Progress is relative. We aim to make things better in the foreseeable future than they are now, and to maintain the improvements we have over the past... — andrewk
Sometimes we fail... — andrewk
That's life. It's not a reason not to try, else nobody would ever try to do anything... — andrewk
From time to time civilisations may collapse, and periods of bloody anarchy ensue. That's life too. But again not a reason not to do anything. And from the desperate low point of that anarchy, perhaps civilisation will one day again start to emerge - relative progress... — andrewk
And in the end the universe will die a long slow heat death.
But if we do our best to be kind to one another in the meantime, perhaps there will be more happiness and less misery across the broad sweep of spacetime then there would otherwise have been. — andrewk
Still for now, life is better than it was in 1067 or 1867. — Bitter Crank
Building can be (and sometimes are) built so that the stability of the structure depends on a few members at ground level--City Bank Bldg. in NYC. Other buildings (thinking of a very, very big low-rise building like the Pentagon) aren't going to collapse all at once -- indeed, can't collapse all at once. Philosophical systems can be more like the pentagon. or they can be like a City Bank Bldg. One won't fall all at once, the other one could (theoretically--given the right stresses). — Bitter Crank
Is it the case that all disagreements come down to Metaphysical beliefs (and faith in those beliefs)? Is it possible to come to any agreement on any issue, when the root issue is Metaphysics? — anonymous66
I voted in opposition because it's true intent is to limit free speech, which includes the artistic experession known as pornography. — Hanover
You know that's not going to work, don't you? Can Luna2 be the idea of Luna2? That way, infinite regress lies... — Srap Tasmaner
I think we're veering towards the concept of identity here. To my knowledge the issue remains unresolved in philosophy. All that means, to me, is that identity is a nebulous idea - look up Ship of Theseus.
It seems you think that the identity of an object is indestructible throughout the process of change from one form to another.
My answer to that is:
Take a human being Mr. X. You will agree that there's a difference between the living Mr. X and an urn containing his ashes. I pin my argument on this difference - something has become nonexistent during the transformation from Mr. X to the pile of ash. This something may persist in memories, books, photos, videos, audio, etc. However, these too will fade and vanish. Then we have the categorical nonexistence you're looking for.
The key factors in your mind-game are the two realms of existence - the mental and physical. In my example above I've shown you an entity, a car that straddles both realms. It's a mental-physical entity. Well, now that I think of it, ALL objects are like that. In effect, identity necessarily requires aspects of both realms of existence - the physical AND the psychical. Losing the physical and/or the psychical part entails loss of identity i.e. the object becomes nonexistent. It's like the set of integers - made of positive numbers AND negative numbers. If you remove either/both, the concept/identity of integer becomes nonexistent.
So, you may reconstitute the car from its parts but that's just the physical aspect of identity. You can't restore the psychical component of the car's identity because people forget, people die. Isn't this categorical nonexistence?
But if something spontaneously comes into existence rather than simply moving from one form of existence to another, then that means that it previously was categorically non-existent.
— WISDOMfromPO-MO
I think you're begging the question, as in you're already assuming categorical nonexistence is impossible.
You can use the same rationale I provided above that the car was categorically nonexistent before it was made. It lacks the physical component of identity, existing only in the mental realm. — TheMadFool
I'm asking if you see a problem with the idea in principle. — Reformed Nihilist
The anti-Dennett ideology. You seem to be focused on taking sides, and you seem to have pre-concluded that his side is the wrong one, regardless of what is actually said or proposed. That is behaving like an ideologue... — Reformed Nihilist
Regarding the rest, I'll ask the question simply once more. Do you object to teaching kids what various different religions believe in first grade? Just things like the difference between monotheism and polytheism, and that the Judeo-Christian religions are monotheistic and hinduism is polytheistic. That there were other religions in the past that mostly people don't believe any more? I accept that you would like to see more done. I am asking if you can agree that at the very least we should at least teach the facts of what people believe? — Reformed Nihilist
Here's an example that has real-world consequences:
In Pew Research Center polling in 2001, Americans opposed same-sex marriage by a margin of 57% to 35%.
Since then, support for same-sex marriage has steadily grown. And today, support for same-sex marriage is at its highest point since Pew Research Center began polling on this issue. Based on polling in 2017, a majority of Americans (62%) support same-sex marriage, while 32% oppose it.
http://www.pewforum.org/fact-sheet/changing-attitudes-on-gay-marriage/
Changing beliefs don't directly cause the laws to change, but it's hard to imagine the latter happening without the former. What's more, you have to assume the aggregate shift represents either many individuals changing their minds or generational replacement, but that leaves unaddressed why younger people would have different views than older people.
