• Arcane Sandwich
    452
    I want to know what "The Absolute" means to you, in whatever sense you mean it. You keep saying the ultimate truth is the Hegelian concept of the Absolute; and I have no clue what you mean by that.Bob Ross

    The Absolute, as I understand it, is what is ontologically greater than subject and objects. It is better than them, in some sense of the term. It is similar to what Lao Tzu calls Tao. It is the symbol of the ying and the yang. It is the Holy Spirit in Christianity. It is the number 3 in some sense of the term. It is what truly, properly transcends. "Transcends what?", you might ask?

    Everything. Including itself. It is why there is an External World, called Nature, in the first place. The Absolute Spirit is the realization of this as a brute fact, as something that one simple "encounters". It is a presence of some sort, but in the way that Derrida spoke about Heidegger's "metaphysics of presence". It is the phenomenon of oddness itself as a psychological phenomenon. And it is a great source of poetry (how could it not be?), at the same time it is a great source of philosophical perplexity (how could it not be?), and of scientific inquiry (could it not be?).

    Now, if you ask me personally if I just happen to like the number 3, then I well tell you no, that I prefer the number 4. After all, it is literally Hegel's concept of the Absolute, not mine. Therefore, my personal commitment to the number 4 is greater than my personal commitment to the number 3.

    @Wayfarer @Banno @Joshs @Janus and whoever wishes to express some opinion on the Ultimate Truth about Reality.
  • Bob Ross
    1.9k


    The Absolute, as I understand it, is what is ontologically greater than subject and objects

    Are you conveying here that you accept a version of non-dualism? Viz., the idea that there is some substance which unites both the mental and physical and of which is neither?

    I don’t know what else it could possibly mean to say that something exists as neither a subject nor an object. EDIT: unless by this you mean some transcendental mode (Kantian style).

    "Transcends what?", you might ask?

    Everything. Including itself

    Well, with all due respect, Arcane, that’s patently incoherent. You are saying here that some third substance and being of that substance exists, and it exists in a manner where it is not identical to itself.

    . It is why there is an External World, called Nature, in the first place.

    How?

    Absolute Spirit is the realization of this as a brute fact, as something that one simple "encounters"

    Oh, are you an ontological idealist?

    It is a presence of some sort, but in the way that Derrida spoke about Heidegger's "metaphysics of presence". It is the phenomenon of oddness itself as a psychological phenomenon. And it is a great source of poetry (how could it not be?), at the same time it is a great source of philosophical perplexity (how could it not be?), and of scientific inquiry (could it not be?).

    This may make sense to you because you are familiar with the ‘Absolute’; but I have no clue what you are trying to say here.
  • Arcane Sandwich
    452
    Are you conveying here that you accept a version of non-dualism? Viz., the idea that there is some substance which unites both the mental and physical and of which is neither?Bob Ross

    I accept a version of non-dualism (I accept several versions of non-dualism, actually), yet I disagree that there is some substance (if by that, you mean something like an Aristotelian substance) which unites both the mental and the physical (because the mental, as far as I'm concerned is physical). If by "the mental" and "the physical" you are speaking non-scientifically, as a mere folk would, then yes, I'm saying "something like that", if you will. The absolute is not a object, it is not one more thing in the world like this stone on the floor or this table. And it is not a subject, it is not like you, and it is not like me. It is something else. Or, again, perhaps I am deluded.

    Oh, are you an ontological idealist?Bob Ross

    No, I am not. I will tell you what I am, and you can call me deluded all you want: I won't change the following five premises of my personal philosophy. Those are:

    1) Realism
    2) Materialim
    3) Atheism
    4) Scientism
    5) Literalism

    Those are my axioms, my "premises", if you will. I am not an idealist, as Hegel was, since I am a materialist. As for the term "ontological", sure, you could call me an ontological materialist, if that makes any sense to you.

    This may make sense to you because you are familiar with the ‘Absolute’; but I have no clue what you are trying to say here.Bob Ross

    Well, I'm trying to explain it to the best of my ability. I'm not the best philosopher in the world, you know. And "Explain the Absolute to another human" is not exactly the type of question that I would expect for a midterm exam or whatnot.
  • Bob Ross
    1.9k


    Well, I'm trying to explain it to the best of my ability. I'm not the best philosopher in the world, you know.

    That’s ok: most of us on here aren’t the best philosophers.

