• Should we try to establish a colony on Mars?


    Everyone who says that we should focus on Earth is correct. It is not controversial and is evident.

    What I'd like to point out, that does bother me quite a bit, is that there need be no mutual exclusivity between discovering and exploring space vs. taking care of things in Earth. What we as a society spend on Space related stuff is NEGLIBILE, compared to all the waste going to banks, military, etc. etc.

    Keep in mind that NASA's budget, for instance is 0.5% of the US budget. That's nothing given how much money is used.

    Having said this, maybe not a settlement on Mars, but having a concept of how to have many people survive in space for years, might be worth it. Not to mention all the wonder stuff with new telescopes and robots giving us priceless information on our universe.

    It's often presented as if it's because we spend money on space that we don't have nice things here on Earth, which is just false. Space exploration is a human miracle.
  • How Useful is the Concept of 'Qualia'?
    Thomas Metzinger's magisterial Being No One (I highly recommend the less technical, much condensed summary version The Ego Tunnel).180 Proof

    That I can agree with. :cool:

    He's a very interesting guy. Not as well known as he should be.

    Haven't seen popular work from him in good while though.
  • Do people desire to be consistent?


    Isn't that person dependent?

    I mean, we may want to be consistent on all areas of knowledge we know a little about but there may be no way of reconciling these areas in a consistent manner. As in, deep down there are say quantum fields and way above that atoms. But then I think that I can't deny that I see that red apple in the corner.

    But atoms or fields don't have colour. I'd like consistency, but I can't find it here.

    I think that, the more honest a person is, the more willing they are able to change what they think in line with new evidence, or, failing that, good arguments.

    Russell did this a lot, and to his merit, acknowledged doing this. And he was an extremely important and productive thinker.

    But consistency for the mere sake of it, may not always be attainable.
  • Clear distinction between Objective and Absolute Idealism


    Very interesting breakdown. I'll have to get around to Schelling and Fichte especially, someday. Now I have a vague notion of what they're arguing for.

    Much appreciated.
  • How Useful is the Concept of 'Qualia'?


    He does talk about it, but it is out of the custom that has arisen in philosophy, it's not as if he loves the use of the term. Not implying that you are saying this.



    "Qualia" simply highlights the qualitative aspects of life, those aspects which we experience directly and immediately and form part of our ordinary life. That (a few) people consider something as obvious as this as problematic, is embarrassing. Here Strawson is 100% correct, I know of no other idea in the whole of philosophy that shouldn't be less controversial than this. It's astonishing that it can be a cause of controversy.

    If the term is troubling, then you can say "sensible properties", or "appearances", manifest reality, etc.
  • Does the inescapability of bias have consequences for philosophy?


    Well, these things are inescapable. One thing is to claim neutrality from bias, another thing is to not have any, which is likely not possible.

    It makes sense to think that personality factors into one's choice of accepted approaches to philosophy. How far does this factor alone determine these things, is likely not possible to say.
  • Is change a property of space, objects, or both?


    Paris is spatial. So is the sentence. You can't say "Capital of France" absent space. You need a world with people who speak to each other and can understand such things as "the Capital of France".

    Another issue is if you want to say that the Capital of France is a property, as opposed to a fact.
  • Is change a property of space, objects, or both?


    The thing is that properties of objects are spatial. You may try to highlight a property, but it includes space, you can't take it out.

    Changes can occur in the object, or in the perceiving subject. It depends on each specific circumstance.
  • Peace and Calm. What is it?
    It's a state you're in.

    It is possible to be in peace and calm in a noisy environment. It's much harder to achieve, but doable.
  • What is metaphysics? Yet again.


    Yes, you can find consistency and some scientists like to be able to think in terms of reduction. The thing is, almost all physicists would agree that, based on physics alone, you would never be able to predict a biological phenomena emerging, much less a complex mammal.

    And we may call physics "physical", but I like to point out that these things are discovered through equations and then verified by observational evidence. The issue is that I cannot think of something less "physical" than mathematics. So we have an ideal theory formation (equations we come up with) combined with physical observation. Looks like messy metaphysics to me.



    It's strange. I often feel I understand a human being better when I'm told why they did something, say, I discover John was mad or Jane was excited, because John was fired and Jane got promoted.

    But this "understanding" is way different than understanding a scientific theory.
  • What is metaphysics? Yet again.


    Science is a way to organize experience in a repeatable manner, such that we have some confidence in the mind-independence of some phenomena. Of course, this independence cannot fully be actualized, but postulated.

