Most questions of metaphysics are just people telling stories to each other to try to ground the 'mystery' of life in some kind of foundational meta-narrative. — Tom Storm
This seems to apply to what many want from philosophy. Other issues seem drier to me, more like a mathematics with concepts which is aesthetically driven. — Pie
As Janus, @Banno and I have all been arguing (I think) the matter is about what could have been, and the temporal aspect makes a difference. Here we are saying that our uncertainty about the present is low, but our uncertainty about hard determinism is higher. We know what is the case, but we're not so sure that it was pre-determined and so could never have been otherwise. — Isaac
I thought the very basis of modal logic is that contingent truths, which cannot be false (obviously) could have been false (which means could be false in other possible worlds). — Janus
"Necessarily" always includes our world because it always includes all possible worlds. "Possibly" is explicitly non-committal on whether our world is the one described. If aliens are known to exist here, they are known to be possible; they may even be necessary, who's to say? But if you claim their existence is contingent, you're explicitly not claiming that in addition to existing here they don't exist here; you are claiming there is a possible world (maybe nearby, maybe accessible, whatever) in which they do not. Again: in that world, they do not; in this one, they still do. "Possibly not" just isn't about the facts here being different here. That rather misses the whole point. — Srap Tasmaner
If "aliens exists" is true then "aliens exist" is not false.
"is not" does not mean "is not possibly". ¬p does not mean ¬◇p.
Again, see the valid modal logic: — Michael
No, it's just saying something like "aliens exist" is not necessarily true, therefore it's possibly true and possibly false. — Michael
You're introducing temportal logic. Temporal logic isn't modal logic. — Michael
That it is necessary that p is true is that it is not possible that p is false. — Michael
The counterintuitive conclusion is that I could be wrong in believing that something is true even though I know that this thing is true. — Michael
How may a full understanding of knowledge be gained, subjectively, intersubjectively and objectively, especially in connection with the opposition between mysticism, imagination in contrast to the understanding of empirical science? — Jack Cummins
For me, mysticism is on par with ethics when it comes to being a philosophically valid field of inquiry. — Pantagruel
I believe in evidence. I believe in observation, measurement, and reasoning, confirmed by independent observers. I'll believe anything, no matter how wild and ridiculous, if there is evidence for it. The wilder and more ridiculous something is, however, the firmer and more solid the evidence will have to be.
I guess if you've never had it, you never know you don't. I'll ask her. — T Clark
Universal cooperation is a pipe dream. Also the idea that we can quickly de-carbonize is a fantasy it seems. The "political" part of the problem is the promulgation of impossible targets, but also, the unwillingness (due to the perceived unpopularity) to promote the idea that we (in the "developed" nations) should all use much less energy; drive much smaller cars, use public transport, do without air-conditioning unless absolutely necessary, stop traveling overseas, choose locally grown foods etc. — Janus
What he says needs to be done can happen only through universal cooperation, which is the panacea that will cure far more imminent threats than global warming. — Hanover
The solution remains more political than scientific. Most of Europe is aligned, but not so much the US, and surely not beyond the West. — Hanover
I agree. I'd say (with my philosopher hat off) 'of course raw feels exist' and those 'raw feels' include an empathy that finds itself mirrored in pets. — Pie
I agree with all of that. — Pie
What you say seems to 'anchor' meaning in something private. — Pie
We are so convinced we feel the 'same' pain (while insisting that pain is private?) because of the routine use of 'pain' public life. — Pie
it's misleading (so Wittgenstein seems to imply) to think of 'pain' having its meaning anchored in the ineffable. I connect this with Saussure's structuralism. Signs get their meaning positionally, — Pie
which implies that meaning is public. — Pie
The beetlebox is his own little joke on the ghost, on its epistemological-semantic nullity. — Pie
Sorry to offend. I guess we just understand Heidegger very differently. — Pie
That's precisely the view I was describing as 'Cartesian' (or 'Lockean' or 'Kantian'). It takes the subject as more real or present or certain than its objects. — Pie
Heidegger is clearly not constructing the world from the 'I' below. — Pie
Sure, but that's still an 'internal perspective' on the issue (your prerogative, obviously), talking of the sensations as more present than the objects associated with those sensations. — Pie
The ghost I joke about is mostly just the guy behind all the sensory monitors, alone in the skull's control room, who grasps the world primarily as spectacle. I see it as a powerful part of the tradition. The other part of the ghost is the elusive X featured in the hard problem. — Pie
However, I see no reason to believe that bat experts have knowledge about how thought and belief emerged, simply because they are bat experts — creativesoul
Starting with Descartes, the subject becomes the center, and the subject, as the first true being, has priority over all other beings. Contrary to this priority of the subject, Heidegger's goal is to show that there is no subject distinct from the external world of things, because Dasein is essentially Being-in-the-world. Therefore, Heidegger puts together the separation of the subject and the object by the concept of "Dasein" which is essentially a Being-in-the-world. However, Being-in-the-world does not mean that it is like a piece of chalk in the chalk box. Being-in, as the most essential and existential characteristics of Dasein, signifies the expression of such terms as "dwelling," "being familiar with," and "being present to."
