• What is the Nature of Intuition? How reliable is it?
    In short intuition tells you what you already know, because it’s just fast thinking.Darkneos

    Interesting. If intuition is thinking it is thinking without reasoning or analysis. I guess that's why it is also called a gut feeling.

    What is the part of intuition that is 'already known'? Can you give an example of this in action?

    It’s why when tested, experts were found to be reliable in their intuition compared to randos.Darkneos

    That makes sense. Not everyone's intuition on a given subject is going to have equal weight.
  • Welcome to The Philosophy Forum - an introduction thread
    Ok. Maybe this place will help you think through this. I can't help you, I am an atheist. :wink:
  • Welcome to The Philosophy Forum - an introduction thread
    I am a Christian of the Catholic/Orthodox variety.Leontiskos

    Welcome. What does this mean? My understand of Greek orthodox Christianity is it considers the Catholic Church to be anathema. Or did you mean an orthodox Catholic?
  • What is the Nature of Intuition? How reliable is it?
    People who lack intellectual self-awareness are often unaware of how their thinking processes actually work.T Clark

    I think I agree. Can you clarify something? What does an awareness of how one's thinking process look like? Do you have an example? In other words, are you talking about an awareness of one's biases and limitations, or an awareness of sound thinking in general and being able to compare sound thinking with one's own process?
  • Kant's Notions of Space and Time
    FWIW, I'd say that there is only a tiny core that can't be denied without performative contradiction : 'we are in a world and a language together'. The details are intentionally left unspecified, for that's what we debate, the nature of the world, never (without absurdity) its existence. The other phenomenological stuff is relatively tentative, but the ideal is not theory construction so much as a pointing-out what's already there and not being noticed (famously including my blind knowhow as I hammer or drive and the strange being-kind of tools-in-use.)plaque flag

    Cool thanks. I'll continue to mull over this.
  • The awareness of time
    Personally, I am exploring the idea that, while objects may have a temporal position, consciousness actually has a temporal "size." Objects are three dimensional and moving through or in time, as it were. But consciousness actually exists in the past, present and future, has actual temporal dimension. An intuition.Pantagruel

    Food for thought.

    Shall I eat and drink only that I may hunger and thirst and eat and drink again, till the grave which is open beneath my feet shall swallow me up, and I myself become the food of worms? Shall I beget beings like myself, that they too may eat and drink and die, and leave behind them beings like themselves to do the same that I have done? To what purpose this ever-revolving circle, this ceaseless and unvarying round, in which all things appear only to pass away, and pass away only that they may re-appear unaltered; — this monster continually devouring itself that it may again bring itself forth, and bringing itself forth only that it may again devour itself?Pantagruel

    Ha! I can only agree with Fichte and have had similar thoughts, as I am sure many do. More recently I feel time is like being trapped inside a speeding train, the stations I see passing in a blur are like the obligatory seasonal and life events which come and go by with monotonous regularity and are also opportunities I've failed to make use of.
  • Kant's Notions of Space and Time
    There probably aren’t any of the metaphysical conceptions. No such thing as reason, judgement, knowledge and whatnot. They’re inventions, meant to explain in the absence of truth, but never intended to prove in the absence of fact. I’m sure you must see the problem, that ↪Wayfarer historically takes so much care in exposing, in that it is we that propose to Nature the rules by which it operates, but in doing so, we should have prohibited ourselves from the capacity for proposing, re: the absolute determinism of natural law with respect to the brain, should not allow the indeterminate possibility of subjective inference.

