creation from nothing', is not 'before the big bang' in a temporal sense, but a fecund field which appears to us as nothing because of not being situated or existent in time or space. But it is nevertheless that (not that there is a 'that') from which everything emanates and to which everything returns. 'When (Augustine) cries out in the midst of his vision of the divine nature, “Is truth nothing just because it is not diffused through space, either finite or infinite?” he is acknowledging that it is the discovery of intelligible truth that first frees him to comprehend incorporeal reality.' (The Divine Nature: Being and Goodness, Scott McDonald, in The Cambridge Companion to Augustine.) It is not a 'that' or a 'this' of any kind, certainly not a 'divine engineer' or the deistic 'first cause' who kick-starts a process but then lets it run on its own accord (which is where so many atheist polemics, and theistic apologetics, are far off base). My intuition about Aquinas is that at the end of his career, when he fell into an ecstatic state and declared 'compared with that I have seen, all I have written seems as straw', it was because of direct realisation of that reality. In Aquinas this is naturally interpreted through the prism of Christian faith, but there are comparable realisations of the 'divine no-thing' in the philosophy of Plotinus and even the śūnyatā of Buddhism - which is not to say they're "all the same" as the subject matter is beyond comparison.)
  • on the matter of epistemology and ontology
    The way I've come to think of 'intelligible objects' is through the expression that they are 'in the mind, but not of it'. This suggests that while forms (or essences) can only be known or apprehended by a rational mind, they are not simply constructs or inventions of the mind; they are not 'the product of' the human mind. Instead, forms have a reality independent of the human mind; they inhere in things themselves, and our minds have the capability to grasp or recognize these forms through observation, reasoning, and abstraction.

    The mistake of modern thinking is to regard particular objects (the proverbial tree or apple or chair) as 'mind-independent', when the act of knowing what each thing is, is itself an intellectual act, which is obviously mind-dependent. This error relies on the so-called 'view from nowhere', the conceit that one can rise above all particular acts of knowing to see material things as they are in themselves. It is a foundational error within empiricism, because particulars are not anything 'in themselves' in the sense that modern objectivism posits. They have no inherent reality, their reality is imputed to them by the observer. (This also shows up, needless to say, in quantum physics.)

    Speaking of Frege, he obtains to a somewhat similar view with respect to the reality of intelligible objects:

    Frege believed that number is real in the sense that it is quite independent of thought: 'thought content exists independently of thinking "in the same way", he says "that a pencil exists independently of grasping it. Thought contents are true and bear their relations to one another (and presumably to what they are about) independently of anyone's thinking these thought contents - "just as a planet, even before anyone saw it, was in interaction with other planets." '

    Furthermore in The Basic Laws of Arithmetic he says that 'the laws of truth are authoritative because of their timelessness: "[the laws of truth] are boundary stones set in an eternal foundation, which our thought can overflow, but never displace. It is because of this, that they are authority for our thought if it would attain to truth."
    Frege on Knowing the Third Realm,Tyler Burge

    Plato lives! :party:
  • on the matter of epistemology and ontology
    IT is over there, but this intimation of real Being is somehow IN the "presence" of the encounter. Where does this come from? It comes from me, the perceiver. This "sense" of "absolute being" is me.Astrophel

    Is it because you know what it is? I've been reading a book on classical metaphysics, which says that the basis of the forms is that they are the what-it-is-ness of a particular. So you know a post as a post, because you recognise it as such. To a post itself, it is nothing, of course, because it's an inanimate object, so its form is imposed on it by the fencemaker, but the same general idea applies to particulars of other kinds - they exist insofar as they exemplify a form, which is what makes them intelligible. If they had no form, they wouldn't be anything. Of course, all of this is nowadays regarded as archaic, but often without much knowledge of what, precisely, has been rejected. Suffice to say for the purposes of this discussion, and your comment above in particular, that the pre-moderns did not regard the world as being 'mind-independent' in the way that moderns reflexively do, which is what engenders the modern 'problem of knowledge' that we're all continually running up against. A comment from an essay on the consequences of nominalism in modern thought:

    In doing away with forms, Ockham did away with formal causality. Formal causality secures teleology—the ends or purposes of things follow from what they are and what is in accord with or capable of fulfilling their natures. In the natural world, this realist framework secures an intrinsic connection between efficient causes and their effects—an efficient cause produces its effects by communicating some formality: fire warms by informing objects with its heat. ....

    Thomists and other critics of Ockham have tended to present traditional (i.e. scholastic) realism, with its forms or natures, as the solution to the modern problem of knowledge. It seems to me that it does not quite get to the heart of the matter. A genuine realist should see “forms” not merely as a solution to a distinctly modern problem of knowledge, but as part of an alternative conception of knowledge, a conception that is not so much desired and awaiting defense, as forgotten and so no longer desired. Characterized by forms, reality had an intrinsic intelligibility, not just in each of its parts but as a whole. With forms as causes, there are interconnections between different parts of an intelligible world, indeed there are overlapping matrices of intelligibility in the world, making possible an ascent from the more particular, posterior, and mundane to the more universal, primary, and noble.