But I can see you have a more teleological or even eschatological view of things than I do. I still can't help but think what people think matters. — Srap Tasmaner
So let's say that this is my idea, not his. I can assure you that the spirit by which I propose it is sincere. Now can we talk about it like rational people and not ideologues?... — Reformed Nihilist
Edit: The agenda of ID proponents is not the problem, it is that they are suggesting teaching something either outright false, or misleading to a degree that encourages outright false beliefs. I am suggesting teaching kids actual facts about religions. — Reformed Nihilist
It's still fallacious. It does not logically follow that the idea is bad because it's inspiration is somehow flawed. — Reformed Nihilist
I agree with most of this, so I find it strange that you are so resistant to the idea that we teach children about religions without value judgements. No indoctrination for or against any religion. Of course we should also teach critical thinking, but that is a separate concern. We should teach critical thinking not specifically as it applies to religions, but as it applies to everything. From your responses, I feel like you think I have a secret agenda to teach children that religion is bad, and my suggestion is just a Trojan horse. That's totally implausible though, as a majority of teachers, assuming they fall into the broader demographic pattern, are religious. Perhaps you could take the suggestion at face value. It really seems like an unusually reasonable and uncontroversial notion to be getting such push back. — Reformed Nihilist
That's the genetic fallacy. You can't conclude an idea is bad based solely on it's source. Even if Dennett was the most fallible, wrongheaded thinker in the history of human thought, even a stopped clock is right twice a day... — Reformed Nihilist
Where did scholars and intellectuals come from? I'm talking about teaching children. I think Aquinas might be jumping ahead a little. How about just teaching them about the basic tenets and orthodoxy of Judaism, Christianity, Islam, Hinduism, Sikhism, Buddhism, etc.? No value judgements or critiques. No justifications or apologies. Just the facts.
How is withholding value judgments betraying an agenda? It is the opposite.
I think you are talking about teens or young adults, not children. I am referring to starting to teach children about religion at the same time as we start to teach them about everything else in school. Basically starting at 5 years old. — Reformed Nihilist
Different people can have different experiences of the same thing. That doesn't make it a different thing. Some people hate cilantro, some people like it, but it's still cilantro. What you and I and Dennett are talking about is the same thing if we're all speaking English and using the word in a conventional sense. I know I am, and I have no reason to believe Dennett isn't, so unless you're intentionally using the word unconventionally, then we're all talking about the same thing. Even if we experience it differently. — Reformed Nihilist
I never asked you to refute his conception of religion. I asked if it was reasonable to teach children the facts about what different religions believe, without treating any one as right or wrong, in publicly funded schools? You could still answer that question if you wanted. — Reformed Nihilist
Are you seeking an academic study on how academia bends over backwards to please whoever gives it give it money? I'll give it a look and see. Maybe, I'll come up with something. — Rich
You understand why anecdote is not a good basis for drawing conclusions?... — Reformed Nihilist
I really don't find your anecdote very compelling... — Reformed Nihilist
not only because my experience is almost completely the opposite,... — Reformed Nihilist
but more so because I understand the fallibility of anecdotal evidence in principle. — Reformed Nihilist
I think the spirit is that indoctrination is bad, and making sure that children can make properly educated decisions regarding religion. I would hope that we all could agree with that. I think it would be wrong to pass any judgement, either pro or anti. Just teach kids what people believe. Like Joe Friday used to say "just the facts ma'am ". — Reformed Nihilist
Regardless of your opinion on Dennett in general, I would be curious if you dispute that it would be a worthwhile enterprise to teach the cultural/social phenomena of religions to children in public school, and if so, on what grounds? — Reformed Nihilist
We're still waiting, as Billy Bragg said, for the great leap forward.
But you're back in the usual bind here. Granting for the sake of argument that Kuhn is right about how one paradigm replaces another, and that the reasons are extra-scientific, it remains that the coming paradigm has to have been created, has to be seen as a contender, has to have achieved some prestige for it to be in a position to take over when the old guard retires or dies.