    We’re left with doing the best we can, in not making more of a shitstorm of things than we already have.
    Mww

    Are you essentially saying that we have constructed little conceptual 'prisons' for ourselves out of theory and intellectual models?

    in that it is we that propose to Nature the rules by which it operates, but in doing so, we should have prohibited ourselves from the capacity for proposing, re: the absolute determinism of natural law with respect to the brain, should not allow the indeterminate possibility of subjective inference.Mww


    Can you clarify this by putting it slightly differently, I'm not entirely clear on this?
  • The awareness of time
    I've been pondering the same thing on and off for much of this year - the present moment may be all which exists, but how are we to understand looking back? I think we just have to take past, present and future as structures in human cognition which help us to make sense of our reality, but I don't know how much we can say beyond this. We can't really examine time outside of our experience of it.
  • Kant's Notions of Space and Time
    As I see it, you are trying to do justice to the entanglement of subject and substance. I think it's better to talk of equiprimordiality. Self, language, community, and world are all co-given -- aspects of a single 'fused' lifeworld. The 'proof' of this is almost analytic : denials of it are performative contradictions.plaque flag

    Quick question: I can see merit in this and have a modest interest in phenomenology, but could it not be argued that this account is just words used as a kind of magic spell? A conjuring move to make the Cartesian conundrum appear to vanish. We can choose to describe our reality any which way we want and hold these accounts as foundational axioms - dualism, monistic idealism - or your equiprimordial, phenomenological construct above.

    But how do we demonstrate the veracity of such models and of what use are they? Are they a variety of poetry, or are they something deeper which can be tied in some way to reality?

    the genuine cogito, Merleau-Ponty argues, is a cogito “in action”: we do not deduce “I am” from “I think”, but rather the certainty of “I think” rests on the “I am” of existential engagement. More basic than explicit self-consciousness and presupposed by it is an ambiguous mode of self-experience that Merleau-Ponty terms the silent or “tacit” cogito—our pre-reflective and inarticulate grasp on the world and ourselves that becomes explicit and determinate only when it finds expression for itself.plaque flag

    On this I am simply unable to tell what fits. I find both 'I think' and 'I am' problematic. Even Merleau-Ponty's account seems to require a kind of faith.
  • Philosophical Discussion and Getting Wet
    Well, I prefer your account as it implies hope.
  • A basis for objective morality
    What I mean is, if the above statement is true, then good would be that which aids life and bad the opposite.Kaplan

    I guess as a presupposition I have generally subscribed to something similar - but the devil is in the detail. I have ususally held (something close to Sam Harris), it is better to be alive than dead, better to be well than sick, better to be happy than sad. My sense of morality follows from this.
  • Philosophical Discussion and Getting Wet
    I guess a good example of the first discussion would be when people discuss things like political and are open to actually listening to different view points.Spencer Thurgood

    Interesting. I generally see political conversations as amongst the most tribal and intractable, so I haven't often had the experience of common ground in those discussions. I would have thought simulation theory is much easier and more fun for people to talk about than right-wing versus left-wing political solutions.

    Certain issues are just in themselves controversial, like abortion or taxation or gun ownership, which readily find people ranting and shutting down.
  • A basis for objective morality
    At the most basic level this would assist us with every single moral question as it is the foundation. What I mean is, if the above statement is true, then good would be that which aids life and bad the opposite. As to the exact permutations and combinations this would look like in specific moral questions and practical/applied ethics, that is not my goal here.Kaplan

    Living is not an obligation of life because life has no moral obligation to live regardless of needs and preferences.Mark S

    Agree.
  • Philosophical Discussion and Getting Wet
    The first is a discussion in which present day events and historical events are discussed and used as resources to create what could be argued as the perfect society. This is generally found in productive discussion of politics, ethics, morality, etc.

    The second is a discussion that often revolve around the social sciences and even some of the psychological sciences such as "gender identity", "consciousness", "spirituality". These debate tend to be subjective in conception, ie "are we a simulations on a computer" and as a result are very difficult to have a productive conversation about.
    Spencer Thurgood

    I haven't noticed this. I've mostly noticed discussions about epistemology and metaphysics mostly. We seem to keep coming back to what it is we can say about knowledge/truth/reality and how we can know it. In the end most discussions or arguments hinge upon these matters as the fundamental building blocks for anything else we may go on to say about morality, science, the transcendent.