    In short, the appeal to forms or natures does not just help account for the possibility of trustworthy access to facts, it makes possible a notion of wisdom, traditionally conceived as an ordering grasp of reality. Preoccupied with overcoming Cartesian skepticism, it often seems as if philosophy’s highest aspiration is merely to secure some veridical cognitive events. Rarely sought is a more robust goal: an authoritative and life-altering wisdom.
    What's Wrong with Ockham, Joshua Hochschild
  • Deep Songs
    The Speck of Dust, Leonid and Friends

  • Discussion on interpreting Aquinas' Third Way
    At the same time, I think Aquinas is a really smart dude, so I'm like "what am I missing about his argument?"NotAristotle

    Does he say 'there could have been a time when nothing existed?' or are you imputing that to him. The argument, as you've provided, and which is a fair paraphrase, doesn't claim that.

    We find in nature things that are possible to be and not to be, since they are found to be generated, and to corrupt, and consequently, they are possible to be and not to be. But it is impossible for these always to exist, for that which is possible not to be at some time is not.

    He's simply observing that all things 'found in nature' are temporally de-limited, i.e. they have a beginning and an end in time. They don't exist 'by necessity' but only as a matter of contingency. He goes on:

    Therefore, if everything is possible not to be, then at one time there could have been nothing in existence. Now, if this were true, even now there would be nothing in existence, because that which does not exist only begins to exist by something already existing.

    I concede, the 'at one time there could have been....' might be speculative. But something to consider is that, if the Universe had existed eternally, and everything in it has a finite lifespan, then again, nothing would exist now, as everything that could have existed, would have already perished, as the amount of time involved is infinite, and no addition of finite durations can add up to an infinite sequence of time. (This is not stated explicitly in the argument, but it is part of the background to the family of arguments).

    (You might also peruse this essay, which provides some more background on Aquinas' interpretation of creation.)

    //ps// - there's a remark at the end of the Third Way, "Now it is impossible to go on to
    infinity in necessary things which have their necessity caused by another, as has been already proved in regard to efficient causes" - I belive that reference to 'has already been proved' is to another of the arguments. //
  • How Different Are Theism and Atheism as a Starting Point for Philosophy and Ethics?
    Some modern humans, with modern ethics now cheerfully cherry pick the 'nicer' parts of religious morality,Tom Storm

    And vice versa. Agree with you about Luther, though, I've never been able to stomach Luther or Calvin. Far prefer Rinzai and Dogen.
  • Discussion on interpreting Aquinas' Third Way
    That's OK, and sorry for my outburst. But Aquinas' arguments are exceedingly difficult, in their own way - and I'm not saying that as any kind of expert, either. I've only read parts of the Summae and various articles about Aquinas, but this metaphysical argument rings true to me (for reasons I can't really put my finger on.)

    Let's go back a few steps. Your paragraph beginning 'An objection to Aquinas' argument....' is not, as I said, an objection. Aquinas argues that if every being were contingent (i.e., could either exist or not exist), there must have been a time when nothing existed, because contingent beings are not the necessary cause of their existence. If nothing existed at some point in time, nothing would exist now, since something cannot come from nothing without a cause. Therefore, the existence of contingent beings today implies the existence of a necessary being that initiated the chain of existence. (Note that this is very similar to, and probably built around, Aristotle's argument for the First Cause in Metaphysics.)

    Simply asserting "there could have been 'possible beings' in existence at all times" does not effectively counter Aquinas's argument, because you have not provided a logical alternative to the necessity of a first, uncaused cause. To effectively challenge Aquinas's Third Way, you would need to demonstrate logically - rather than simply assert - how an infinite regression of contingent causes could exist without a prime mover or uncaused cause, or to provide an alternative explanation.
  • Discussion on interpreting Aquinas' Third Way
    I removed it. But I was vexed by the fact that after you introduce the topic you then declare that it doesn't say anything, i.e. that it's meaningless. It gives me the impression that you don't understand the point of the argument, so I'm asking, if you think it's a pointless argument, then why go to the trouble of starting a thread about it?
  • Discussion on interpreting Aquinas' Third Way
    An objection to Aquinas' argument, in my opinion, is that, while there could have been a time when nothing was in existence, there also could have been "possible beings" in existence at all times.NotAristotle

    But not by the logic of the argument. In other words, you're simply asserting that Aquinas' reasoning is wrong. In order to show why it is wrong, you would have to establish that there can be an infinite sequence of contingent causes, without an initial uncaused cause to ground them. Simply asserting that 'there could have been' doesn't amount to an argument against it.
  • On ghosts and spirits
    Why would clothes also survive death? And sometimes there are ghost trains, cars and horses and dogs with their drivers or masters. What makes animals or machines come along for the undead journey?Tom Storm

    Aren't they presumed to be ethereal? As distinct from corporeal, to use another archaic term. They're denizens of another plane of existence, the ethereal realms that are normally only accessible to mediums or shamans or others of that ilk. I suppose Swedenborg was an example from relatively recent history (although I've never studied his writings). So they're not ever going to leave remnants, they're nearer in nature to rainbows than to materially-existent things.

