Actually both materialism and idealism have both been falsified. The fact that the material interacts with the mental, and vice versa, is falsifiable evidence that the universe is neither one or the other, but something else entirely. — Harry Hindu
Almost all atheists nowadays define their atheism as "the lack of belief that gods exist" or something similar. — Jerry
Also, it seems like an escape from burden of proof to take the "lack of belief" side. To "believe god doesn't exist" holds a burden of proof, but most atheists claim that only the theist has a burden of proof, even those that clearly believe no god exists.
Those are my rough thoughts on the issue. I'd like to hear why you think atheists insist, or why you insist, on this understanding of atheism. I can think of some reasons, but I'd rather hear from others and discuss them then.
Can all these assumptions be supported?
The epistemic regress problem goes like this:
— Purple Pond
In order to have knowledge of a proposition you have to rely on other propositions for support. Those other propositions in turn have to be supported by other propositions. Since you can't have justification for every proposition without going into an infinite regress, or going in a circle, any knowledge of a proposition relies on propositions without support. So any knowledge is at bottom without support.
How many assumptions does the regress argument make? Here's a list I've came up with.
All knowledge is propositional.
Knowledge of a proposition requires support by other propositions.
Those other propositions also require support. And so on...
There is something wrong with an infinite chain of justification
And what is the point of the regress argument? So what if all knowledge at bottom is without support? Therefore what?
Nobody wants to die but everybody wants to go to heaven — On a T shirt
A few facts:
1. Religion posits a place called heaven where , it's supposed, we all go after we die. Heaven is a place of happiness, no suffering - a great place everyone should be happy to go to.
2. It doesn't take a lot of effort to see that life has a disproportionate amount of suffering - disease, poverty, crime, etc.
If 1 and 2 are truths then we should be happy to die. We go to heaven and escape worldly pain.
Yet, death invites tears and sorrow instead of what should be laughter and joy.
Comments... — TheMadFool
we are far apart on the idea that metaphysics is a precise and scientific subject, i.e., I look at it as having some precision, but also having areas of blurred boundaries. And even the word precise falls into the category of being blurred, depending on context/use. For example, I can say, "Stand precisely here," without having an exact spot in mind, i.e., if you come over and stand roughly where I was pointing, that will do. I'm not going to say, "No, your not standing exactly where I pointed," as you get down and point to a piece of gravel. Now of course sometimes we do have an exact spot in mind, but the point is that much of language is very vague, and yet we use these concepts in ways we understand, we do it all the time. — Sam26
Second, let's consider the statement "God exists." My contention is that we can refer to such a being without having a very precise definition, and still have an idea of what we're talking about, at least generally. To explain this further let's use this example: For the sake of argument let's suppose that we were having an argument about whether Augustus Caesar existed, do we need a precise definition of who we're talking about in order to have a sensible discussion/argument? What kind of definition could one give that someone else couldn't say, that's not very precise? Someone might ask you, "Who or what is Caesar," i.e., give me a definition? Whatever definition you give, surely it isn't going to explain Caesar's exact nature or character, but it's probably going to be close enough for us to have a sensible conversation.
My point would be that this is true of the concept God
The word real isn't always as clear cut as we would like it to be, but that doesn't mean we can't use the word in reference to metaphysics, i.e., simply because it has no clear cut meaning. The word real is vague by it's very nature, even when used in reference to the physical universe. However, it does get even more problematic when discussing metaphysics, but that doesn't mean we can't know what people mean by real in terms of the metaphysical. You seem to want to limit its use because it's vague, but many words are like this, and yet we understand their use. — Sam26
For example, we often ask, "Is God real?" without any precise definition that applies, and yet we seem to understand the implications of the question.
For example, we often ask, "Is God real?" without any precise definition that applies, and yet we seem to understand the implications of the question.
Real” isn’t metaphysically-defined. I have no idea what people at a philosophy forum mean by it. I try to avoid that word. Or, when I mention it, I emphasize that I don’t know what it would mean—as I did in the passage that you quoted.
Sorry I don't always get back to every response.
On some of these ideas we're in agreement, or at least close, but in other areas we seem far apart, but I guess that's natural.
One area of disagreement has to do with the use of the word real as it pertains to metaphysical questions. The word real isn't always as clear cut as we would like it to be, but that doesn't mean we can't use the word in reference to metaphysics, i.e., simply because it has no clear cut meaning. The word real is vague by it's very nature, even when used in reference to the physical universe. However, it does get even more problematic when discussing metaphysics, but that doesn't mean we can't know what people mean by real in terms of the metaphysical. You seem to want to limit its use because it's vague, but many words are like this, and yet we understand their use.
For example, we often ask, "Is God real?" without any precise definition that applies, and yet we seem to understand the implications of the question.