    I don't think any discussion goes anywhere if people are too firmly attached to their presuppositions - doesn't matter if we are talking politics, cookery or bushcraft. But the curious thing is even zealots do change their minds and the debates they participate in can create significant shifts in their thinking, even as they fervently insist you are wrong. I've met many atheists, for instance, who are former religious fundamentalists and the process of change, when viewed from the outside by others most likely looked like complete resistance to new ideas. You just never know what will make a person change. Or when it might happen.
  • What Are the Chances That This Post Makes Any Sense? A Teleological Argument from Reason
    I don't associate aggressiveness with apologetics so much as naive confidencewonderer1

    I meant aggressive in the sense of super assertive and unassailably confident, not hostile.

    The cultural gap is just too wide.wonderer1

    Probably right.

    WLC is skilled at presenting arguments, and conveying the sense that any reasonable person must come to the same conclusions he doeswonderer1

    He's definitely a very smart man but I find his style reminds me of a used car dealer, haranguing you to buy the product. For my taste he's too slick, too fast, too insinuating.
  • Kant's Notions of Space and Time
    Interesting. There seems to be a similar performative contradiction in Donald Hoffman's idealist philosophy - if evolution is only about survival and does not support humans acquiring truth about reality, how does Hoffman ascertain that his metaphysics is true? I recall his response being something like - 'I don't, everything is wrong, even my theory.' Perhaps this is taking fallibilism too far.
  • What Are the Chances That This Post Makes Any Sense? A Teleological Argument from Reason
    The premises of arguments for God depend greatly on intuitions, and intuitions (key to making the arguments seem like sound arguments) tend to get reinforced on Sunday mornings.wonderer1

    I hear you. I agree that some Christians are good at reason. And often they feel they need to be in a world that privileges reason and evidence over faith and feeling. When I think of defensive, perhaps even aggressive reasoning, I tend to think of apologists. Especially the presuppositionalists. Most atheists I know (certainly those who are not in America and don't have to face fundamentalists) are complacent and don't care much about the arguments for or against god. Their atheism is often a kind of lazy cultural scientism. You know the kind of thing - 'science makes sense, god's don't.'
  • How Does Language Map onto the World?
    But mortals are haunted by opportunity cost, to name just one ghost. Is it better to be Beethoven or Kant ?plaque flag

    Interesting point. In the finite amount of time and brief attention span of my life, I've never considered pursuing an intellectual or cultural project of consequence. It's more likely: do I sleep in or do I do the shopping? And I suspect that no matter how many years most of us are given to live, we are never going to be Beethoven or Kant. I doubt talent like this is just waiting for time to unleash it. And I suspect that's a blessing. Maybe being Peter the electrician, or Mary the accountant is a finer and more rewarding experience in the living of it (certainly compared to Beethoven). Even as a half-baked romantic, I think I would much prefer an 'enjoyable' life to an influential, or prodigious one. The question of a realist theory of language and all that this might imply may well be a decadent and nugatory pursuit. :wink:
  • How Does Language Map onto the World?
    Everything here is lost to history within about three posts. This is a safe space for misplaced confidence. :grin:apokrisis

    I'm glad I'm not the only one. Sometimes I find myself in a discussion with someone and I can't for the life of me remember the point we were exploring.
  • How Does Language Map onto the World?
    I wish I could understand this. If only I had spent my life doing some interesting reading instead of drinking in bars.. :wink:
  • What Are the Chances That This Post Makes Any Sense? A Teleological Argument from Reason
    To be sure, there is some interesting stuff in the philosophy of religion, but it seems very rare for it to actually change people's opinions or even influence theology much.Count Timothy von Icarus

    Agree. I don't think reason counts much in the god debates. You either buy the idea or you don't. I personally have no sensus divinitatis (to borrow from Calvin) so the notion of god is incoherent from my perspective, no matter how it is spun.
  • What Are the Chances That This Post Makes Any Sense? A Teleological Argument from Reason
    How can death and suffering exist without life? Something has to be alive in order for it to die, right? That's all I was getting at.Count Timothy von Icarus

    No - that's not the point I am making. I'd say you're overlooking the obvious. This is not just death and suffering exist; this is creation as a orgiastic instantiation of chaos, death and suffering. Specifically the mechanism of predation is predicated on extremes of cruelty and violence. This is built into the fabric of creation - survival is not possible without this. Now why would a 'good' god who could do anything specifically chose a creation built upon predation - suffering and chaos as a way of life?