    One problem with relying too much on science as a worldview is that it must overlook personal (private) experience. I suspect this is part of the reason why psychology as a science, has not made as much progress as other fields, the phenomena get too complex eventually.

    I don't know if it's even possible to negate a metaphysical perspective.
  • To What Extent are Mind and Brain Identical?


    The short answer is that we don't know.

    A longer answer is that the term "identical" isn't useful here, a brain is not like experience. We in fact can see this empirically, we see brains outside of heads, lacking experience. Or in the cases in which a person is conscious and a surgeon sees inside the brain, the surgeon sees the brain as it appears to his experience, and not experience itself.

    All we can say, at this point, is that the brain is a necessary condition for experience. But the how this is possible question, might well be beyond our capacities to understand, which is very plausible.
  • Are my ideas really 'mine'?


    To the extent that you don't share or speak about your idea at all, then they belong solely to you.

    As soon as you express it though and another person hears it, you'll be stuck with the problem of not knowing if your idea was tainted by another persons idea, which you forgot about, or absorbed indirectly. Most of the time, even when you do think you have a unique idea, then you realize someone else said it long ago, often (but not always) better than you did.

    The really interesting issue, the really mysterious one, is a persons first idea. That one comes from within. The only "learned" thing here is the word you use, not the idea. Innate knowledge is very tough.

    Fascinating.
  • What is metaphysics? Yet again.


    Well, in a sense. I mean, everybody has a metaphysics, scientists included. They just don't have a particularly good metaphysics.

    So take a scientists who believes in only what the evidence shows. The world is made of quantum fields. That's what the evidence says exists at bottom. It's a fluctuating space that vibrates. It's a physical thing that we'll never see, can only get at thorough (physical) mathematical equations and offers no hints that a rock, much less an organism would ever arise.

    That is a metaphysical view. That's a strange belief to anybody, even if it has evidence.
  • What is metaphysics? Yet again.


    Absent evidence, we resort to reasons. Someone can give you a reason for thinking that idealism is better than panpsychism, you weigh those reasons based on your experience and proceed to adopt either view, or you can reject them both.

    The issue I see with your use of "physical" here, is that it stands in for publicly observable phenomena, that is a thing many people can point to and see.

    That leaves out an awful lot. But, this specific issue aside, you can say that metaphysical ideas are not subject to testing, only reasons.
  • What is metaphysics? Yet again.


    Yes.

    Then again, we don't know much about creativity at all and we can say it's as real as anything else. I mean, we all have it to an extent and it leads to discoveries on some occasions.

    I suppose the surprising thing is that we even manage to have theories that "connect" us to the world at all. There's no reason to suspect any advantage in terms of survival based on science creation.

    We have not (all of us, or most of us) agreed as to what metaphysics even is.
  • What is metaphysics? Yet again.
    Jeez man. I suppose we are only left with the option that "metaphysics" means, whatever anyone chooses it to mean.

    I don't know if this obscurity is due to the topic itself, which could be the case, or if simply we are just confusing ourselves.

    I can certainly see the appeal of using "physics" as ones metaphysics, and then forget about all the other issues that will arise. Or, as is said, "shut up and calculate."
  • Gettier Problem.
    The thing is that ordinary use varies, and there is a sense of knowledge that answers the JTB criteria. The truth criterion is justified by locutions such as "I thought I knew that P, but I was wrong" (i.e. I didn't actually know that P). Or "A thinks that she knows that P, but she is mistaken."SophistiCat


    Sure. As is the case for most words.

    But I agree that JTB picks out at best some, but not all ordinary senses of knowledge.SophistiCat

    Yup.

    I don't see the benefit of saying knowledge must be JTB.
  • Gettier Problem.
    As I see it, insisting on JTB forces an unnecessary constraint on what knowledge is. It can lead us to conclude that people who study ancient Mythology, pre-modern science and much common sense belief to not be knowledge at all.

    Heck, even all our current beliefs could turn out to be wrong, and we would know nothing.

    It's better to let go of this constraint and simply use the word knowledge as we tend to do in ordinary life, which usually does not pose much problems in discussion, outside of specific cases like this.

    But that's just me.
  • What is metaphysics? Yet again.


    Yes, a fine balancing act indeed. The problem is finding arguments against what I believe, say, a Cudworthian innate-ism - I won't go into the details here , that deserves a thread- but I genuinely (I think) try to look for arguments against it, there are some but I'm not confident they touch the main issue.

    The other metaphysical idea, does have more holes in it (things in themselves), those arguments are better, but not definitive in a way that I could abandon them.

