When they don't we end with people thinking Kant, Marx, and Nietzsche were real philosophers. — Garrett Travers
Since when do philosophers wait for more facts before they start "speculating"? — Gnomon
Besides, the authors of the books referenced are pragmatic scientists, who were forced by the counter-intuitive "facts" they dug-up to speculate on what they might mean for our intuitive worldview and our incomplete "standard theory" of reality. — Gnomon
I haven't read the book [Penrose], but from reviews I get the impression that his Mathematical Reality is essentially the same thing as Virtual Reality. If that is not questioning our traditional understanding of reality (Materialism & Atomism) I don't know what it's all about. :cool: — Gnomon
Let me toss another one on the fire :razz: : Stephen Wolfram's A New Kind of Science. I'm not advocating, just mentioning — Real Gone Cat
Good! The problem with Systems Theory is that, like all Holistic attempts to understand Nature, General & Universal concepts are not knowable by sensory observation or reductive analysis. Instead, we develop such mental models of reality by rational inference from direct personal experience, or from second-hand learning from other envelope pushers.. The next Theory of Everything will never be a confirmed fact, but merely a new target to shoot down.Oh, I see. I am in 100% accord with this analysis. — Garrett Travers
But as a fundamental concept explaining physical reality his (Wolfram's) ideas have failed. — jgill
hould the properties an object has in common with other objects, such as color and shape, be considered to exist beyond those objects? — Gnomon
It means that what you think of as capital "S" Science is a moving target. And these envelope-pushers may know something you don't. For example, Deacon has postulated the counter-intuitive notion of "causal absence". Check it out. But hold your prejudice until you understand what he's talking about. :wink:I regret I haven't read the works you refer to, but just what is that supposed to mean? — Ciceronianus
Yes, It's that dual meaning of "exist" & "real" that causes us to talk past each other. Some deny the existence of "a different order of phenomena". AFAIK for almost 14 billion years, there were no minds, and hence no Universals or General Concepts and no Ideas or Ideals. When your dog is looking pensive, is he pondering Universals? Is your talking parrot a philosopher?Gonna butt in here with some of my homespun analysis. Universals don't exist, but they're real. They're real as constraints and possibilities, the forms that things must take in order to exist. But they're not real on the level of existent things, their reality is of a different order to phenomena. — Wayfarer
AFAIK for almost 14 billion years, there were no minds, and hence no Universals or General Concepts and no Ideas or Ideals. — Gnomon
Brits (& Aussies?) call that "taking the piss".serves you right :naughty:
— Wayfarer
:brow: — Agent Smith
I.e. Kant's platonic 'transcendental reifications' ...That is why in some sense universals are possibilities; they're the attributes or forms something must have in order to exist. — Wayfarer
"Universals" do subsist, but until we grasp them, they do not exist – stand out – for us. Is it your position, Wayf, that they are "real but do not exist" (à la Meinong)? If so, sketch what "real" means to you in this instance as distinct from "exist".But that doesn't mean that by our grasping of such things they begin to exist, ...
Consider this alternative: It's [X] the applications of, or uses for, our abstractions (i.e. grammars e.g. expressions, "valid moves") abstract & concrete objects that work (discerned from those that do not work) which are "discovered" (re: pragmatics) whereas [Y] the expressions of abstractions themselves (i.e. logical spaces e.g. systems, "games") are invented. I think [Y] the latter begin (via reflective equilibria?) as particular (trial and error) heuristics from / by which deduceable algorithms subsequently emerge as generalizations abstracted inductively from [X] the former. In other words, "universals" are abstracted from "instantiations" – [Y] generalizations from [X] particulars – like maps abstracted from territories; it makes no more sense to say that [Y] generalizations are logically (or causally) prior to [X] particulars (e.g. platonism) than it does to say maps (forms, possibilities) are logically (or causally) prior to territories (facts, actualities).... rather, they're discovered by us.
My position is that "universals" are not real (i.e. they are not 'ineluctable, subject/language-invariant, non-tautologies') yet they do subsist (e.g. fictions) :point: — 180 Proof
"Universals" do subsist, but until we grasp them, they do not exist – stand out – for us. Is it your position, Wayf, that they are "real but do not exist" (à la Meinong)? If so, sketch what "real" means to you in this instance as distinct from "exist".