    Is there? When people talk about "the laws of physics," or "natural laws," I don't think they're generally presupposing any sort of "lawgiver."Count Timothy von Icarus

    Indeed they do - read anything by any Islamic or Christian apologists - its a key line 'a law implies a lawgiver'. William Lane Craig, a big name Christian philosopher maintains this in most of his work. This is one of the reasons why many atheists no longer refer to the 'Laws of logic' but prefer the 'logical axioms'. Our language influences our arguments. But I agree with you that this shouldn't be the case. Laws are metaphors.

    My point is that this sort of argument runs into the problem of then having to explain why the multiverse only creates certain types of universes, that is, ones with "physical laws."Count Timothy von Icarus

    My problem is we don't know enough about the universe, the earth or even human perception and consciousness to make any totalizing claims about design. There isn't even agreement about idealism vs materialism. But what we do see, for what it's worth is that the universe seems mostly good at spawning black holes. :smile:
  • Addiction & Consumer Choice under Neoliberalism
    But the relationship between consumerism and industrialism (production) is reciprocal: a radical drop in consumption means less production; less production means fewer jobs, fewer incomes, fewer meals, fewer everything,BC

    We'll never know until we try and it looks very much like we have to try. :wink:

    But my would-be minimalism isn't motivated by the environment, it is just about my relationship to stuff.
  • Can a limitless power do the impossible?
    So, since a limitless power (let’s say that also includes limitless imagination) isn’t limited as we are, couldn’t we say that it can also do everything we call impossible?

    What do you think? :smile:
    leo

    I think it seems incoherent.

    Maybe you could start by defining power. What does power look like as the limits are removed?
  • Addiction & Consumer Choice under Neoliberalism
    Religion can be a route to minimalism--asceticism. 150 objects with no car, no computer, that one dim light bulb. Grim but holy. And very good for the environment and the soul.

    Asceticism has a huge downside: Were it to be widely practiced, it would send the world's economies into free-fall from which there would be much chaos and many deaths.
    BC

    I wouldn't take the ascetic versions of 'hard' minimalism as its only expression. I think the world can easily manage a radical drop in consumerism. Most of the people I know own way more than 150 objects and don't count their things. But they don't have cars or kitchen appliances, or many clothes or useless furniture. And for the most part they shop in thrift shops. Some of these folk are comfortable financially. I include myself in this group. They still eat out and buy coffees and travel and spend - it just isn't on 'useless' stuff. But we can find faults in any lifestyles. Nothing is perfect.

    I have no kitchen appliances - no toaster, kettle, processors, etc. Just an oven and some kitchen tools like a knife, grater, cutlery. No mugs or cups, just a few heatproof glasses. No couch or sofas. No coffee tables or side tables. A couple of years ago I got rid of 2000 books - they were the only things I purchased, mainly second hand. I have about 1000 left. I still own paintings and art - some of which are my parents. These I have struggled to ditch. I still have a long way to go.
  • What Are the Chances That This Post Makes Any Sense? A Teleological Argument from Reason
    Death, suffering, chaos, etc. all only make sense in terms of living things so those issues seem anterior to life existing, more in the bucket of "the problem of evil."Count Timothy von Icarus

    I'm not sure this is correct - for evil to exist, this seems to require free choice. How can something be evil if it is the necessary requirement for existence, built into it by the creator/evolution? The notion of predation, so much a part of the natural world of animals, must then imply that the natural world is evil. Do you subscribe to this? Manichaeism holds to this view. Earthquakes, fire and floods are built into how nature functions, how can they be evil? Are black holes evil?

    When some people attempt to quarantine suffering and pain caused by natural processes as being somehow separate from a 'good' or 'balanced' creation, it seems manipulative or selective.