Descartes famously emphasized that subjective reality is better known than objective reality, but knowledge of the objective reality of one’s own existence as a non-physical thinking thing is nearly as basic, or perhaps as basic, as one’s knowledge of the subjective reality of one’s own thinking.
The question then is why reject the external world? — Isaac
I think we can have some sense of whether they are justified...or what are controlled experiments for ? We decide what counts as justification after all. Normative. — Pie
But obviously you can do you. I just don't see why you bother with debate given what I take to be almost an irrationalism. — Pie
No offense. But by my lights you do. The key point (what I refer to) is the emphasis on the internal as the given. — Pie
For some of us, getting it right is the job. Objective is good. — Pie
But I would like to have true beliefs, justified beliefs, reasonable beliefs. — Pie
I still think it's either a bad metaphor or a dilution of 'faith' into something insignificant. If everybody is X, no one is, because nothing is picked out. — Pie
But who would say otherwise ? Is the Enlightenment to be understood as more of a prison than a release ? — Pie
Given your seeming 'Cartesian' leanings — Pie
We're in it as much as it's in us. That's my claim, anyway. — Pie
I take serious issue with the very notion of what-it's-like regardless of the candidate under consideration. It's not like anything at all to be me. What sense does it make to expect there to be something it is like to be a bat(or a crow)? It's a flawed approach with no clear target. — creativesoul
We do want to be machine men. Was it not you who introduced folk psychoanalysis, calling Brandom and Sellars 'anal', railing against a paradoxically up-your-arse concern with justification, in defense of the soul's imagery ? — Pie
Why should we worry about settling beliefs rationally in the first place if there weren't so many candidates to choose from ? — Pie
I think free speech is crucial, so don't count me an enemy of diversity simply because I seek the best beliefs like everyone else. — Pie
Or do you insult reason to make room for faith as well as an unleashed animality ? — Pie
And that means the need a common-public language to be in together, which is to say [also] a common-public world for that language to be about. You left out normative rationality. The first two requirements (arguably just one language-world) are those for any kind of communication. — Pie
I think this is the natural way to think of it. But I take it to be one of the great discoveries of philosophy to have flipped things around. This flip, this revelation of the priority of the 'we' before the 'I' and the 'external' to the 'internal'...I take to be what's great in Wittgenstein and Heidegger. As I see it, one is one before one is someone in particular. Everyday Dasein is Anyone, tribal second nature incarnate. — Pie
I think this is the natural way to think of it. But I take it to be one of the great discoveries of philosophy to have flipped things around. This flip, this revelation of the priority of the 'we' before the 'I' and the 'external' to the 'internal'...I take to be what's great in Wittgenstein and Heidegger. As I see it, one is one before one is someone in particular. Everyday Dasein is Anyone, tribal second nature incarnate. — Pie
'Experience' names a ghost. I don't deny it's utility in ordinary language, but I question its epistemological use in more careful talk. — Pie
Concepts, koncepts, khancepts, conecepts. Mww already tried this. — Pie
Cling if you must to your ontology of secret things, but you must propose and defend it publicly (with words that don't mean whatever you want them to mean) to play philosopher rather than mystic. Try the game yourself. What is necessary for the concept of a philosopher to make sense ? — Pie
Absolutely. But if there's a part of your mind that you're not consciously aware of then it suffers from exactly the same problem that the external world suffers from, for the solipsist. It can't be proven to exist. So it's inconsistent for the solipsist to use it's existence in a theory explaining how the external world might not exist (and yet they can still be wrong). If the external world is doubted because it can't be proven, then so must the unconscious mind be. — Isaac
This is just saying that the solipsist could be wrong about solipsism. That's not my argument. My argument is that the solipsist cannot be wrong about anything else, if they are right about solipsism. — Isaac
Once you see it, the self-contradiction will be so glaring that you'll be amazed how cozy you were with it for so many years. — Pie
I speculate that it's the very background theological bias I'm criticizing that's tempting my opponents to insist that concepts must be crystalline and perfectly definite to be public. That's like thinking the Charleston (the dance) is perfectly definite or that there's one exactly right way to perform a song. — Pie