    I accept a version of non-dualism (I accept several versions of non-dualism, actually), yet I disagree that there is some substance

    I mean it in the Analytic Philosophy sense of a substrate which bears the properties of things.

    yet I disagree that there is some substance (if by that, you mean something like an Aristotelian substance) which unites both the mental and the physical (because the mental, as far as I'm concerned is physical). If by "the mental" and "the physical" you are speaking non-scientifically, as a mere folk would, then yes, I'm saying "something like that", if you will

    Ok, so you are a ‘materialist’; so there’s, so far, two types of substrates for you: the physical and the kind that bears the properties of this ‘Absolute’. Are you a bundle theorist? Otherwise, how does things which are of this non-physical (and non-mental) interact with or relate to the stuff which is bore by the physical substrate? The hard problem of interaction seems to plague this theory.

    The absolute is not a object, it is not one more thing in the world like this stone on the floor or this table. And it is not a subject, it is not like you, and it is not like me. It is something else.

    Ok, it isn’t physical. What is it? When you say ‘The Absolute’, I am thinking of just reality as it is in-itself. Why should be posit this thing as being real?

    1) Realism
    2) Materialim
    3) Atheism
    4) Scientism
    5) Literalism

    I think this detracts from the conversation: I think you should be able to briefly explain what the Absolute is, conceptually, if you have a firm grasp of what it is.
  • Arcane Sandwich
    452
    I mean it in the Analytic Philosophy sense of a substrate which bears the properties of things.Bob Ross

    In that case no, there is no such thing (not to my mind, at least). I'll give you three examples why not:

    1) From an ordinary point of view (the POV of ordinary life), Reality is not a single, gigantic, homogeneous block. It's a bunch of stuff, it's a plurality of entities. That's just how it seems.
    2) And that leads us to the concept of intuition. You simply intuit many things around you, or you simply have the intuition that there are many things around you, like this stone on the floor, or this desk, that table, this computer, and so forth.
    3) From a metaphysical point of view (as developed in the Analytic Tradition, particularly in the field known as Metaphysics of Ordinary Objects), it makes more sense to be a metaphysical conservative, than to be a metaphysical eliminativist or a metaphysical permissivist. Likewise, it makes more sense to give a particularist answer to van Inwagen's Special Composition Question, or SCQ for short, than to give an nihilist or a universalist answer.

    Ok, so you are a ‘materialist’; so there’s, so far, two types of substrates for you: the physical and the kind that bears the properties of this ‘Absolute’.Bob Ross

    I'm not sure that's correct, but I'll just ignore it, for now. Unless you want to make that point clearer, because I didn't understand what you said there.

    Are you a bundle theorist?Bob Ross

    No, I am not. There are things that have a metaphysical substrate. It just so happens that not everything does, or even is, a metaphysical substrate to begin with. I don't believe in disembodied universals: there is no redness apart from red things, like this rose or that brick. But there are pseudo-things, if you want to call them that: a pack of six wovles is a pseudo-thing, the pack itself is not a substance, the only substances there are the six individual wolves.

    Otherwise, how does things which are of this non-physical (and non-mental) interact with or relate to the stuff which is bore by the physical substrate? The hard problem of interaction seems to plague this theory.Bob Ross

    Everything that is mental is physical, but not everything that is physical is mental. That's what seems the most reasonable thing to say here.

    Ok, it isn’t physical. What is it? When you say ‘The Absolute’, I am thinking of just reality as it is in-itself. Why should be posit this thing as being real?Bob Ross

    It isn't. Reality Itself and the Absolute are two different "entities", if you will. They belong to different categories. Reality is what exists, and the Absolute, in the Hegelian sense, is the truth (it is the Ultimate Truth) about that (about Reality itself)

    I think you should be able to briefly explain what the Absolute is, conceptually, if you have a firm grasp of what it is.Bob Ross

    No, I don't have a firm grasp of what it is. I don't think anyone does. I don't think Hegel did either, for that matter.
  • Bob Ross
    1.9k


    1) From an ordinary point of view (the POV of ordinary life), Reality is not a single, gigantic, homogeneous block. It's a bunch of stuff, it's a plurality of entities. That's just how it seems.

    Substance theory doesn’t deny that: it is claiming that each ‘entity’ has a substrate for its existence whereof its properties are bore by it. E.g., the apple has a bear existence which provides the compresence for its properties (like redness).