I haven’t heard of those [NDEs that speak of previous lives]. I’ve read a few books on NDEs, and haven’t heard of ones that suggested knowledge about past lives. So probably not a high percentage of NDEs report that.
I've divided NDEs into three categories - category 1 is just a very basic NDE where someone might experience an OBE and observe things taking place around them while their body is unconscious. Category 2 has more information, i.e., they may see deceased relatives, go through a tunnel, experience a life review, etc. And then there are category 3 NDEs, which give us even more information about the experience. An example of a category 3 NDE would be Dr. Eben Alexander's NDE, which gives more detailed information about the experience, but there are many category 3 NDEs that give more information than is generally known. Many of my conclusions about past lives has come from what people have said about their category 3 experience, and yes, this category isn't as pervasive as category 1 and 2 NDEs, but there are still many thousands of them. So there is plenty of evidence, but not enough to be dogmatic about it. All I can say is that it seems to be the case that based on these testimonials that certain conclusions follow. Moreover, there is also testimonial evidence of past lives from people who have experienced DMT, and these experiences are closely related to NDEs, i.e., they have some of the same experiences and more.
So we have no telos- final ends we are working towards except survival and entertaining ourselves. — schopenhauer1
I call this concept "Instrumentality". It is the idea that we [No, you do] do to do to do, because we [No, not "we"] can [are willing to] do no other.
What people will often say is meeting some goals or preferences- achieving goals in other words, is what we should strive for. That is what we [Not "we", but you] do anyways, however modest those short or long term goals are, but this is not "THE PURPOSE".
Rather, [your] life consists of a lack that is constantly deprived and we [No, you] are always trying to fill with goals, lest we [you] get bored and find other ways to entertain ourselves.
[...]
.Lastly, you will have your "free time" for entertainment, which is just a way of saying you [No, you do] try to flee from boredom with various activities so you achieve some sort of flow state or engaging cognitive/physical task so you do not have to think about the boredom that is mainly the default state [for you] when there is nothing else going on.
.I don't doubt that NDEs are real (whatever that means), valid and true. And they seem tell of an impression of something good after life.
.
But it should be emphasized that NDEs occur early in death, and therefore don't give any evidence about the specifics of what happens later--reincarnation or sleep.
.What does it mean for an NDE to be real? That must be a difficult concept for you to apprehend.
.
.Real in the sense that any of our sensory perceptions are real. In other words, they're not hallucinations, illusions, dreams, imaginings, etc.
.Actually many NDEs do tell us that some things about living out other lives, not the specifics obviously, but enough to draw the conclusion that there probably something to the idea.
.Of course any one (or some) NDE can be explained away with other explanations, that's why it's important to look at a wide variety of reports from a variety of sources and cultures.
.And to compare these reports with UFO accounts, ghost stories, and past lives, etc., is to show complete ignorance of the facts as presented in my original argument.
.These testimonial statements are just as strong as any testimonial evidence.
.It's not that difficult to rule out the possible explanations you've presented. It's been done many times.
.you make it sound like your possible answers explain these NDEs away
., but they're just the kind of responses that someone would make who never studied NDEs, and who never closely studied the testimonial evidence.
'Objective' and 'subjective' are categories of human understanding; so nothing wrong with trying to clarify the differences ever more precisely. Nothing incoherent about that! — Janus
But the sages themselves are by no means attached to metaphysics, nor do they see them as profound.
Actually sages are quite dismissive of metaphysics and philosophy. Ramana Maharishi used to say, they're like a stick you use to get the fire going - once it's burning, you throw the stick into the fire.) — Wayfarer
Saying that "words don't accurately and completely describe any reality, — Sam26
Then when you admit to yourself that you don't have reason to doubt something, then, by definition, you have belief in it. — Banno
If I tell you that there are national secrets, things that aren't allowed to be discussed, and you say, "But you've just discussed them by saying they are. That's hypocritical.", how much sense would that make? — Michael Ossipoff
I think that makes a lot of sense. — Metaphysician Undercover
So my objection holds.
Why would you mention, or bring up for discussion, something which you claim cannot be discussed.
That's nonsense.
Either they really cannot be discussed, in which case you wouldn't be able to mention them for discussion
, or your assertion that they cannot be discussed is false.
Clearly your assertion is false
because you are saying "I cannot talk about the national secretes which I am talking about".
Therefore, I think that unless you can explain your distinction between metaphysical and meta-metaphysical, in a way which makes sense
Because there's no assurance that an assumption is righ — Michael Ossipoff
Nor an assurance that it is wrong.
So why is it rational to doubt without reason, yet not to believe without reason? — Banno
By metaphysics I mean general discussion of the limits of what describably, discussably is.
By meta-metaphysics, I mean what else is — Michael Ossipoff
So you are positing something which is, which is other than that which is. Isn't that contradictory? — Metaphysician Undercover
I know that you say the one "is" refers to what we can talk about, and the other "is refers to what we can't talk about
.