    I recall the main characters in H P Lovecrafts' novels entering into spirit worlds through dreams. It's not too distant from that Christopher Nolan film, Inception. These kinds of stories highlight the idea of parallel realms of existence, which we mortals aren't aware of. It's curious now that with the idea of the multiverse which originated with quantum physics, many (like David Deutsch) are willing to contemplate the possibility of other worlds in that physical sense. But the so-called ethereal realms, akashic records, and the like, are of a different order of being, not detectable to scientific instruments which are ultimately just extended versions of our natural senses.

    (Many years ago I read an interesting media studies review of the attraction of films like Matrix, Inception, etc, being so attractive to audiences because of their suggestion of parallel realities. Wasn't ever able to find it again, but it made a compelling case.)
  • The Unity of Dogmatism and Relativism
    The disagreement you're having is very similar to the Katz-Forman debate. This debate centers around the contrasting views of two scholars: Steven T. Katz and Robert K.C. Forman. The crux of their disagreement lies in the interpretive framework used to understand mystical experiences, particularly regarding the extent to which these experiences are shaped by cultural, religious, and linguistic contexts.

    Steven T. Katz argues for a constructivist approach, suggesting that mystical experiences are heavily influenced by the individual's cultural, linguistic, and religious background. According to Katz, the interpretive frameworks and conceptual categories that a person has internalized from their culture shape the nature of their mystical experiences. This view implies that there is no "pure" mystical experience independent of the conceptual apparatus brought by the mystic to the experience.

    On the other hand, Robert K.C. Forman advocates for the perennialist approach, positing that there are core realisations that are universal and not entirely shaped by cultural or linguistic conventions. Forman argues that some aspects of mystical experiences transcend cultural and religious boundaries, suggesting the existence of a common realisation that can be accessed by individuals independently of their specific religious or cultural backgrounds.

    I see @Count Timothy von Icarus as favouring the Forman approach and @Joshs as advocating the latter. I favour the former approach, in that I believe that at least some elements of what is being described as mystical experience (granting that it is rather a problematic description) are as universal as the experience of breathing or having sex. Religions and philosophies vary culturally, but hearts and lungs are the same everywhere.

    But it's futile to really try and isolate or identify what that common core or 'mystical experience' is, because insofar as anything whatever is said about it will be expressed in language and its related metaphorical and cognitive structures. I believe that the 'philosophers of the absolute', of whom I suppose that Hegel is arguably one, would be aware of that, but I wouldn't look for agreement in the milieu that Joshs typically appeals to.

    I think the key term is 'the unconditioned', and accordingly did a search on 'the unconditioned in philosophy'. I found one article called The Unconditioned in Philosophy of Religion - read it a couple of times and didn't get much from it, but at least it frames the debate the right way. A better one was The Unconditioned Soul by Stephen Priest, a book excerpt. But I know the objection will often be that all consideration of a putative 'unconditioned' is characterised by post-modernists as religious dogma, which counts against it.
  • On ghosts and spirits
    speculative branch of sociology...Manuel

    It's more a speculative biological theory applied here to sociology in this particular case. The point being that morphic fields, and morphic resonance, provide a medium for what is perceived by us as ghosts. I will add that the existence of morphic resonance is on the whole rejected by most scientists, despite Sheldrake's claims to have found evidence for it, so I'm not saying you should believe it. Only that they at least provide a paradigm.
  • On ghosts and spirits
    One of the 'six realms' into which humans may be reborn in Buddhist cultures is the realm of the hungry ghosts - these are the spirits of people who in life were greedy, envious, jealous or selfish. The hungry ghost's existence is characterised by inextinguishable craving which can never be satisfied, so they are depicted with large bellies and thin necks, forever searching for a sustenance they can never obtain.

    Hungry-Ghost-396x300.jpg
  • On ghosts and spirits
    Is it just that we experience things to some extent due to cultural circumstances?Manuel

    Consider this essay. Morphic fields, and morphic resonance, even though generally (and angrily) rejected by mainstream science, at least provide a potential medium for the transmission of what is perceived as ghosts.
  • How Different Are Theism and Atheism as a Starting Point for Philosophy and Ethics?
    Quite agree. I always been interested in the idea of a cosmic philosophy, a philosophy which makes sense of the whole of existence. Generally, those philosophies tend to have religious connotations. Modern academic philosophy is not into that. When I went to University, I found a lot more of interest in anthropology and comparative religion.
  • On ghosts and spirits
    I have heard of bone-pointing deaths, not sure if they are well-documented.Janus

    Quite well, I seem to recall from my studies in Anthropology, although I won’t go digging for them.

    Did you ever see Oscar Wilde’s The Canterville Ghost? i found it tremendously poignant.
  • On ghosts and spirits
    Yeah but I don’t know if their ghosts would bother haunting white fellas, or whether I’d be able to see it if they did.