— 180 Proof
My position is that "universals" are not real (i.e. they are not 'ineluctable, subject/language-invariant, non-tautologies') yet they do subsist (e.g. fictions) :point: — 180 Proof
"Money" may be the most ubiquitous fiction on the planet and its an abstraction that has long been far more effective at shaping the concrete world than swords & ships, bullets & bombs. :roll:Those factors are not fictions. — Wayfarer
Good! The problem with Systems Theory is that, like all Holistic attempts to understand Nature, General & Universal concepts are not knowable by sensory observation or reductive analysis. — Gnomon
Instead, we develop such mental models of reality by rational inference from direct personal experience, or from second-hand learning from other envelope pushers. — Gnomon
That's why scientists, who make general judgments about whole sub-categories of Nature, are going beyond the empirical evidence to make metaphysical philosophical postulations. — Gnomon
You might call them "un-settled science" — Gnomon
This knowledge-of-the-gaps is so instinctive for humans that we hardly notice when we cross the line between empirical evidence and theoretical speculation. — Gnomon
But. I'm inclined to give them the benefit of the doubt — Gnomon
For example, Einstein was not a practicing scientist when he published his five papers that turned the classical world upside down — Gnomon
And, I understand that he is not denying our common sense model of material reality, but merely noting that that notion is a map, not the territory. — Gnomon
Our dear Einstein labored in passion in coffee shops, scribbling in note books ad nauseum to develop a theory that seemed to make sense, but science doesn't play with "seem," neither does philosophy. — Garrett Travers
Sorry. I just like Zevon, and couldn't help but think of these lines. Couldn't help but type them as well, it seems. — Ciceronianus
Unless you are a professor of Consciousness Studies, you are not likely to put food on the table by understanding Non-physical Reality. But, if you are an amateur philosopher, like me, that deeper understanding of reality, may make a difference in how you perceive & conceive the puzzling world around you. That, in turn could make you a better person (wisdom & virtue) in your day-to-day dealings with other people. Besides, it might give you fodder for contentious TPF topics. Do, you have something more important to do with your time on Earth? If so, why are you wasting it on feckless Philosophy? :smile:I'm sure there may be many interesting implications from these works. I'm just wondering if they make any difference to how we live our lives on a day to day basis (which seems, to me, to involve reality). — Ciceronianus
Do you really require objective verification for all of your beliefs? Most people get their technical knowledge second & third hand. So, they must trust their sources. I am not a practicing scientist, so my understanding of abstruse topics, such as we discuss here, is verified only by comparing one expert opinion to another. That's why I read widely. And I actively look for opinions that are different from my own : this forum, for example. That's how you learn. But there are not enough minutes in eternity to "verify" all sources, or for critical analysis of every "fact". So, I suspect that like most folks, even you remember mostly those "facts" that seem to agree with your prior beliefs, as vetted by the Availabilty Heurstic. :smile:Truly holistic theories are adaptive to all new objectively verified phenomena, like science, and philosophy. — Garrett Travers
Whoa! That sounds like Antihumanism or Transhumanism or even Antinatalism. Which means you won't rest until the scourge of irrational caveman intuition is eradicated from the planet. It must be frustrating to share the world with imperfect people who are not as logical as Mr. Spock, or as computational as Commander Data, or as intolerant as GT. My condolences. :sad:This knowledge-of-the-gaps is so instinctive for humans that we hardly notice when we cross the line between empirical evidence and theoretical speculation. — Gnomon
Man's greatest murder, and I will not fucking stand for it for another day in my life. I will ridicule and rationally destroy it of the face of the earth with pleasure for the rest of my days. — Garrett Travers
Hey, you're not arguing with me. that's a quote from Alfred Korzybski. His point was that your mental model of the world is a figment of your imagination, not a miniature clone of reality. And he would probably agree with Don Hoffman, that your model of Reality is an "illusion". Or with Carlo Rovelli, that Reality is "not what it seems". However, they are not denying the existence of both mental Maps and material Territories in the same world, but in different forms. Each has its place in the grand scheme of things . . . an non-things. :cool:Read above what I have posted to you here again, and come back and read this statement of yours: "a map, not the territory." You sure it isn't..... both? Or, more than both? — Garrett Travers
Do you really require objective verification for all of your beliefs? — Gnomon
Most people get their technical knowledge second & third hand. — Gnomon
That's why I read widely. And I actively look for opinions that are different from my own : this forum, for example. That's how you learn. — Gnomon
So, I suspect that like most folks, even you remember mostly those "facts" that seem to agree with your prior beliefs, as vetted by the Availabilty Heurstic. — Gnomon
Whoa! That sounds like Antihumanism or Transhumanism or even Antinatalism. — Gnomon
It must be frustrating to share the world with imperfect people who are not as logical as Mr. Spock, or as computational as Commander Data, or as intolerant as GT. My condolences. :sad: — Gnomon
Hey, you're not arguing with me. that's a quote from Alfred Korzybski. His point was that your mental model of the world is a figment of your imagination, not a miniature clone of reality. And he would probably agree with Don Hoffman, that your model of Reality is an "illusion". — Gnomon
grand scheme of things — Gnomon
Generally, "exist" is a spatial-temporal concept. To exist is to be describable in spatial-temporal terms — Metaphysician Undercover
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