, but haven't you just talked about it by saying it "is". So if it's not contradictory, it's at the least, very hypocritical. How is it possible that you can mention the thing, and have a meta-metaphysics to talk about the things which we can't talk about?
But sure, all assumptions should be subject to question, and radical doubt, skepticism, is the right approach to philosophy. — Michael Ossipoff
Why? — Banno
What do you mean by meta-metaphysics? — Metaphysician Undercover
In neither Plotinus nor Advaita is physical death understood in terms of non-existence or non-being. — Wayfarer
What it does mean however is obviously not going to be an easy thing to say or to fathom. — Wayfarer
Suffice to say that the common aim of those traditions is to realize an identity that is not subject to death. — Wayfarer
Plotinus, that is through seeking the identity of the soul with the One - very similar to Vedanta. — Wayfarer
So the purpose of the spiritual discipline or sadhana is to ‘realize the Self’ (in Vedantic terms) instead of identification with ego and sense-objects. — Wayfarer
Realizing that identity is called mokṣa. — Wayfarer
Your "research" seems to be cherry-picked. — Harry Hindu
Are you saying that you think metaphysics must be completely uncontroversial to be metaphysics? — Metaphysician Undercover
What?! Saying that "words don't accurately and completely describe any reality," contradicts the statement "Are there objects in this reality, is there light and darkness, is there space, are there beings?" — Sam26
Where in the latter statement do you see me accurately and completely describing any reality? — Sam26
These are general statements that have very little specificity to them in terms of kinds of objects, the kind of light that may or may not be in this reality, whether it's 3 or 10 dimensions of space, and, are the beings biological or composed of pure light. — Sam26
If anything the statement supports the contention. It surely doesn't contradict the former statement. — Sam26
NDEs, and whether they support the inference that consciousness survives bodily existence. If you people want to talk about whether your opinions support some theory of metaphysics, start up another thread. Thank you. — Sam26
.That was the whole point of the story, ...to illustrate that the standard truth table for such implications can give results that differ from what people ordinarily expect.
.No. The point is that you can know a language, but translating the meaning to another can give results that differ from what people ordinarily expect when you don't translate it correctly.
.…you can know a language, but translating the meaning to another can give results that differ from what people ordinarily expect when you don't translate it correctly.
.A computer program doesn't interpret an "IF...THEN" statement as a logical proposition that a conclusion follows from a premise.
.
It takes it as an instruction to do something if a certain proposition t is true.
.
Loosely said, it often takes it as an instruction to make a variable take a certain value if a certain equality, inequality, or proposition is true. ... when the action called for is the execution of an assignment-statement.
.
...but it can also just specify an action, such as "IF x = a, THEN PRINT(x)"
.Exactly. The sign is written as an IF-THEN statement. IF you give the clerk $5000, THEN you receive the diamond. IF-THEN-(ELSE) is how we make ANY decision.
.You simply need to rewrite the sign so that it actually translates correctly.
.You still haven't given us the relationship between giving the clerk $5000 and receiving the diamond. Is it a causal relationship, or what? What does the arrow between p and q actually mean?
.No one is claiming that words always mean the same in logic and in human language.
.Human language is logical.
Like before we were born, but without the prospect of coming to life at some point in time. — CuddlyHedgehog
So easy and yet so difficult to comprehend. We accept those short periods of absence when we are asleep or unconscious because we know we will be coming back round to being the centre of the universe. The prospect of never existing again though...
Millions of years go by, the planet gets inhibited by another form of life or gets sucked into a tiny black hole. The universe continues to be there, as it always has, occupying infinity with no beginning or end, in time or space. Forever evolving, contracting and expanding. And where are we? Absent. Like before we were born but no starting point this time. Non-existent... FOREVER. Harrowing or liberating?
Thus, when Plotinus says that Intelligence emanates from the One, and the Soul emanates from Intelligence, and the multiplicity of beings follows from the Soul, this appears to be completely backward and unintelligible to a perspective of emergence, so it's just designated as mysticism, and ignored. — Metaphysician Undercover
Your survivors will experience the time after your complete shutdown. You won;t.
What will you experience then? Going to sleep. Basically like every other time you went to sleep.
.But here lurks a problem, for our notion of sleep is empirical, even for so called "maximally unconscious sleep."
.For example, the meaning of a "fully unconscious sleep" from a first-person perspective is the experience of being presently awake but without having memories of being asleep.
.This is the first-person empirical definition of "fully unconscious sleep".
.Without the experience of being awake yet having no previous memories of being asleep, one cannot assert the existence of fully unconscious sleep.
.Hence the notion of an infinitely long and unconscious sleep…
.…is a meaningless sequence of words that contributes nothing to any discussion.
