And if it is not valid we cannot say it is "inferential". — Metaphysician Undercover
. The rabbit didn't necessarily go down a path, logically, it could have gone anywhere, therefore the dog's conclusion was not a logical conclusion. — Metaphysician Undercover
Maladapt it is. :pray: — 180 Proof
This is clearly not an example of simple logic, because it is invalid. Out of many possibilities, you cannot conclude that if it's not one it's necessarily a particular one of the others. — Metaphysician Undercover
And the putting them together, just is that requirement, which represents the conception of synthesis. Maybe that is a modernized version of a philosophy predicated on intentionality. I suppose a guy putting seven things in series with five other things does it for a reason. But below that intention, is the consciousness of the possibility of actually doing it. Hence, the pure transcendental form of a priori justifications. — Mww
It's a paradoxical idea. I had a long discussion about this on another philosophy forum. The idea of a unique absolute reality originates in the Greek philosophers. — Hillary
Maybe they can't but they want to have their worldview absolute existence. The particle physicist wants his preons to be true, the theist his gods, the astrologist his system of prediction, or the Aboriginal his dreamtime. — Hillary
....but Kant wanted to extent those to a priori conditions, which must have nothing to do with experience.
“....But to synthetical judgements à priori, such aid is entirely wanting. If I go out of and beyond the conception A, in order to recognize another B as connected with it, what foundation have I to rest on, whereby to render the synthesis possible? I have here no longer the advantage of looking out in the sphere of experience for what I want...” — Mww
True enough, but there is a section in E.C.H.U. where he posits feelings as just another kind of experience, which, naturally, Kant denies.
You ok with all that? — Mww
Many problems arise by claiming that your objective reality should be the same for everyone. — Hillary
But we want them to. — Hillary
Both are equally true and objective stories. — Hillary
This is what woke Kant up: there’s got to be a way to show the relationship between cause and effect doesn’t have to come from experience, that understanding itself can show the relation as universally necessary. So he invented a way to make it so. — Mww
In the light of gods, reason can be given. — Hillary
But language is not just an adaption, like a tooth or a claw. If you think about what is required for language to really operate, then you get into the whole field of semiotics, linguistics, and theory of meaning. — Wayfarer
Go back to the passage I quoted from Maritain and read it again. Here Maritain is making a crucial point about the nature of reason.
the human intellect grasps, first in a most indeterminate manner, then more and more distinctly, certain sets of intelligible features -- that is, natures, say, the human nature -- which exist in the real as identical with individuals, with Peter or John for instance, but which are universal in the mind and presented to it as universal objects, positively one (within the mind) and common to an infinity of singular things (in the real). — Wayfarer
Public bath facilities were one of the best contributions of the ancients to the world. — L'éléphant
That's why instead of logos, I advocate xin! — Agent Smith
Actually, on further reflection, I think that the ability of animals to plan and act according to goal-directed purposes supports the idea that reason, per se, is not solely confined to the conscious intellectual operations of h. sapiens, but rather is somehow latent or potentially existent throughout the organic world. But the 'something more' that h. sapiens has, is the ability to consciously recognise that. — Wayfarer
very fascinating but not germane to the point I'm arguing, which I don't believe you have responded to. — Wayfarer
but I'm not particularly interested in it, and furthermore I think it is easily exagerrated. — Wayfarer
My view is not human-centric, but based on a rational assessment of the nature of reason. Yours appears to be based on nothing more than sentiment. — Wayfarer
But I'm not denying for a moment that animals have intelligence; only that they don't engage in rational inference. I can't see how that is controversial. — Wayfarer
I think that you think that it's just 'common sense' that man is a kind of primate, and continuous with other species. — Wayfarer
Such behaviours can all be explained in terms of stimulus and response, without any requirement to introduce logic. — Wayfarer
the merely sensory psychology of animals, especially of the higher vertebrates, goes very far in its own realm and imitates intellectual knowledge to a considerable extent. ....
Point out specifically where I have done that, or the passage from Maritain does that. — Wayfarer
While I don't want to derail the thread from the OP more it already has been, for the sake of historical accuracy, Darwin himself was a teleologist. — javra
Such behaviours can all be explained in terms of stimulus and response, without any requirement to introduce logic. — Wayfarer
Other animals and plants do not use logic and they still function. — Metaphysician Undercover
Other animals and plants do not use logic and they still function. — Metaphysician Undercover
Organisms display characteristics which snowflakes and crystals do not, first and foremost homeostasis. — Wayfarer
Living forms are shot through with designs, and patterns, at every level from the microcellular to the ecological.
But this doesn't necessarily imply a conscious designer, some being or entity that sweats away on designing such patterns (or beetles for that matter). It might simply be conceived of as an inherent drive or tendency in nature to give rise to progressively more elaborate patterns and designs as pure play or sport (Lila of Hindu mythology. However, ideas of ‘inherence’ are usually forbidden on the grounds that they are ‘orthogenetic’.)
Furthermore, if the design in nature is only 'apparent', then does that mean that only human agents can produce real designs? I mean, designing is something that humans obviously do, but do only humans do that? Put another way, are the only actual designs in the Universe of human origin? And if that's not so, then is there really no actual, as distinct from apparent, design anywhere at all in the Universe? It seems an absurd proposition. — Wayfarer
There's also the example of biological evolution as having a telos. Momentarily suppose this to be true. This telos pulls towards itself. — javra
That offered, can you form an argument for the logical necessity of all final causes being themselves driven by, or else dependent on, sentient agency? — javra
You've overlooked issues regarding the contradictions that unfold when considering such monotheistic deity the arbiter of purpose/telos. — javra
You've also not offered a defense of nihilism. — javra
We in fact can connect particular thoughts and feelings with particular processes. — Hillary
As to the alternative I at least have in mind, it's a mouthful, but here goes: Cosmic purpose/teleology could be self-consistently upheld - though not in any materialist conceptualization - in what has been termed "the One" or "the Good" as an ultimate state of reality, which is not itself a mind that thinks, wants, perceives, and judges but a non-dual (hence, lacking any dichotomy between self and otherness; hence, perfectly selfless; hence, in an important sense, a perfectly objective and non-quantitative) state of awareness (think of the eastern notion of Nirvana for one possible example: in short, not a mind), one which serves as an Aristotelian final cause as the unmoved mover of all that exists in states of duality/quantity (the "unmoved mover" read as: not a mind that has goals and hence wants, hence ends it itself pursues, but a state of pure and selfless awareness devoid of all otherness and wants ... on which all else is in either direct or indirect manners dependent but which is itself fully unconditioned, instead just being) ... which individual, naturally dualistic minds such as our own can either choose to approach (via earnest love of truth, or goodness, or impartiality, etc.) or to further ourselves from (via attempts at benefiting by means of deception, falsehoods, egotism, etc.). — javra
I'll offer that "too vague to be of any use" would only apply to something that has little to no explanatory power. To the extent that value is important to us - inclusive of notions such as right/wrong and good/bad - teleology that is neither pivoted on the of ego-centrism of individual human minds nor on the imagined cosmic presence of such a human-like mind would be of considerable conceptual usefulness. — javra
