I’d said:
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Also, I’ve never understood what philosophers mean when they speak of God. — Michael Ossipoff
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You said:
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I don't know much about theology in general, though traditional theology does use logic to "prove" the existence of God. I did study some "negative" or apophatic theology, which is closely related to extreme forms of atheism. I don't have a sense that there is some God outside of us. I agree with Feuerbach. Religious thought is anthropomorphic, but that's a good thing! At least for Feuerbach. Man is the god of man. In the myth of the incarnation this becomes explicit. I read these myths as coded truths about human nature.
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Ok, thanks for clarifying that. Of course that’s Atheism. I don't criticize someone else's position--to each their own. …and you aren’t one of those
preachy or evangelistic Atheists, who comprise most Atheists.
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Anyway, that answers my question, quoted above. I’ve suspected that most people talking philosophically about God are Atheists.
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I’m not evangelizing, proselytizing, preaching, promoting, or trying to convince anyone, but, just for position-clarification, I emphasize that I’m not an Atheist.
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It seems to me that the position that I described in an earlier reply qualifies me as a religious person and a Theist.
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I was raised Atheist, but later, as an adult, I began questioning and doubting Atheism, and eventually left that faith.
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I’d said:
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My metaphysics (Faraday, Tippler, and Tegmark, and (from what I’ve heard here) Wittgenstein too, beat me to it, in its main basis) is about hypothetical things too, based on inevitable abstract logical facts, to explain our world and life-experience.
— Michael Ossipoff
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You asked for a sketch of my metaphysics. I’ll be glad to post a sketch, in this post, but, just to let you know in advance, my sketches can be a bit long.
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I wanted to say things that no one would disagree with. …uncontroversial statements. That was what I was trying for, when proposing this metaphysics. …a completely uncontroversial metaphysics.
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Any fact about our physical world can be said as an if-then fact. If I tell you that there’s a traffic roundabout at the intersection of 34th & Vine, that could also be said by saying that if you go to 34th & Vine, you’ll encounter a traffic roundabout.
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We’re used to declarative grammar, because it’s convenient. But I suggest that conditional grammar is at least as accurate a description of our physical world. A world of “if”, rather than “is”.
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If someone examines the physical world in close detail, they’ll encounter physical laws, about physical quantity-values.
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Physicists encounter that via their experiments. We can encounter it via our experiences—including direct perception, and the experience of hearing the physicists’ reports.
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Abstract logical facts don’t need an explanation. They’re inevitably there. Likewise, complex systems of them.
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This word is a complex system of inevitable abstract logical if-then facts about hypotheticals.
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For example:
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A set of hypothetical physical quantity-values, and a hypothetical physical law that consists of a relation among them, are parts of the “if “ premise of an if-then fact.
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…except that one of those physical quantity-values can be taken as the “then” conclusion of that if-then fact.
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A mathematical theorem is an if-then fact whose “if “ premise includes, but isn’t limited to, a set of mathematical axioms (geometric or algebraic).
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Just as abstract logical facts are inevitable, so are complex systems of them. And, among those infinitely-many complex systems of inter-referring inevitable abstract logical if-then facts about hypotheticals, there inevitably must be one whose events and relations match those of our “physical” universe.
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There’s no particular reason to believe that our universe is other than that. There’s no physical experiment result that suggests otherwise.
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Michael Faraday pointed that out in 1844.
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If this physical universe has some sort of “objective” existence, other than as a complex logical system, then that’s a superfluous, unverifiable fact, an unfalsifiable proposition.
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If, in our universe, there’s the objectively, concretely, fundamentally existing “Stuff”, that Materialism believes in, then it’s superfluous, unverifiable, and the subject of an unfalsifiable proposition.
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I don’t claim that what I hypothesize in the two above paragraphs aren’t superfluously, unverifiably, unfalsifiably true. (…though I feel that there’s no particular reason to believe that they are.)
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And no one would disagree that there are abstract facts, and the infinitely-many complex systems of them that I spoke of above.
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So then, I’d say that there’s no disagreement about the metaphysics that I’ve just described.
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There’s no reason to believe that our universe isn’t one of infinitely-many such complex systems of inter-referring inevitable abstract logical if-then facts about hypotheticals.. One of infinitely many such complex logical systems.
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Instead of one world of “is” -- infinitely many worlds of “if “.
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If someone questions the “reality” or “existence” of those complex systems of abstract logical facts, then I reply that each one such system needn’t have any reality, existence, relevance or validity outside of its own local inter-referring context.