    On that topic, ever read about bone-pointing deaths?
  • On ghosts and spirits
    Any thoughts on this topic?Manuel

    When I was in my early teens we lived for half a year in Aberdeen Scotland which has been continuously inhabited since pre-historic times. We lived slightly outside the city in a 17th c home which was originally the gamekeeper's cottage of a minor estate. In that part of the world, in winter, the sun goes down at three in the afternoon, and often there's a thick sea fog - the house was only about a km from the North Sea - you literally couldn't see your hand in front of your face.

    Just up the laneway was another very old house, which was reputedly the site of some public hangings in times past, and had been constructed on the ruins of an ancient monastery which had been sacked by an invading force (possibly Vikings.) The current owners, who we came to know, said that they had unearthed the odd dubloon and other ancient remnants while digging in the grounds, that there were frequently sounds of movement and chains clanking in the night.

    Me, I don't know if there were ghosts there, but it really wasn't hard to believe it in that environment. Partially because of the sense of the past and of premature and violent deaths. It was much easier to believe it there than in the brash newness of Australia where I come from. We're not old enough to be haunted.

    On a more scholarly level, there is a lot of literature on the British Parapsychological Society. Someone recommended me a book, The Ghost Hunters (review here) which I haven't got around to, but it looks a great read - they were very interesting characters, and many of the anecdotes are at least suggestive if you can put it like that. Again, I'm not persuaded by such accounts, and I think definite evidence is always going to remain elusive, but part of me would like to think that it's true.
  • on the matter of epistemology and ontology
    The truth is the whole. Both mind and nature play a role in defining truth, and the attempt to abstract propositions into mindless statements of fact simply miss this.Count Timothy von Icarus

    What is required is a perspective which transcends and therefore includes both subject and object, seer and seen, self and world - one of the fundamental themes of metaphysics since Parmenides. Hegel would probably be one who understands this better than most. But then as you point out there is a thread that connects the mystical tradition, and therefore neoplatonism, with the German idealists (Dermot Moran has written a book on that.)
  • Ancient Peoples and Talk of Mental States
    3. Ancient peoples coherently talked about their mental states.RogueAI

    Which 'ancient peoples' in particular, and in which texts? A pretty strong argument can be made that many ancient myths and fables can be understood as allegorical descriptions of mental states, told by peoples who had very limited ability for conscious introspection as we understand it. Consider as an example Julian Jaynes theory of the bicameral mind, proposed in his 1976 book "The Origin of Consciousness in the Breakdown of the Bicameral Mind." He suggests that ancient humans operated in a state where cognitive functions were divided between two parts of the brain, which he termed the "bicameral" mind. One part of the brain "spoke" as though a god or superior authority, and the other part listened and obeyed. This mental framework, he argues, allowed early humans to navigate their social and environmental worlds without the kind of introspective consciousness that characterizes modern human thought.

    There's a related stream of thought, that connect mythological stories and characters with aspects of the unconscious mind. Jung introduced the concept of the collective unconscious, a shared level of unconsciousness across humans that is populated by archetypes—universal, mythic characters and themes that reside within the psyche of all people. He believed that myths and dreams are expressions of these archetypes and serve as a way for the unconscious to communicate with the conscious mind.

    James Hillman, building on Jung's work, developed the concept of archetypal psychology. Hillman suggested that myths and dreams are not just expressions of the inner psyche but also have their own autonomy. He argued that mythological stories and characters reflect deep structures of the psyche that play a crucial role in the shaping of human life and culture. For Hillman, these mythological images are not merely symbolic but are essential constituents of psychological reality, influencing how we see the world, ourselves, and our experiences.

    None of which has much to do with 'brain states' but that might be part of the point.
  • How Different Are Theism and Atheism as a Starting Point for Philosophy and Ethics?
    It should be about more than just "getting to heaven." The bible contains unbelievably sophisticated dialogues and discourses between "God" and "man" which helps man frame and understand his world/his self. The "divine revelation" contained in the bible helps me understand myself, which extends to the world and its various phenomena. It's also just an astoundingly wise and radical work of literature to have been written in antiquity (or for any time, for that matter.)BitconnectCarlos

    I hear you. I'm personally not oriented so much around the Bible although I recognise that it's clearly a major part of my inherited culture and certainly a major part of my own spiritual orientation. I had a conversion experience earlier in life towards a more Eastern way of understanding. They're not necessarily conflicting, but they are different. But the major point for me in terms of philosophy, is the role (and the rejection) of revealed truth and spiritual insight.

    Secular philosophy generally starts from the assumption that the 'wisdom traditions', whilst they might have value as literature, are just human inventions, that their cannot be a revealed truth in their sense because there is no truth to reveal (or at least, none that has been subjected to peer-reviewed journal articles and empirical observation). As far as the cultural distinction, Christian faith tends more towards fideism (justification by faith) and the Eastern traditions more towards forms of gnosticism (saving insight). But so far as secular culture is concerned, while they're worthy of respect as elements of human culture, they're not truth-bearing in the way that scientific observation can be.