    That's my version. Others adhere to say, modern materialism, or panpsychism surely go through a similar process, as you do too, I'd wager.

    It's a bit like adopting a stance in modern physics actually, you go through an intense phase of thinking about the problem, then you have an idea which you think is best: "many worlds", "Copenhagen", etc. It should be hard to change your mind, given the time invested.
  • What is metaphysics? Yet again.
    I think this is a good idea. If I remember rightly from long ago reading Peirce spoke this way. Hume point out there is no deductively valid reasoning to support our belief that the so-called laws of nature will continue to hold sway. On the other hand there is an enormously complex and coherent scientific picture, and no well-documented exceptions have been observed.Janus

    Yes, Peirce and Hume are correct. For all we know, tomorrow gravity could work differently, unlikely to happen, but not impossible. If we take multiverse ideas seriously, then different "laws" might reign. There is no great word for this, "law" sounds too sacred, "habits" sounds to anthropomorphic, but better overall.

    I could be wrong but I thought black holes were theoretical entities which were posited on account of our understanding of the laws of nature. I believe I've read that they have subsequently been observed, but I'm not sure. (I could search that but I can't be bothered).Janus

    Yeah, they exist. They even were able to picture one (due to the light if a nearby star): https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-019-01155-0

    I like Spinoza's deus sive natura ("God or nature'). For us nature is God indeed (but I don't agree with the pantheistic reading of Spinoza's idea) I agree that the great philosophers would likely have very different views if they were alive today..

    I don't think what science tells us about the world should be blithely ignored or that we should believe in certain metaphysical notions just because they might "feel right" (which could just amount to serving our wishes regarding how we might like things to be).
    Janus

    This sounds correct to me. I don't see any good reason to be suspect of nature. Everything is a natural thing, I see no scienticism here, nor denying all those very profound experiences most of us have, which we cannot explain.

    I think that, despite our best efforts to the contrary, we end up adopting a metaphysics we like. Maybe we are uncomfortable with the idea, but then one accepts is it as a very good direction to go in.

    All that's to say, nature is mind-boggling. That's a good thing, to me.
  • What is metaphysics? Yet again.
    I wonder if much of these discussions about science being this or that could be alleviated by speaking of "habits", rather than "laws", as this latter term implies something of which there can be no exception.

    But we know circumstances in which such universal "laws", break down, in black holes or near the singularity. We might discover more exceptions when the James Webb telescope goes to space (hopefully) in a few months and takes extremely high resolution images.

    I personally don't see the problem in substituting "God" for "nature". That's what makes sense now, I reckon a good deal of the traditional figures in philosophy (perhaps not all) would've agreed, given how things have changed.
  • What is metaphysics? Yet again.


    In a certain sense, yes.

    Metaphysics is merely the extension of Reason into un-mapped territory, beyond current understanding, or beyond the scope of empirical evidenceGnomon

    That's part of it, until it becomes part of empirical investigation, then it's stops being called metaphysics.
  • What is metaphysics? Yet again.
    Metaphysics arises from the mismatch between what we can experience given the creatures that we are, and the craving that we have for knowledge which we cannot fully attain.

    Schopenhauer's will a sound idea. Also Cudworth and Kant's "things in themselves", which are quite legitimate problems, which are very hard to clear up.
  • Currently Reading
    Currently Reading:

    The Revisionaries by A.R. Moxon

    Re-reading:

    A Treatise Concerning Eternal and Immutable Morality by Ralph Cudworth

    Even though I very much enjoyed this book the first time through, this time now there's so much more to take out of it, it truly is a goldmine of knowledge and insight. I can surely see why Chomsky thinks these ideas are richer than Kant's, in some respects at least.

    It's a bit of shame he's not much, much better known. But, being a very dense theologian does not help.
  • God exists, Whatever thinks exists, thoughts exist, whatever exists
    The problem arises immediately when when you counterpose "thought" with the "physical world". One must explain why thought cannot be physical. What is it about thought specifically that prevents it from being a physical thing?

    The distinction to make is between dependence and mind-independence, and the question is, are there things independent of physical minds (this is a provocation, but merited)? There are many ways to slice this question, I'll simplify to two options:

    Either there is not something independent of mind or there are things independent of mind. I think there are things independent of mind, because we cannot come anywhere near close to exhausting concepts by thinking alone. And there are things we discover which we would not come up with absent empirical investigation.