    That PSR is a far assumption for our world has no doubt be challenged, but I think those challenges still are a small minority viewpoint. And that makes sense to me, after all, we don't see pigs materialize out of thin air, second moons appear in the night sky, chop a carrot and have one half turn to dust, etc. There are law-like ways to describe the behaviors of the universe at both the macro and microscales.Count Timothy von Icarus

    I'm not sure this works for me. You talk about 'law-like'. But even in using the term 'laws' this implies a lawgiver - there's a prejudice built into the language. Would it not be fairer to argue that there are various regularities we have observed in our world (let's ignore QM). Do these say anything about a creator or about purpose? Not really. All they say is we have observed regularity. Maybe worth noting that Kant and others hold that our notion of space/time is not really 'out there' in the universe but inside us as part of our cognitive apparatus. Could not many of our accounts of the world be more about us than the world itself? Future accounts/discoveries may see some of those regularities we see be replaced in time. We just don't really know.
  • A basis for objective morality
    mean, if I made the counter claim "whatever is natural is right", how would you show me I'm wrong about that? Would you point to intuition, language use, the canon of ethics...?Isaac

    I wouldn't show you that you are wrong, I would say simply that the case hasn't been made. Why would I accept this claim? What is it about the natural that entails the good? Can this be demonstrated?
  • A basis for objective morality
    Well, is there not a paradigmatic value system that makes such vocabulary intelligible? Is not each fact flowing out of this system of thought framed with expectations and anticipations? Is not each assertative empirical statement a form of question put to experience, an expectation that subsequent events will validate rather than invalidate it?Joshs

    Can you tie this more robustly to is/ought for me?
  • A basis for objective morality
    Now I am still working through refining my thoughts in the above paragraph, but I think the is/ought problem, or the naturalistic fallacy, are unassailable gaps perhaps from one paradigm, but not from another which is just as viable.Kaplan

    The issue here might be that anyone can argue that their paradigm is better than another paradigm - isn't this what creationists do when they poo-poo evolution in favour of the Biblical paradigm? But we still need a demonstration that one paradigm should be privileged over another.

    Life by definition wants to live. There is no life otherwise and no discussion of anything.Kaplan

    Even if this is true, can you demonstrate how this assists us with morality as per my earlier question -

    Also nothing you have argued seems to go to morality as such. What does this say about homosexuality; drug use; the role of women; capital punishment, poverty, etc?Tom Storm
  • A basis for objective morality
    because living is the first 'thing' an organism does and is what makes it an organism. Living is an obligation for life. Therefore one ought to live, as being a being implies this by default.Kaplan

    Further to my above response - it doesn't matter how deep you go into the process of life, the point is you are still committing the naturalistic fallacy (which is close to the is/ought fallacy). Just because something is the case in nature does not make that something right. The natural is not the same as the good.
  • A basis for objective morality
    You can't get an ought from an is. Oh, I see Jesus got there before me. Just because you have determined that something is nature doing its job does not make it ipso facto right. One could argue that cancer is just nature efficiently doing what it does. Does that make cancer good?

    Also nothing you have argued seems to go to morality as such. What does this say about homosexuality; drug use; the role of women; capital punishment, poverty, etc?
  • How Does Language Map onto the World?
    It reminds me of Rorty, who'd call it philosophy's inheritance from the Romantics.plaque flag

    Looks like we were heading in the same direction. :wink:
  • How Does Language Map onto the World?
    Agree with most of your feedback to BF.

    Poetry has high status.
    — apokrisis

    I'm not sure it enjoys as high a status today as it did at other times, speaking generally of course.
    Janus

    Indeed. Poetry now inhabits a cultural backwater, like bocce or folk dancing - there's a cognoscenti for it, but it's only a shadow of what used to be.