    Reason has its place but to say that one's entire worldview can be constructed from reason is just folly.BitconnectCarlos

    Something that strikes me as a sub-text behind this, is the feeling, or the conviction, that life arises by chance, that it is the outcome of the 'accidental collocation of atoms', as Bertrand Russell put it in his seminal modern essay A Free Man's Worship. Overall, there's a rejection of the idea of reason in any sense but what is intelligible in human terms, and what is useable from a pragmatic point of view. There is no reason in the sense captured by the Greek term 'logos' (which perhaps unfortunately was appropriated and re-purposed by Christian theology.) We live in a purposeless universe, with whatever purpose we perceive those we read into it.

    I don't advocate belief in God or theism but I believe an awareness of what is missing is important.

    What secular reason is missing is self-awareness. It is “unenlightened about itself” in the sense that it has within itself no mechanism for questioning the products and conclusions of its formal, procedural entailments and experiments. “Postmetaphysical thinking,” philosopher Jürgen Habermas contends, “cannot cope on its own with the defeatism concerning reason which we encounter today both in the postmodern radicalization of the ‘dialectic of the Enlightenment’ and in the naturalism founded on a naïve faith in science.”Does Reason Know What It is Missing?

    That is more a question than an answer, which is appropriate.
  • Feature requests
    That's different to my experience on iPhone, or at any rate I haven't noticed any particular latency. But do agree about that annoying feature with quoting.
  • How Different Are Theism and Atheism as a Starting Point for Philosophy and Ethics?
    But this misses the point, which is that for those who actually believe in God, it has real consequences. Whereas to believe that it's simply a 'puzzle-solver is a meaningless hypothetical.
    — Wayfarer

    That's a pointless point that deserves to be missed.
    Janus

    For 'internet atheism', faith in God can only ever be a mistaken belief or delusion or superstition, it's only ever an item in an argument. So the consequence of loosing said faith can only be the loss of a fallacious belief, which would obviously be beneficial, so far as the atheist is concerned. But for the believer what is at stake is much more than a belief, but the fate of their immortal soul, which is something of absolutely momentous importance. That's what I meant by 'asymmetry', although I'm not going to go into bat for belief in God.
  • A philosophical discussion with ChatGPT
    Another one of the same. As it's on a similar theme I thought I would add it here rather than creating a whole new thread. It starts off with a comparison of the 'thing-consciousness' of materialism and contrasts that with the 'no-thing consciousness' which is associated with the Buddhist śūnyatā (emptiness). Then there's a discussion about the nature of self as that which distinguishes living from non-living things. Finally that segues into a consideration of whether Evan Thompson's 'Mind in Life' might be a useful reference for these musings.

    Part One:
    Reveal
    USER: I'm wondering if physicalism as a philosophical outlook is always tied to the concept of 'thing-ness'. What I mean is, that whatever the fundamental ontological substance of physicalism comprises, it has to be conceived of in terms of it being some kind of thing, as the concept of an immaterial thing is oxymoronic. To which one might oppose philosophies of no-thing-ness. In that context, 'no-thing' does not mean quite the same as merely 'nothing'. Think for example of the Buddhist śūnyatā, emptiness. But that is also not simply nothing, but no-thing.

    ChatGPT: Your question touches on deep and nuanced areas of philosophy, engaging with the concepts of physicalism and notions of "thing-ness" versus "no-thing-ness." Let's unpack these ideas to better understand the landscape.

    Physicalism is a philosophical stance that everything which exists is no more extensive than its physical properties; that is, all that exists in the universe can ultimately be described by physics. Physicalists argue that the only "things" that truly exist are physical entities or entities that can be explained in physical terms. This view is often contrasted with dualism, which holds that both the physical and the non-physical (such as the mind) can exist, and idealism, which posits that mind or consciousness is fundamental, and the physical world depends on it.

    When physicalists talk about the universe and its contents, they indeed tend to conceive of them in terms of "things" or entities with physical properties. These can be particles, fields, waves, or any entity describable by physics. The conception of "thing-ness" in this context is tied to materiality or physical existence.

    No-thing-ness, on the other hand, refers to an ontological state or concept that goes beyond the mere absence of things (nothingness) to denote an absence of intrinsic, independent essence or nature in things. This concept is prevalent in several Eastern philosophies, including Buddhism's notion of śūnyatā (emptiness). Śūnyatā suggests that things do not possess inherent existence on their own but are interdependently co-arisen. This does not mean things do not exist at all but rather that their existence is not independent or inherent.

    The key distinction here is between physicalism's commitment to the existence of "things" as the fundamental constituents of reality (albeit physically describable) and the concept of "no-thing-ness" which challenges the very notion of intrinsic essence in anything, suggesting a more relational or dependent conception of existence.