    But the world is a postulate, used to make sense of experience. As for God, I don't see how this helps much, unless specified some specific function.
  • The Strange Belief in an Unknowable "External World" (A Mere Lawyer's Take)
    The noumenal anchors us in realism. That the thing in itself is unknowable doesn't mean it's meaningless or nonsense. It serves the purpose of rooting reality in the world, not just in our head.Hanover

    That's how I see it too. It would be rather strange indeed if the things we saw, for some reason, looked as they do to us, absent us. That is, river and stones would like as they seem, absent us, with all the colours, textures and the like. Surely not the everyday concepts "river" and "stone" would be around though.

    If we postulate things in themselves, then we can say there is something that exists absent us, which does not depend on mind.
  • Solution to the hard problem of consciousness


    Thanks!

    That's the real truth. :wink:
  • Solution to the hard problem of consciousness


    Yes. Science turned into scienticism makes for very poor philosophy, in fact, leaves most of it out.

    As to the world absent people, there are vague notions I have. But it's part of the game of belonging to the human species.
  • Solution to the hard problem of consciousness


    Of course.

    In all likelihood, I am quite mistaken in several of my views and beliefs, maybe most of them.
  • Solution to the hard problem of consciousness


    It's not clear to me. You can speak of this topic as you wish, that's not a problem.

    We agree on physics.

    I think you are using reality in the sense of including everything, which invites all kinds of views and perspectives. This view will depend on our proclivities, inclinations, preferences and biases. It's not so much as I can say you are "wrong" or you say the same to me, it's related to usefulness to each person.
  • Solution to the hard problem of consciousness


    Well, now it depends on what you mean by reality. Do you mean everything ranging from human beings, ideas, Gods, to a rock onto a novel? There's little of explanatory depth when the range is so wide.

    If you mean by reality what's fundamental to things and the universe, then physics will tell you a good deal about it, they do and are examining the fundamentals of reality. I just don't think we can pierce "the bottom layer", as it were. This is the area in which some physicists begin saying things like like certain particles arise out of nothing.

    Or that the "nothing" we use doesn't exist. I think these are different terms that may signal a point of no further depth of insight. I may be wrong.
  • Solution to the hard problem of consciousness


    I think I'm using this distinction too much, and it perhaps strays from the intended use, but, I think Sellars' distinction between the manifest image and the scientific image is roughly correct, or at least a good step in the right direction of a fundamental distinction.

    What you say about different realities would apply to the way we make sense of the world intuitively, but not the way the mind-independent world works. I think there is a way the world works mind-indpendently, and physics gets us as close as we can to know what it is. But I don't think physics reaches the final causes of things, it is beyond what physics is intended to do.

    But if you are comfortable or believe that there is only mind and no external, independent of us, world, then what you say may be easier to accommodate.
  • Solution to the hard problem of consciousness


    I think we basically reach a point in which we cannot discover the "ultimate aims" of nature, that is a final explanation or cause. We can go so far as we can posited a good relational theory. Likely related to the way we think as a species.
  • Solution to the hard problem of consciousness
    Man, this "hard problem" really captures the imagination of folks. But we can put aside other hard problems, which, we never had an answer for.

    So the hard problem of motion, which was made explicit with the discovery of gravity, we've never understood but have accepted, otherwise, physics would've stayed stuck.

    Yeah, the brain - matter - so constituted gives occasion for the emergence and formation of experience. Given how non-substantial matter is, it should be less puzzling that thoughts can arise in the brains of certain creatures.

    We start with experience, the bigger mystery is not "subjectivity", that's given, but the world.
  • The Strange Belief in an Unknowable "External World" (A Mere Lawyer's Take)


    I can see that my projections are pretty smart and often clash with each other.

    :cool:
  • Looking for advice to solve an ethical conundrum


    I'm very sorry to hear about these issues you are having with your sister. Mental disorders are extremely complicated to deal with, and absent some good professional care, it's hard to say much that will be of help.

    Assuming her condition is one which ebbs and flows, that is rises to manic proportions and comes back down again, you could try to talk to her when she's in a relatively reasonable frame of mind, try to tell her that she needs professional help and possibly medication. In these moments you might want to point out that there is no reason why anyone would want to harm her, to the contrary you love her and want to help. The crucial part here is finding the right time.

    Having said all this, I think you are aware that she is not your responsibility, which is not to say that you shouldn't care, not at all, but only that a person who is in such a state can only be helped to the degree that they want help. If they refuse it at all costs, then you cannot physically force her to go anywhere. I know it's easy and understandable to feel guilty, that means you are an empathetic person, but try not to let that escalate into guilt.

    Good luck.