People still have to do stuff for change to happen, even if you can't just make change happen by doing stuff. — Srap Tasmaner
Of course not, and like with virtually every complex phenomena, there is no bright demarcation line. That doesn't mean that they shouldn't be considered distinct at points outside the blurry lines near demarcation. At the most private, personal beliefs are not publicly shared, and then are not subject to public scrutiny or critique. At the least private are proselytizing religions, which are most open to the same critique. I would suggest that Daniel Dennet's proposal that all children be taught about all of the major religions of the world without a suggestion that one or another is the "right" one at public schools would be a great way to approach the subject, to counteract what could be considered the indoctrination of children into a particular religious heritage and dogma. — Reformed Nihilist
Ah, so your question was exactly that: is there anything on the Geertz side, say, that at least aspires to scientific rigor as Harris did? Harris may not have succeeded but at least he properly identified the goal. Yes?... — Srap Tasmaner
So what do you think of the sort of cracker-barrel statistical approach I presented earlier? — Srap Tasmaner
You might also want to check out Timothy Snyder's Black Earth which repeatedly explains the events of the Holocaust in terms of the local political situation instead of attributing everything to anti-Semitism. — Srap Tasmaner
I think there was something that historians (and maybe anthropologists) used to call the "intellectual fallacy," which was supposed to be overstating the importance of culture and beliefs relative to the material conditions of life. There's the stuff Marvin Harris did in anthropology, for instance. (I had forgotten this one, but Wikipedia says he argued that Aztec cannibalism can be explained by protein deficiency instead of religion!) — Srap Tasmaner
Aye, and there's the rub. Justification, in real life, is a post hoc process, unlike how it is regularly viewed in philosophy as being the reason for, or cause of behavior. In any sufficiently complex scenario, multiple rationally defensible but mutually exclusionary justifications are possible. I would submit that it makes more sense to explore under which circumstances people are more likely, or less likely to behave in ways that lead to such things as wars and genocides. I think that there is a case to be made that religions are for the most part exclusionary in principle (heresy is a sin in every religion), if not always in practice, and that this buttresses in-group thinking. There's a great deal of research on in group/out group dynamics, and the social discord that come from it, which include wars and genocide. Again, I think some people overstate this connection as a direct causal chain, but I don't think it's unreasonable to draw some lines. Here's a very reasonable take on the matter:
http://bev.berkeley.edu/Ethnic%20Religious%20Conflict/Ethnic%20and%20Religious%20Conflict/1%20Identity/Journal%20of%20Peace%20Research-1999-Seul-553-69.pdf
I also don't think that it's unreasonable, given those sorts of associations, to conclude that it is more prudent to reject religion. In a sort of a reverse Pascal's wager, I would suggest that religion offers little of value that can't be acquired otherwise, and there is at least some reason to believe that it underpins some of the worst parts of our nature, so it is the most moral choice to both reject it for oneself, and to speak out about it's possible ills. — Reformed Nihilist
While I think the point in the original post is reasonable to an extent, I also think it is reasonable, to an extent, to make judgments about how someone's beliefs motivated their actions based on their own explanations. Is it unfair to conclude that 9/11 was motivated by a belief in a specific form of Islamist fundamentalism (a belief system)? Bin Laden explicitly explained it to be part of a holy war. I suppose we could psychologize him, and try to determine proximate vs ultimate causes, but for most practical purposes, can't we just say that his belief, and the beliefs of those who took part in the attack were a significant, even primary, motivating factor?
I'll agree that some people play this hand too strongly, saying that all wars through history have been caused by religious belief. But the overstatement or poor formulation of an idea doesn't mean we should dismiss every formulation of that idea. I would suggest that we should concern ourselves with determining motivation instead of cause, and figuring out to what degree various beliefs or cultural/social institutions help to motivate positive and negative behaviors. Surely it isn't unreasonable to suggest that the various dogma of the social institutions of religion have historically been a large motivating factor in various violent incidents, including many wars and genocides? The Spanish inquisition, the Crusades, the Israeli/Palestinian conflict, the Indian/Pakistani conflicts,etc. Surely that's not controversial? — Reformed Nihilist
Maybe there isn't any! — Wayfarer
Look at the current political debate about health cover in the USA. I would say 'belief' plays a huge role in that. The hardline conservatives believe that individuals ought to look after themselves and that government interference in the marketplace is comparable to socialism and communism. The democrats believe that society has a responsibility to provide a baseline of care for any citizen. I don't want to debate the issue in its own right, other than to observe that these are very much matters of belief...[/b]
Does anybody really "believe" those things?
Or are they just using them as rationalizations for their positions and actions?
How do we know if a person really has a "belief" or what his/her response to that "belief" is? Rather than accepting a belief as corresponding with external reality, a person could have strong doubts about a belief.
