I don't know if philosophers today would agree with Hegel. Especially the science based ones. — Jackson
Best statement on the topic of progress in philosophy: " philosophy is its own time comprehended in thoughts." (Philosophy of Right, Hegel, preface). — Jackson
or example, you have reason to think I know what I am talking about. You don't though. So that reason is not being causally effective. — Bartricks
show how an evolutionary explanation of our development needs to posit actual noramtive reasons. Not causes and not the belief in normative reasons. Actual normative reasons. — Bartricks
do you think that causes and normative reasons are one and the same — Bartricks
So, you think normative reasons are causes and causes are normative reasons? — Bartricks
It would be an epistemic reason. There - that's a big word for you. You can misuse that one now. Have fun with it. — Bartricks
I don't know what you mean by that (and nor do you). — Bartricks
Address the OP. You haven't done that. If there are normative reasons, then we have reason to believe in them. — Bartricks
I conclude that God is Reason. I don't claim it. I conclude it. — Bartricks
Er, no it doesn't. You explain why you think it does. It doesn't. — Bartricks
Reason - who is a person - will be omnibenevolent. That doesn't mean 'won't ever lie'. — Bartricks
And it does not follow from his being omnibenevolent that he would never deceive us. — Bartricks
The distinction was between normative reasons and causes. — Bartricks
That got a chuckle outta me, I must say. And you know me.....everything philosophical worth repeating originated in Königsberg. — Mww
Which is precisely the exposition given by ↪Wayfarer
: “What the observer brings *is* the picture”. — Mww
3. If a purely evolutionary explanation of our belief that there are reasons to do things is correct, then our belief that there are reasons to do things is debunked because we do not have to posit any actual reasons to do things. — Bartricks
I don't know what you mean. 3 is a conclusion and so to reject it you need to reject either 1 or 2 — Bartricks
3. If a purely evolutionary explanation of our belief that there are reasons to do things is correct, then our belief that there are reasons to do things is debunked because we do not have to posit any actual reasons to do things. — Bartricks
feel like this is similar to the objection raised earlier. Saying something cannot or is highly unlikely to be right does not require you to know what the correct answer is: — Count Timothy von Icarus
Besides, if talking about it is pointless, then talking about talking about it is even more so. — Wayfarer
However, there is no logical reason that you can't have a selection pressure that is constructed by the mind as a "snake," and still have no snake. — Count Timothy von Icarus
So, yes, “scientific idealism” is emerging, which itself reduces to no more than to, “....raise a loud cry of danger to the public over the destruction of cobwebs, of which the public has never taken any notice, and the loss of which, therefore, it can never feel....”. — Mww
Interesting links; now I understand what you meant by emerging. — Mww
Yes, the kind called ‘shifting the goal posts’. — Wayfarer
So, the corollary here would be "I believe in physicalism, but I don't know if physical reality exists?"
This seems different to me because it is a positive claim made in the absence of knowledge as opposed to a negative claim such as: "I don't believe in physicalism, but I don't know if it is true or not." — Count Timothy von Icarus
How does that square with this statement from his interview:
The central lesson of quantum physics is clear: There are no public objects sitting out there in some preexisting space. As the physicist John Wheeler put it, “Useful as it is under ordinary circumstances to say that the world exists ‘out there’ independent of us, that view can no longer be upheld.” — Wayfarer
I say "almost", due to the fact that if realism, idealism and solipsism are understood to refer to grammatical stances, and if one is free to choose one's grammatical stance in accordance with one's circumstances, then the so-called "ontological commitments" that are entailed by these contrary positions can only refer to the state of mind and intentions of their asserters, in which case the public debate between realism and idealism amounts to psychological differences among the public that have no relevance to the empirical sciences at large. — sime
I think of awareness as usually being like a flashlight in a dark room. I just meant that physicalism, to the extent that it's monistic, has to accept that the universe has awakened to itself. That's what we are. — Tate
If you're a physicalist, you probably accept that in some sense the universe is aware of itself, so I don't know if it's more plausible. It's just the starting point our culture embraces. — Tate
I would argue, are numbers abstract — Janus
That is the prevailing view in philosophy of math. — Tate
thanks, hadn't noticed that second usage. Careless on my part. Hope it doesn't detract from the main point. — Wayfarer
then we could say that particular numbers subsist in collections of objects that instantiate the appropriate numbers. As I say in my response to @Tate we cannot see the number three but we can see the pattern that three objects make.a. to exist as a concept or relation rather than a fact
b. to be conceivable — Janus
Just keep in mind that if you find that your analysis of abstract objects contains the very thing you're trying to analyze (such as 'things we do', which is a set, and therefore an abstract object), you may take that as a signal that what you're dealing with is more primal than you previously may have thought.
But at least at this point, you've recognized that they exist and all that's left is to join the ongoing debate about how to understand them. — Tate
