First I'll briefly reply to a few of Tim's questions, and then I'll describe the metaphysical proposal that I'm referring to, and how it implies reincarnation.
Time asks:
What is your definition of metaphysics, please? — tim wood
As I use the term, "metaphysics" means the discussion of what
is, at the limits of what is discussable, describable, and meaningfully assertable and arguable. ...and, within that limitation, at the limits of generality.
I don't claim that metaphysics covers, discusses or describes all that is, or all of Reality. I don't claim that all of what is, all of Reality, is discussable, describable or meaningfully assertable or arguable. Here, I'm not making any assertions, claims, or even comments on that matter. Referring to the matter of what is, but isn't discussable, describable or meaningfully assertable or arguable...I'd call that "meta-metaphysics". I'm not making any claims or assertions about that (...and, by definition it wouldn't be meaningful to do so anyway.) I'm just discussing metaphysics here..
What is the uncontroversial metaphysics in question?
See below.
What do you understand by the term "implication"?
In logic, it's a proposition, P, about a relation between propositions A and B, such that P is false only if A is true and B is false.
I mean implication with a somewhat weaker meaning, in which the truth of one thing
suggests another thing.
And please lay out briefly that implication.
See below. The discussion of the implication of reincarnation follows my description of my metaphysical proposal.
For example, if you mean that there are belief systems (e.g., Jainism) that "buy" reincarnation, and that such systems are "uncontroversial" (whatever that means)...
A statement is "uncontroversial" if no one can come up with a supportable reason for disagreeing with it.
I'm saying that my metaphysics is uncontroversial. I'm not saying that anything else is uncontroversial.
What I describe isn't a "belief-system".
, then you're arguably correct, but the proposition is not especially interesting because it doesn't say much of interest. Is that what you're saying?
No. See below.
Metaphysical Proposal:
Let me first summarize, and quote Faraday:
In 1844, the physicist Michael Faraday pointed out that what we observe in the physical world consists of mathematical and logical structural relational facts, and that there’s no particular reason to believe that the physical world consists of more than that.
In particular, there’s no particular reason to believe in the Materialist’s objectively-existent “stuff”.
He was right.
There are abstract if-then facts.
If all Slithytoves are brillig, and all Jaberwockeys are Slithytoves, then all Jaberwockeys are brillig.
That’s true even if none of the Slithytoves are brillig.
That’s true even if none of the Jaberwockeys are Slithytoves.
That’s true even if there are no Slithytoves, and no Jaberwockeys.
When I say that there are abstract if-then facts, I mean only that they “are”, in the sense that they can be stated. I imply or clam nothing about the matter of whether or not they’re “real” or “existent”, whatever that would mean.
Of course, by definition, a fact is true. Otherwise it would be a proposition, but not a fact.
Also, I make no claim about the truth of the premises of the abstract if-thens that I speak of, in regards to the metaphysics that I propose. There’s no particular reason to believe that any of their premises are true.
Any fact about this physical world implies, corresponds to, and can be said as, an if-then fact:
“There is a traffic roundabout at the intersection of 34th & Vine.”
“If you go to the intersection of 34th & Vine, you’ll encounter, there, a traffic roundabout.”
Additionally, any fact about this physical world is (at least part of) the “if” premise of some if-then facts, and is the “then” conclusion of other if-then facts.
For example:
A set of hypothetical physical quantity-values, and a hypothetical relation among them (called a “physical law”) together comprise the “if ” premise of an if-then fact. …except that one of those physical quantity-values can be taken as the “then” premise of that if-then fact.
A proved mathematical theorem is an if-then fact, for which at least part of the “if ” premise consists of a set of mathematical axioms.
We’re used to speaking in declarative, indicative grammar. But I suggest that we believe our grammar too much. I suggest that conditional grammar better describes what metaphysically, discussably, describably is.
Instead of one world of “Is”, infinitely-many worlds of “If “.
In addition to abstract if-then facts, there are systems of inter-referring abstract if-then facts. There are complex systems of them. …infinitely-many of those as well.
Among that infinity of complex systems of inter-referring if-then facts, there’s inevitably one that’s about events and relations that are those of your experience.
There’s no reason to believe that your experience is other than that.
I call that your “life-experience possibility-story”.
Why are you in a life? Because you’re the hypothetical protagonist of a hypothetical life-experience possibility-story. To say it differently, there’s a hypothetical life-experience possibility-story that has, as its protagonist, someone just like you—you, in fact.
Now, if you’re in a life for a reason, then what if, at the end of this life, that reason still obtains? What does that suggest? …
At the end of life, there’s eventual unconsciousness and sleep. …”unconsciousness” only in the sense of absence of waking-consciousness. Of course eventually that ever deepening unconsciousness reaches a time when you don’t know (or care) that there ever were, or could be, such things as identity, individuality, worldly-life, time, or events …or hardships, problems, lack, or incompletion.
Of course, by the timescale of an outside observer of the shutting-down of your body, you’ll soon be completely shut-down. But you don’t know or care about that, because you don’t even know that there is, was, or could be such a thing as time or events. You’ve reached timelessness. The impending complete shutdown of your body, which will be observed by your survivors, is entirely irrelevant and unknown to you.
But I suggest that it isn’t certain that you’ll reach that deep, near-end, stage of shutdown at the end of this life:
But, before you reach the place in shutdown at which you’re quite unaware of life, time, events or worldly-experience, it’s reasonable to suggest that there’s a lesser degree of unconsciousness in which you merely don’t remember or know the exact details of the life that has just ended, or exactly what’s going on, but you still retain your old subconscious attributes, predispositions and inclinations.
Lacking factual information and waking-consciousness, you don’t know if you’re coming or going, but you retain your subconscious attributes, predispositions and inclinations, including a future-orientedness, and an orientation towards worldly-life.
There’s a life-experience possibility-story about you, as you are at that particular time. You’re the protagonist of that experience-story. That life-experience story necessarily starts where you are, as do all lives, with someone who is like you are at that time. …without waking-consciousness, without any factual knowledge of what’s going on.
Without explanation, not knowing what’s going on, you’re experiencing without waking-consciousness. That situation began at the end of a life, but you don’t remember that.
As I said above, if the reason why you were in a life before continues to obtain at the end of your life, then what does that suggest?
I emphasize that reincarnation isn’t _part of_ my metaphysics. It’s just, I suggest, an implied consequence it.
You can disagree with my suggestion that it’s an implied consequence of my metaphysics, without disagreeing with the metaphysics itself.
In one paragraph above, I described a particularly deep level of unconsciousness at the end of life. I suggest that few people reach that stage, because their retained subconscious inclinations and predispositions lead them elsewhere, as described above.
According to Hinduism and Buddhism, very few people reach the end-of-lives at the end of this life, basically for the reason that I described.
The suggestion of reincarnation isn’t really so fantastic. It’s no more fantastic than the various alternative suggestions. In fact, the fact that you’re in a life (even if an explanation can be suggested) is, itself, something remarkable, fantastic and surprising.
Anyway, whether or not you agree with the reincarnation-implication, the metaphysics that I propose implies an open-ness, loose-ness and lightness in stark contrast to Materialism’s grim accounting.
…an insubstantial , ethereal nature for what is describable and discussable.
I suggest that there’s something inherently good about “what-is”.
Michael Ossipoff