A question I have asked before: a stick of dynamite explodes: what caused it to explode? — tim wood
Maybe I'm not understanding the language, or context is omitted, but pretty clearly for the Greeks what ought to be was manifestly not in nature. — tim wood
There is no "final cause" because the end of the universe hasn't happened. — Gregory
Hey. Just to know, what is it that you have in mind when you speak of naturalism? — Manuel
The term ‘positivism’ was coined in the 1830s by the French philosopher Auguste Comte, to distinguish the empirical and natural sciences from religious and metaphysical accounts of the world. Comte saw a progression in the development of society from the ‘theological’ to the ‘scientific’ phase, in which data derived from empirical experience, and logical and mathematical treatments of such data, provide the exclusive source of all authentic knowledge. Even though Comte’s influence has waned in the intervening centuries, his conception of the evolution of society from theological to scientific - a model which might be called ‘historical positivism’ - has remained an important component of the modern outlook.
Pretty much 'post Enlightenment philosophy'. A strict division between what can be known by the natural sciences and what is deemed not to be thus knowable. Closely intertwined with empiricism, the view that only what can be detected by the senses (and instruments) is to be considered real. The other component is 'positivism'. — Wayfarer
Cartesian anxiety refers to the notion that, since René Descartes posited his influential form of body-mind dualism, Western civilization has suffered from a longing for ontological certainty, or feeling that scientific methods, and especially the study of the world as a thing separate from ourselves, should be able to lead us to a firm and unchanging knowledge of ourselves and the world around us. The term is named after Descartes because of his well-known emphasis on "mind" as different from "body", "self" as different from "other".
This place is full of it. ;-) — Wayfarer
I don't think arguing with people who agree with Dennett or Churchland(s) to be fruitful in any way. — Manuel
Closely intertwined with empiricism, the view that only what can be detected by the senses (and instruments) is to be considered real. The other component is 'positivism'. — Wayfarer
The tragedy of the great Empiricist philosophers came from the fact that not only did they deny the prime intellectual intuitions on which metaphysical knowledge depends, but they were actually lacking in these intuitions. They did not see (through the intellect's power of vision) when it came to the supra-empirical horizon of Being and essence brought out at the level of metaphysical intelligibility. And they did not know that they saw through the intellect's power of vision when it came to the scientific handling of the world of experience. Thus they indeed endeavored in a sincere and earnest fashion to build a comprehensive system giving account of all the human riches inherent in Western culture; no one was more generously attached to these human riches than a John Stuart Mill for instance: but they only succeeded in building cathedrals in paper and worlds in the air.
The modern man does not even feel such tragedy. Unaware of his own intellect's spiritual activity, which he cannot do without, but which he has repressed in his unconscious, he gladly enjoys a mental behavior in which human reason limits itself to the most clever and intelligent use and penetration of the animal field of sense-experience.
Well, that's clear. What does that mean? We can be informal in description, and thereby imprecise, but what good is that? What I'm driving at is nothing original with me: If you insist on cause, then it is presumably separate from event, but if the cause is being lit, and it explodes when lit, then cause and effect are one, and if being lit isn't the cause, then what is? And that seems a problem for this sense of cause and effect. And of course there are other senses. The person caused it. The lighting of the fuse caused it, and so forth. There seem, then, many causes and no cause. And that's on the way to understanding why the idea of cause is no longer used in some sciences, replaced by fields.That it was lit. That the chemical compounds which comprise dynamite explode when lit. — Wayfarer
Just so. The Greek view of nature was as a world of imprecision, for which no science is possible. That's why ideals and mathematics, but no natural science in any modern sense.It varied between philosophers and schools. Some of them were much nearer to naturalism than others, but platonism did not operate from naturalist presuppositions. — Wayfarer
Western civilization has suffered from a longing for ontological certainty, ....should be able to lead us to afirm and unchanging knowledge of ourselves and the world around us.
https://iep.utm.edu/rorty/#SH3aIn rejecting representationalism and the essentialism that it implies, Dewey abandons the Cartesian-inspired spectator account of knowledge, which radically separates the knowing subject from the object being studied. No longer considering that objectivity a result of a detachment from the material under study but rather as an ongoing interaction with that which is at hand, Dewey elevates practice over theory; better said, he puts theory in service to practice. From Rorty’s perspective, while Dewey had a great insight, he ought to have taken the next step and rejected scientism—the claim that scientific method allows humanity to gain a privileged insight into the structural processes of nature. His failure to reject the alleged epistemologically privileged stance is one main reason Rorty must re-imagine Dewey. Nevertheless, Dewey’s elevation of practice continues the movement away from the pre-Darwinian attachment to the belief in a non-human source of purpose and the immutability of natural kinds toward a contingent “world,” where humans define and redefine their social and material environments. It is within a social practice or a “language-game” that specific marks and sounds come to designate commonly accepted meanings. And, as Rorty states in “Feminism and Pragmatism,” (1995) no set of marks or sounds (memes) can ever bring cognitive clarity about the way the world is or the way we as humans are. Instead, memes compete with one another in an evolutionary struggle over cultural space, just as genes compete for survival in the natural environment. Unguided by an immanent or transcendent teleology, the memes’ replication is determined by their usefulness within a given social group. And it is through their utility for the continued existence and prospering of a social group that the group’s memes—like their genes—are carried forward and flourish. They establish their niche in the socio-ecological system. — link
That it was lit. That the chemical compounds which comprise dynamite explode when lit.
— Wayfarer
Well, that's clear. What does that mean? We can be informal in description, and thereby imprecise, but what good is that? What I'm driving at is nothing original with me: If you insist on cause, then it is presumably separate from event, but if the cause is being lit, and it explodes when lit, then cause and effect are one, and if being lit isn't the cause, then what is? And that seems a problem for this sense of cause and effect. — tim wood
This longing for unchanging, certain knowledge seems to me to be associated with religion and old-fashioned metaphysics ('rationalized' religion). As I understand them, the scientific spirit and more recent philosophy understand our knowledge to be constantly evolving. — j0e
Classic empiricism is indeed crude by today's standards. — j0e
Maritain was a modern student of Aquinas whom more than all Catholics worshipped the sun. — Gregory
And my view of yours, that I'm glad to be corrected on if I'm mistaken, is that you believe in the extra-mental reality of non-material things. — tim wood
And the difficulty is that your view, that I call mere belief, being at best a claim, if allowed in argument, leads to conclusions with respect to the existence of things for which no evidence is possible. — tim wood
On what corroborable grounds have you (Eleatics, Platonists & woo-ologists) determined "objects ... constantly arise and pass away and are ephemeral" do not constitute "true knowledge"?The knowledge of the empirical world ... is not equated with true knowledge, because the objects within it constantly arise and pass away and are ephemeral. — Wayfarer
:100:The Greek view of nature was as a world of imprecision, for which no science is possible. That's why ideals and mathematics, but no natural science in any modern sense — tim wood
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