    It's important to note that while physicalism inherently relies on the concept of "thing-ness" because it posits a fundamentally material or physical basis for all phenomena, it does not necessarily preclude a conceptual space for understanding phenomena that do not neatly fit into the notion of "thing-ness," such as emergent properties or complex systems. However, the challenge for physicalism in the context of "no-thing-ness" is to account for the relational and interdependent aspects of reality without resorting to non-physical explanations.

    In contrast, philosophies that embrace "no-thing-ness," like certain interpretations of Buddhism, offer a fundamentally different ontological perspective that does not ground existence in "things" but rather in the absence of inherent essence and the interdependence of phenomena. This can provide a complementary or alternative framework for understanding reality, one that challenges and expands beyond the materialist confines of physicalism.

    In sum, while physicalism as a philosophical outlook is generally tied to the concept of "thing-ness" due to its materialist underpinnings, engaging with concepts of "no-thing-ness" like śūnyatā introduces rich philosophical territory that explores the limits of physicalism and opens up dialogues with other ontological perspectives.


    Part Two:

    Reveal
    User: Here is another perspective on this distinction. I have been mulling the idea that what distinguishes living things (or beings) from inanimate objects, is that they have a rudimentary form of self. That can be justified on the basis that even the most rudimentary organisms maintain a boundary between their bodies and the environment, and by so doing, differentiate themselves from the environment. I'm not saying they have any *sense* of self, but that distinction between inner and outer is the basis of what evolves to become *self".

    ChatGPT: Your perspective offers a fascinating lens through which to examine the distinction between living things and inanimate objects, focusing on the notion of a rudimentary form of "self" as a defining characteristic of life. This idea resonates with several theories in biology, philosophy of mind, and cognitive science that explore the origins and nature of selfhood and consciousness.

    The concept that living organisms maintain a boundary between their bodies and the environment is central to biological and philosophical discussions about the nature of life. This boundary is not just physical but also operational, as it marks the delineation where metabolic processes, homeostasis, and various forms of regulation occur. These processes are fundamental to what it means to be alive, enabling an organism to maintain its internal environment within the limits necessary for its survival, despite changes in the external environment.

    This distinction between inner and outer, as you suggest, can be seen as the most basic form of "self" — not in the sense of a conscious or reflective self-awareness but as an operational or functional self. Such a self is defined by its capacity to maintain its integrity and identity over time, distinguishing itself from its surroundings through processes like metabolism, growth, and response to stimuli.

    Philosophers and scientists have proposed various theories about how this rudimentary form of self might evolve into more complex forms of self-awareness and consciousness. One key idea is that as organisms become more complex, their mechanisms for interacting with the environment also become more sophisticated, leading to more complex forms of self-regulation and, eventually, to the emergence of consciousness and self-awareness. The evolutionary biologist Lynn Margulis, for example, emphasized the role of symbiosis and cooperation in the evolution of complex life forms, suggesting that the integration of different organisms and their functions might contribute to the emergence of new levels of selfhood.

    Cognitive scientists and philosophers like Daniel Dennett and Thomas Metzinger have also explored how self-awareness might arise from more basic forms of selfhood. They propose that self-awareness emerges from the brain's ability to model its own processes, leading to a reflective understanding of oneself as an agent in the world.

    Your perspective aligns with these theories by suggesting that the very act of maintaining a boundary between self and environment is foundational to the concept of self. This boundary is the precursor to more complex biological and cognitive processes that underlie self-awareness and identity. It suggests that the evolution of selfhood is a gradual process, starting from the most basic biological distinctions between organism and environment and leading up to the complex phenomena of consciousness and self-reflection observed in higher organisms.

    This approach to understanding life and selfhood emphasizes the continuity between life's basic biological processes and the complex phenomena of mind and consciousness. It suggests that even the simplest forms of life exhibit the rudiments of selfhood, laying the groundwork for the evolutionary development of more sophisticated forms of self-awareness.


    Part Three:

    Reveal
    User: So to tie this to the earlier musing on 'thing-ness' in physicalism, the point about 'the self' - even the rudimentary self of primitive organisms - is that this is not itself something that appears as object. It is the basis of 'subject-hood' (which is not quite the same as subjectivity, but more like the capacity to be subject of experience.)

    I'm wondering if Evan Thompsons Mind in Life might have some material on this idea?

    ChatGPT: Evan Thompson's "Mind in Life: Biology, Phenomenology, and the Sciences of Mind" is indeed a seminal work that explores the intersection of biology, phenomenology (the philosophical study of experience), and cognitive science. Thompson's work is particularly relevant to your musings on 'thing-ness' in physicalism and the concept of 'the self,' especially in the context of the rudimentary self of primitive organisms and the basis of 'subject-hood.'

    In "Mind in Life," Thompson challenges traditional perspectives in both the sciences and philosophy that treat life and mind as fundamentally separate domains. Instead, he argues for a deep continuity between life processes and the emergence of mind, suggesting that basic life processes exhibit proto-mental features that are foundational to the development of more complex forms of consciousness and subjectivity.