.What do you think about the possibility of everyone's consciousness continuing indefinitely once it has been awakened?
.Each conscious entity has its own possibility-story that adapts to allow its consciousness to survive within that possibility-story. For example, someone could die in a car accident in my reality, but in theirs, the paramedics are somehow able to revive that someone, so that their reality can continue.
.Or perhaps there is no interdependence between realities - each conscious entity's reality branches off from one of many source realities at the time of birth of consciousness.
.Since I can only have conscious self-awareness in one reality, I guess this would mean that I would be the only truly self-aware conscious entity in my reality...?
Ceasing to exist. No consciousness, no thoughts. Eternal absence. — CuddlyHedgehog
Like before we were born, but without the prospect of coming to life at some point in time.
If you can't say for sure that that's true, then any claim about all of Reality is questionable.
That's what I mean. Radical doubt is, must be, painful to philosophers because it undermines everything, from their axioms to their logic. — TheMadFool
.I’m not saying that I'm familiar with what you believe to be original in your model.
.It's possible you’re reinventing the wheel.
.But if you are trying to use your model to get a better understanding of ethics, aesthetics, affect and emotion, the nature of psychopathologies like schizophrenia and autism, biological evolution, the development of culture, social relationships, empathy, then I would argue that you are handicapped by the metaphysical
tradition from which your concepts are derived.
I can elaborate further on this if you could say a few worlds about how your model deals with any of the areas I mentioned above.
..
Also, what motivated you in the first place to create your model? What specifically were you dissatisfied with in the way that other philosophies address the issues above?
What is it exactly that you're claiming we can't describe? I can't make any sense out of a reality that can't be described. — Sam26
Words don't accurately and completely describe any reality. — Sam26
Are there objects in this reality, is there light and darkness, is there space, are there beings? — Sam26
that's different from saying we can't describe some reality. — Sam26
And if it comes down to being able to accurately and completely describe some reality your [sic] not saying anything new or significant. — Sam26
Thanks for the response. The challenge in our discussion I think is this: I'm familiar with the history and nature of the ideas you're presenting. Im not saying that I'm familiar with what you believe to be original in your model. — Joshs
But the history of Western metaphysics going back to the Greeks is something that I am well acquainted with, and what you've come up with is, as youve indicated, a variation on the modern scientific metaphysics. So you're prepared to go back and forth on definitions that come from various eras and chapters in that history, picking and choosing among them to build your own approach(I'm not sure how well versed you are in German Idealism or the analytic tradition. It's possible youre reinventing the wheel).
What I wrote you was not coming from that tradition, so all of my definitions will be alien to you, and they would not be something I could explain in a single post. So your response is not just a matter of disagreeing with my assertions, it's not having a sense of what kind of metaphysics ( or post-metaphysics) they're coming from. My terms will essentially be a foreign language to you unless you're well versed in writers like Nietzsche, Husserl, Merleau-Ponty, Deleuze, Heidegger, Derrida.
For instance, you say there are aspects of reality that language can't describe. In my chapter of philosophy , reality isnt a collection of things
, and language is not a tool to describe those things. Language is a transformation.
Imagine trying to insert your ideas into a conversation that is taking place among Ancient Greek philosophers. You would be able to intepret their concepts and state your preferences among their various models, but their unfamiliarity with modern scientific metaphysics, the empiricism of Locke, the idealism of Berkeley, the subjectivism of Kant, would make it impossible for them to make sense of your approach before you taught them this new language.
Because I can understand where you're coming from, I could choose to keep my own terms within the confines of the part of Western scientific and philosophical history you're familiar with. I could choose not to introduce into the discussion this other world of philosophy that is alien to you, where logic, language, reality, objectivity and subjectivity mean something very different than what they mean to you
There is one good reason I can think of to venture beyond your familiar territory, but it depends on the purpose that your model serves for you. What would you say it is intended to clarify about the world?
For instance. If your main interest is offering a new philosophical clarification on how today's physical science(physics, chemistry) is understood, then I don't think it would be particularly useful to you to insert Derrida or phenomenology into the conversation. As far as I'm concerned, your account is perfectly respectable for that purpose and I have nothing to critique in it.
But if you are trying to use your model to get a better understanding of ethics, aesthetics, affect and emotion,
I can elaborate further on this if you could say a few worlds about how your model deals with any of the areas I mentioned above.
Also, what motivated you in the first place to create your model? What specifically were you dissatisfied with in the way that other philosophies address the issues above?
The characters in a novel stand apart from one another, so under your definition they exist. — Janus
What is the difference between being metaphysically defined and just being defined? — Harry Hindu
I see real, existent, and is, as synonyms. — Harry Hindu
Well, radical doubt will question the certainty with which you assert truths. Are you sure it's not a demon manipulating your mind? — TheMadFool