    I don't see why mechanistic reason could not deliver a point of view on feelings and values that is suitable for modern life.Janus

    Indeed and (this is only a minor point) I find it interesting how often pejorative language (like 'mechanistic') is employed to describe reason or science. It seems to me that a form of romanticism still has us (perhaps postmodernism is a type of romanticism too) and it seeks to elevate the personal, the emotional, the relationship, the experience, as contrasted with the mechanical, the impersonal, the rational, the transactional, the disenchanted. But I suspect we don't have to use these words to characterize any way of seeing. It depends upon the individual seer.
  • What is the Nature of Intuition? How reliable is it?
    For example, I'm 99% sure TS would agree (though he is free to correct me if I am wrong) that he didn't develop the intuitive recognitions he has (e.g. that someone has a weapon) from reading a book. Instead those intuitions came from years of interactions with, and observations of, people. Attentiveness to body language and other nonverbal signals undoubtedly played an important role.wonderer1

    Quite right. No reading or study involved. I'm fairly sure the intuition I know is acquired by paying attention to experience and being able to recognize key indicators, which are not necessarily consciously available to me.
  • What Are the Chances That This Post Makes Any Sense? A Teleological Argument from Reason
    Consider:

    "If God is omniscient then God cannot forget anything and cannot create a truth that God does not know. Thus, God is constrained and not omnipotent."

    Or:

    "God can/cannot create a rock so heavy that God cannot lift it."

    Plantinga argued that these turn out not to be real contradictions. The first is logically equivalent with "if there is a truth, God knows it." The second is logically equivalent with "God can lift all rocks." God only doing good things based on God's desires is equivalent with "all of God's actions are good and God only does what God wants to do," which is the same as "God is omnibenevolent and God can do or not do anything God desires."
    Count Timothy von Icarus

    If God is real, why would human reason or our conceptual frameworks even begin to describe or understand what god can or cannot do? Or what god is. These sorts of questions are likely irrelevant and a bit like trying to teach card tricks to a dog. The notion of god is itself almost incoherent to human comprehension, completely outside our understanding of cause and effect, physics and behavior. Just what we are doing trying to project the known world on an unknowable deity is beyond me.

    I guess what we are attempting to do here is imagine god as a kind of personality who is part of our world, but has super powers or magic which can be described and contextualized, based on what we already think we know. We are attempting to constrain or limit the idea and mold it to our presuppositions, our limited understanding of things. But I don't think the concept of god is a crossword puzzle to be solved over the weekend, with cups of tea and some hard thinking. If reason, time and space emanate from god's nature (and who is to know if this is the case?) then god presumably transcends such strictures and as such is likely unintelligible.

    What are the chances that our world should be a rational one? To put the question more concretely in the terms of physics: is it likely for a universe evolve from state to state, such that past states dictate future ones? Or, is the apparent rationality of our world evidence for a designer?Count Timothy von Icarus

    As presuppositions go, I don't see overwhelming evidence that the world we think we know is rational or ordered. Humans impose reason and order because we are pattern seeking machines. One could just as well argue that the universe specialises in black holes and chaos and kills most of the life it spawns, often with horrendous suffering. Life on earth is one of predation - for many creatures to eat, suffering and death are required. Why would a universe be designed to produce such chaos and suffering and a natural world which wipes out incalculable numbers of lifeforms with earthquakes, fires and floods? Why would a universe of balance have within it so many meaningless accidental deaths in nature, along with endless horrendous diseases and concomitant wretchedness?
  • How Does Language Map onto the World?
    Roughly (or so I claim) the meaningful structure of reality is exactly the kind of meaning in language, so 'the world is all that is the case.' The (intelligible) structure of the world is the meaning of all true sentences, or something like that. There's a surplus in humans though, an ability to hypothesize, lie, and be mistaken.plaque flag

    Yes, I see that. It's not cats on mats or plumbs in iceboxes that are the main problem, it's the very values we live by and for. When someone says, 'There is a God' - there is almost nothing that maps onto any reality I understand or is available to us the way cats or plumbs might be. What does 'there is' mean here? What does 'a God' mean or even 'God'. These four words are like a hall of mirrors.

    For everyday practical purposes, language mirrors what we see is going on well enough to be a practical tool for issuing instructions, passing along information, and so on.Janus

    Yes, and isn't it interesting that this is the best we seem to be able to do? Most of us posting here have come up with variations of this frame and often from different backgrounds. All roads lead to utility...