    Thompson draws on phenomenology to articulate a concept of "lived body" or "body-subject," emphasizing that living beings are not merely objects in the world but also subjects of experience. This approach aligns with your distinction between 'thing-ness' and 'subject-hood,' as Thompson argues that even the most basic forms of life embody a kind of subjectivity—albeit not in the reflective or self-aware sense we associate with human consciousness. Instead, this subjectivity is manifest in the organism's capacity to maintain itself, regulate its interactions with the environment, and exhibit a form of "sense-making," where the organism actively engages with its surroundings in a meaningful way.

    Thompson's integration of phenomenology with the life sciences provides a framework for understanding how subject-hood and the capacity to be a subject of experience can emerge from the biological processes that define living systems. He argues that the organizational properties of life itself underpin the emergence of mind, suggesting that mental phenomena are not something added to life from the outside but are intrinsic to the very process of living.

    In this context, 'the self'—even at its most rudimentary level in primitive organisms—is understood not merely as an object among objects but as a dynamic, self-organizing process that gives rise to subject-hood. This perspective challenges the strict materialism of some physicalist positions by suggesting that the phenomena of mind and consciousness cannot be fully explained by referring to physical processes alone. Instead, Thompson proposes a more integrated approach that sees mind and life as fundamentally interconnected, with subjectivity emerging from the life processes that characterize living beings.

    So, in relation to your interest, Thompson's "Mind in Life" indeed provides valuable material that bridges the concepts of 'thing-ness' and 'subject-hood,' offering a sophisticated model for understanding how the rudimentary self of living organisms can serve as the basis for the capacity to be subjects of experience. This aligns with and enriches your earlier musings, providing a robust theoretical foundation for exploring these ideas further.
  • Does Consciousness Extend Beyond Brains? - The 2023 Holberg Debate
    You’re welcome. Sorry didn’t realize that link was paywalled.
  • Does Consciousness Extend Beyond Brains? - The 2023 Holberg Debate
    I don't really get why AI has become a topic in this thread, when it wasn't even discussed in the presentation that the thread refers to, and when it is the perennial topic of discussion in numerous other threads. Here is a 1980's era documentary on Sheldrake from the BBC about his life, theories and the (generally hostile) reception to his work. (Sheldrake notes towards the end that he was an early victim of 'cancel culture', when invitations from student bodies for him to lecture would be rejected by the University boards on the grounds that students ought not to be exposed to such nonsense.)
  • Does Consciousness Extend Beyond Brains? - The 2023 Holberg Debate
    Our physical brains operate under physical lawsPatterner

    Physical laws goven physical things, but language and reason operate by different principles, let alone many other of the subtle abilities of the mind, and not only the human mind.

    In respect of Sheldrake's morphic fields and morphic resonance, here is his introductory page. His basic idea is that nature forms habits, that once something has begun to form in a certain way, there is a greater tendency for it to form that way thereafter. I understand that this is generally rejected by most scientists on the grounds that it cannot be understood in physical or electromagnetic terms. 'When Rupert Sheldrake's book A New Science of Life was published in 1981, Sir John Maddox, then editor of Nature, thundered that it was an "infuriating tract" and "the best candidate for burning there has been for many years". When asked later why so, he responded '"Sheldrake is putting forward magic instead of science, and that can be condemned in exactly the language that the Pope used to condemn Galileo, and for the same reason. It is heresy."'

    Sheldrake has been very active of late on internet panel discussions such as those hosted by IAI (Institute of Art and Ideas), alongside the likes of Roger Penrose and Sabine Hossenfelder. He's often regarded with a kind of bemused tolerance, like an endearing older relative who has odd beliefs. But at least he does have a place in the discussion, which I find encouraging, as I've always rather liked him. I can't say that I've been through his research papers in any depth, but I'm open to his ideas.

    (Incidentally, last night a minor tremor affected a wide area of Western Sydney and the adjacent Blue Mountains where we live. It was a single shock, the windows rattled, it felt like a distant explosion or sonic boom. We didn't know what had happened until news reports several hours later. But as is often the case, many callers to the news reported that their dogs started barking minutes before it happened. Due, it is believed, to animals being able to detect changes in electromagnetic fields, although nobody actually knows - see this.)
  • Exploring the Artificially Intelligent Mind of Claude 3 Opus
    Thanks for the intro! I signed up and posed a few questions, which I won’t link in full, but Claude said at the end of it ‘I appreciate your nuanced perspective on the interplay between philosophy and science.’ :nerd:
  • Does Consciousness Extend Beyond Brains? - The 2023 Holberg Debate
    Sheldrake has published a lot of papers and books. I’m not going to come to his defence, as hostility towards PSI research is notorious and it’s a very nasty debate, and I don’t have a dog in the fight. But one point he does make, and which I’ve read elsewhere, is that one of the arguments that is routinely invoked against PSI is that ‘extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence’. PSI phenomena are categorised as ‘extraordinary’ as a matter of definition, and so whatever statistical evidence is adduced in favour of, say, ‘remote viewing’ is said to require far higher standards of statistical significance than, say, epidemiological studies do. And defenders of PSI say that this allows for a fair amount of goal-post shifting when it comes to reviewing the results of PSI experiments. Whereas, the PSI proponents might argue that extra-sensory perception is actually not extraordinary at all, but something that occurs frequently in both animals and humans. It’s the philosophical implications of that which should be of interest on this forum, because if it is true - not saying it is! - then it indicates a significant gap in our understanding of the nature of life and mind.