And how can we isolate and compare beliefs? I believe the concept I need is reductionism. We can reduce material to an enzyme and any further reduction makes it something other than an enzyme. We can compare one enzyme to another and see, I suppose, that they are almost completely identical (I don't know; I could be wrong; somebody might say something like, "Wrong! Scientists say that no two atoms are alike!). Those enzymes, I supposed, would be interchangeable. We could replace one with another and it would behave the same. But can we say any of this about beliefs? Is it scientifically possible to demonstrate this about beliefs? Can we transplant one person's belief that God exists in place of another person's belief that God exists and not change anything about the former person?
— Wayfarer
Also there's a very porous boundary between belief systems and ideologies. If you look at some of the notably destructive political and terrorists movements, such as Pol Pot, Al Queda, and many communist movements, I don't see how you can claim that belief doesn't form a strong component of those movements... — Wayfarer
That is the so-called 'new atheist' polemics - Dawkins and his various acolytes.
As of January 2010, the English version of The God Delusion had sold over 2 million copies.[70] As of September 2014, it increased to 3 million copies.[71] It was ranked second on the Amazon.com best-sellers' list in November 2006.[72][73] It remained on the list for 51 weeks until 30 September 2007.[74] The German version, entitled Der Gotteswahn, had sold over 260,000 copies as of 28 January 2010.[75] The God Delusion has been translated into 35 languages.[6]
This in turn is grounded in the 'enlightenment narrative' that religions are oppressive, reactionary powers that try to preserve their own power and work to suppress freedom of expression and individual conscience. In a way, it is itself a quasi-religious narrative, but it puts man in the place of God, and science in the place of religion. Dawkins' view has been described as:
We find an initial idealised state, an evil intrusion, a present dreadful state caused by the intrusion, the promise of a future idealised state assured by the elimination of the intrusion. There is a glorious leader and even a sort of New Man. The message is pitched both at the level of humanity and at that of the individual.
Dawkins's message is basically that we are social animals on an evolutionary trajectory to ever more rational and therefore higher moral standards, but that the process has been derailed somewhere along the line by the appearance of religion. It had looked until recently as though we were shaking off religion and entering an Age of Reason. But now, with the rise of religious fundamentalism, there is a relapse which accounts for the world's present troubles. Nevertheless, thanks to the enlightenment Science brings, we can root out religion and get back on track. 1
You can certainly make the case, but on the other hand, the very idea of 'freedom of conscience' and many other principles of liberal politics, were derived in the framework of the Christian idea of the sanctity of the individual. That case has been put by many of Dawkins' critics.
But I think the argument is basically irresolvable either way. It's a matter of belief. — Wayfarer
Are you familiar with Max Weber? His Protestant Work Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism is a classic study of just these questions. — Wayfarer
Tonight I have been reading some F.H. Bradley and thinking about the concept of the reality of the world.
I'm trying to get clear on my thoughts about this.
The question I am raising comes down to this: The world we inhabit is the world of our experience. This is what people usually mean by "the world." But metaphysicians are always seeking a world behind the world; a reality behind the appearance.
I would differentiate these with the terms the-world-for-us and the-world-in-itself.
I do not deny the existence of a world-in-itself. Surely, trees, dogs, rivers, mountains, planets, solar systems and stars would exist regardless of whether humans were here to experience them.
What I deny is that such a world is philosophically relevant, because such a world, in principle, cannot be experienced. The world-in-itself exists, but it is not "like" anything. It just is.
And everything we know about the world is the world-for-us, even when discussing cosmology or quantum mechanics. Such studies are meaningless in the face of a world wholly unrelated to our experience of it.
I take this view to be an essential tenet of traditional phenomenology. The goal of phenomenology is to describe the only world that can ever be experienced, the world-for-us. The world-in-itself, like the Kantian thing-in-itself exists - there would still be entities if there were nobody to experience them. But they wouldn't be like anything in particular, because because like something requires experience of those things. They would just be there, exist, as pure being. And there's nothing else to know about such a world physically, other than that it is coherent and exists.
The goal of philosophy is not to see through appearance to get to the world in itself, but to immerse yourself in mastering the world-for-us, the only world we ever have any access to.
I believe pragmatism and existentialism deal with this in a very distinctive and logical way. The world-in-itself exists - it just shouldn't make the guest list for the big philosophical party, because it's a basicalaly useless cognitive placeholder for us.