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Each one is an isolated local system, and needn’t be real or existent in any context other than its own. …needn’t be real or existent in any larger or global context. …needn’t have some global medium in which to be real or existent.
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Are the other infinitely-many possibility-world universes real to us? Of course not. Likewise ours isn’t real to their inhabitants either.
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This is basically what Michael Faraday was quoted as saying in 1844.
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Here are some ways in which my metaphysics, my version of this Eliminative Ontic Structuralism, differs from those of Frank Tippler and Max Tegmark (his Mathematical Universe Hypothesis (MUH):
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1. Contrary to what I might have implied above, I define this logical system primarily from the individual-experience point of view, where Tippler and Tegmark define it from the objective, whole-universe, 3rd-person point of view. Tegmark is quite explicit about that, espousing a first principle called The External Reality Hypothesis (ERH) (or something like that).
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Because “Real”, “Existent” , and “Is” aren’t philosophically-defined, I suggest that there isn’t really a meaningful issue between Realism and Anti-Realism. Neither is absolutely right or wrong.
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So I refer to a complex system of inter-referring inevitable abstract logical if-then facts about hypotheticals that is an individual “life-experience possibility-story”. …of which there are infinitely-many.
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I say that, for us, it’s most meaningful to speak of us and our experience as being metaphysically-primary.
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You’re in a life because there’s a life-experience possibility-story that’s about you. ,,,about someone just like you, with your basic subconscious attributes, inclinations, feelings etc. …about you. You’re the protagonist in that story.
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It certainly empirically makes sense for us to define the metaphysical world based on our experience, because, for one thing, everything that we know about this physical world comes to us from our experience. That’s what there directly observably metaphysically is, for us. It’s reasonable, natural and right for us to speak from our own empirical point of view.
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Nisargadatta said that we didn’t make our world, but we make it relevant.
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That implies, and I agree, that Anti-Realism is valid and right for us, but doesn’t really rule-out a kind of reality for all abstract facts, including systems of them that are uninhabited universes.
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It’s a matter of relevance to us.
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One could say that we’re the reason why our world is relevant (…meaning relevant to
us). That has a circular sound to it, and it sounds like living-being chauvinism--which it would be, if we took Anti-Realism as absolute fact.
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The abstract facts that make up our life-experience possibility-stories aren’t really different from the ones that make up uninhabited universes, or aren’t part of a life-experience possibility-story or a possibility-world.
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I sometimes, as a chauvinism analogy reminiscent of absolute Anti-Realism, I quote a story that says:
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“Alright”, said the Giraffe, “then let’s just say the one with the longest neck gets all the jellybeans.”
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(Kenneth Patchen,
Because It Is….San Fransisco beat-poet)
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In the infinity of possibility-world universes, it’s inevitable and natural that there must be experiencing-beings, and, from their (our) point of view, we experiencers and our experience are primary, and that’s a valid empirical description. I speak of an Anti-Realism because I’m describing it from the point of view of experiencing-beings.
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MUH has been called Eliminative Ontic Structural Realism. I claim that it makes more empirical sense to speak of Eliminative Ontic Structural Anti-Realism (EOSAR).
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2. Tegmark calls MUH a “hypothesis”. I call EOSAR an inevitability, an uncontroversial metaphysics.
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3. Tegmark referred to MUH as an explanation of Reality. I don’t believe that any metaphysics, describes, is, or explains Reality.
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4. Tegmark and Tippler have said that our physical universe might be a universe created by a computer-simulation. I say that a computer simulation can’t create something that already timelessly is—a possibility-world or a life-experience possibility-story.
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A computer simulation could
duplicate, portray, a possibility-world, for its viewing-audience, but it certainly can’t
create what already timelessly is.
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I’ll check out
The Concept of Time eventually, especially if I run into it. Sometimes the famous philosophers say things that confirm or agree with what I’m saying, as when Wittgenstein was quoted as saying that there are no things, only facts.
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And, if they say something that I disagree with (as Tippler and Tegmark have), then I want to comment on that difference too.
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For me the "divine" only makes sense as feeling, as a mode of being alive. I do think this mode is supported by the "right" kind of thinking, but "feeling is first."
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Certainly, though my impression of good intent behind what is, benevolence above metaphysics, is an impression, with nothing to do with logic or argument. But it’s an impression that I don’t doubt.
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Michael Ossipoff