    I’m not especially interested in PSI research - I’ve tried to read up on it, but a lot of it amounts to arguments about statistical significance. But I have a hard time accepting that all of the accounts of psychic phenomena that have occurred throughout history are simple falsehoods. I am more inclined to the view that there’s something about them which makes them almost impossible to validate against what we regard as scientific standards. But I’m content to leave it as an open question and not to try and prove the case one way or the other.

    I did notice in the video - and I did review the whole presentation - Anil Seth’s closing statement. I was very impressed by Seth overall, his demeanour and attitude were exemplary, so I’m not trying to ‘pick holes’ or anything. But in reviewing Luhrmann and Sheldrake’s statements about the reality of ‘transcendent experience’ (for want of a better term), he said they should be taken seriously but not literally, because to take them literally would be to ‘overturn 400 years of scientific consensus’. Mind you, he also added, much to his credit, that if this was necessary in the end, then so be it, demonstrating a real open-mindedness. But from the perspective of history of ideas, the 400 year figure is significant, I take it to be a reference to ‘since the “Scientific Revolution”. Meaning that, we have a consensus view of the nature of reality, and that view is, at the end of the day, that the physical sciences are definitive, and that psychic phenomena and belief in higher planes of being can only be understood in subjective terms.
  • After all - Artificial Intelligennce is thick as a brick
    AI is indeed intelligent in that it is able to find patterns in huge amounts of data but there is no way AI could reach to judgements like we humans can.Pez

    Agree. I’ve engaged in dialogues with ChatGPT almost daily since its release and am frequently amazed and impressed with the quality of the output. But I agree with your basic point. The reason is, human judgement ultimately relies on what really matters, what we think is important or salient, among other things. And the point about the distinction between rule-following and judgement is also true.

    Actually on the point of becoming too reliant on AI, I’ve noticed that since GPS systems have become common, I have over-relied on them on many occasions, even allowing them to direct me via a route I kind of instinctively felt was the wrong one more than once. And I’ve noticed I will now routinely turn on GPS instead of relying on my own navigation skills like I used to. I can really see this happening in an AI-dominated future. ‘But Siri told me…..’
  • Feature requests
    I have an iPhone 13 - it’s not slow but it’s always a bit fiddly due to the limitations of the iOS interface. Latency issues might be due to the network you’re on.
  • Feature requests
    It can be done manually on mobile by entering the tags
  • The Role of the Press
    As long as the headline says "Opinion," I think it's fair game to say as you want.Hanover

    It’s said that intelligence is ‘the ability to make distinctions’. I’m afraid that the distinction between news and opinion is one the general Fox audience may not have the intelligence to make.

    Secondly Trump undermines the idea of there being objective facts. He creates a ‘permission structure’ in which facts are what he says they are, and hundreds of millions will believe it. The so-called progressive media have given up on fact-checking him, because his followers believe him and deny the facts. That is of the essence of his threat to democracy.
  • The Role of the Press
    To argue that the press has a duty to provide only certain facts in order to protect democracy contradicts the idea that the freer the press, the more open the democracyHanover

    I agree with you in principle, but in the specifics of Trump v Biden, I understand the angst directed at the NYT. In my view, the fact that Trump is even considered a candidate, given his well-documented attempts to subvert the 2020 election and his consistent refusal to concede, is gravely disfunctional. As I've often said, you wouldn't even be allowed into a tennis tournament if you refused to acknowledge the umpire's rulings. And I too was dissappointed by the particular story the article highlights about concerns of Biden's fitness for office, which are routinely exagerrated. Biden has never been a very good public speaker, but he's an effective politican and leader who actually observes the conventions of his office and 'plays by the rules'.

    My question is whether anyone disagrees with what I've said and believes that the press has a duty to stake out a preferred social objective and then to use its power to promote that objectiveHanover

    Obviously a difficult question, but sometimes there are not 'two sides to every story'. In this case, it's not a contest between two equally qualified and worthy candidates, and that is a matter of objective fact. It's a contest between a regular politician, even if a mediocre example in some eyes, and a candidate who demonstrates contempt for democratic norms every time he opens his mouth and who openly threatens to institute a police state to persecute his rivals.

    But then also consider the role of Fox Media in the American Political landscape. They make no secret of being a propaganda channel for right-wing political views. I never watch it, but I read reports to the effect that they routinely denigrate and belittle Biden and make no pretence whatever at impartiality in their coverage of presidential politics, never mind the almost billion-dollar penalty they received for their outrageous bias in coverage of the last Presidential election. And if that could be reigned in, it would definitely be a good thing.