Thoughts on these themes? — Brian
Which branch of science do you think ought to be in the business of investigating the causal power of belief? — Wayfarer
Right. I think folk psychology endorses (2) and (1) is just a sloppy attempt to express (2) in most cases.
I couldn't tell you what the scientific support for (2) is. Certainly there are studies that address how people's attitudes and choices vary depending on the information you provide them. There are also studies that show reasons aren't everything, that people make choices that differ from what you'd predict given their self-identified reasons. — Srap Tasmaner
What if, instead of saying your beliefs caused your actions, I said only that you had acted on your beliefs, or acted with your beliefs in mind? Would you still object?... — Srap Tasmaner
I can think of a bunch of other ways to put this too. Suppose I believe you are an armed and dangerous intruder in my home, and I shoot you. I could say I shot you because I believed that you were ..., that my belief was a or the reason I shot you, that it was a contributing factor in my shooting you. I think we would only say it was a or the cause of my shooting you or that the belief caused me to shoot you if we were speaking very loosely indeed. — Srap Tasmaner
The way I see it is a particular form of a thing acquires an identity over and above that given by its composition. For example, take metal, plastic, rubber and glass and make a car. These materials have their own existence and yet, they interact to create a car whose identity as a vehicle is something more. Further interaction with its owner and his/her family will add to this identity. However, a time will come when it will be discarded, dismantled into its composite parts. We could say that it has simply changed form but it has lost the identity it acquired over its lifetime as a car. We could then say it changed its form into, hopefully, fond memories, pictures, etc. But these to will fade away over time - pictures decay, people die. Eventually, the car will literally vanish both from the physical and mental planes. It is then that the car will be categorically nonexistent. I think if we take something closer to home, like a person, the message becomes even poignantly clearer, for in death lies the answer to your question of categorical nonexistence... — TheMadFool
You have a point but it doesn't help your case because it matters not how something, anything arose. What matters is, well, cateogrical nonexistence... — TheMadFool
Please read above. — TheMadFool
Suppose in a few centuries no living person has ever encountered the Harry Potter stories. It's a thought experiment. All that remains of them is a dusty box with the (by then) old books, hidden away somewhere, all else long since having been recycled.
Can it then be said that Harry Potter still exists (as a fictional narrative), perhaps as a kind of extended memory found in that dusty box?
Or, can Harry Potter only "come back to life", as it were, once someone has read the old books?
Can one speak of any ontological status worth mentioning?
It is said that Zeno devised 40 thought experiments, paradoxes, though only 9 are known, and only second-hand. We might suppose they could still be uncovered in ancient texts of course, perhaps even Zeno's own words, however unlikely it seems by now.
What might be the ontological status of these alleged 31 thought experiments supposedly devised by Zeno?
After all, I just referred to them, hypothetically at least. — jorndoe
Suppose I have the thought that Earth might have another moon, call it "Luna2." If I determine that there is no celestial object that actually qualifies to be called a moon of Earth, I'll say, "Luna2 does not exist."
You will say that Luna2 does exist, as an idea. Okay, Luna2 is an idea. What sort of idea? Is Luna2 an idea of something? If so, what? — Srap Tasmaner
Actually my long-standing view is that the dynamics of ecclesiastical power held by the Church has a great deal to do with the way this conflict has unfolded in Western culture. This is because of the power wielded by religious orthodoxy and, conversely, the treatment meted out to heretics and schismatics. That played out over centuries in the West, and of course it also became deeply intertwined with politics, in the Wars of Religion and the 30 Years War, not to mention many bloody episodes in the Inquisition, such as the persecution of the Cathars.
I am inclined to think that is the underlying cause of the anti-religious attitudes of the so-called 'secular West'. That, in turn, grew out of the Enlightenment and the belief that science, not religion, ought to be the 'arbiter of truth' - which is, of course, true, in respect of the kinds of matters that can be made subject to scientific measurement. But religions deal with many ideas and values that are quite out of scope for science.
Actually this is a subject which Karen Armstrong's book The Case for God, talks about - that essay is basically an abstract of it. She shows how early modern science, by appealing to 'God's Handiwork', inadvertently brought about its own undoing - 'Fatally, religions tried to defend themselves against science by arguing that they knew the truth better than the geologists, rather than presenting themselves (as one feels Armstrong would have wished) as the guardians of mystery and therapeutic manoeuvres of the mind. 1.'
That impulse is what gave rise to biblical fundamentalism and the 'culture wars'. Most people don't realise that Augustine and Origen were fiercely critical of biblical literalism and fundamentalism, in the early days of the Christian church. — Wayfarer