    2) And that l

    Again, substance is being used here in the sense of substrates; which doesn’t negate the possibility of a plurality of objects.

    3) From

    I am not familiar enough with what you are referring to by metaphysical conservatism, eliminativism, and permissivism to comment adequately on this one; but I suspect you are addressing a view which has no relevance to substance theory (in the sense of rebuking a position that holds that everything is one concrete entity).

    I'm not sure that's correct, but I'll just ignore it, for now. Unless you want to make that point clearer, because I didn't understand what you said there.

    So, I mean that we can describe the type of substrate a substance is to meaningfully discuss things. Idealists accept hat there is a mental substrate; physicalists accept a physical substrate; a substance dualist accepts both; a non-dualist adds a third; etc.

    No, I am not. There are things that have a metaphysical substrate.

    Ok, cool. So, then, under your view, is this “Absolute” of a different type of substrate than physical stuff?

    Reality is what exists, and the Absolute, in the Hegelian sense, is the truth (it is the Ultimate Truth) about that (about Reality itself)

    Ok, so are you just noting by “The Absolute” the totality of reality and negation? I know that much about Hegel haha….

    No, I don't have a firm grasp of what it is. I don't think anyone does. I don't think Hegel did either, for that matter.

    Then why do you believe in it?
  • Arcane Sandwich
    452
    I am not familiar enough with what you are referring to by metaphysical conservatism, eliminativism, and permissivism to comment adequately on this one; but I suspect you are addressing a view which has no relevance to substance theory (in the sense of rebuking a position that holds that everything is one concrete entity).Bob Ross

    Hmmm... well, you see, here's where I personally disagree with you (I'm not attacking you, BTW). Here's what I'm saying about that: mereological nihilism is the opinion that composition never occurs. An object A never composes an object B. Does that mean that the objects A and B exist? No, it does not. So what does the nihilist say? She says that only atoms exist ("atoms" in the sense mereological sense, literally "in-dividual", you cannot divide them). And what are those? The elementary particles of contemporary physics. In other words, the nihilist is a realist about physical, elementary particles. She is not a realist about anything else. You, me, these other fine folk, we don't exist, technically speaking. That's what the nihilist says. So, what are we? Well, just a bunch of good ol' particles, and nothing more.

    So Bob, you see why these debates are not restricted to formal mereology. There are of interest and relevance to metaphysics, as I've hoped to have shown.

    So, I mean that we can describe the type of substrate a substance is to meaningfully discuss things. Idealists accept hat there is a mental substrate; physicalists accept a physical substrate; a substance dualist accepts both; a non-dualist adds a third; etc.Bob Ross

    Maybe, I don't know. Sounds reasonable enough to me, but I'm not sure if I agree with what all of that implies, from a technical standpoint.

    Ok, cool. So, then, under your view, is this “Absolute” of a different type of substrate than physical stuff?Bob Ross

    God damn, that's a hard question. What do you want from me, Bob? You just want to "beat the metaphysical truth out of me, whatever that metaphysical truth might happen to be". I mean, it feels like intellectual torture, "mate".

    Ok, so are you just noting by “The Absolute” the totality of reality and negation? I know that much about Hegel haha….Bob Ross

    I have no idea, I'd have to think about it. See my comment above.

    No, I don't have a firm grasp of what it is. I don't think anyone does. I don't think Hegel did either, for that matter.


    Then why do you believe in it?
    Bob Ross

    Because I'm a simple peasant from Argentina at the end of the day, mate.
  • Bob Ross
    1.9k


    So Bob, you see why these debates are not restricted to formal mereology. There are of interest and relevance to metaphysics, as I've hoped to have shown.

    I agree mereology is important; and I would say it is a branch of philosophy—specifically metaphysics.

    God damn, that's a hard question. What do you want from me, Bob? You just want to "beat the metaphysical truth out of me, whatever that metaphysical truth might happen to be". I mean, it feels like intellectual torture, "mate".

    This is how philosophy works, lol. I want to know what you believe and why you believe it. E.g., I would go for a physical substrate—as a physicalist myself—and no other substrates. This is important because once you posit two it gets zesty.

    I have no idea, I'd have to think about it. See my comment above.

    Hegel’s concept of the truth being the whole of negativity and reality is the closest I’ve got to whatever you are trying to say. For Hegel, subjectivity is inherently negativity—it isn’t real, but rather negates what is real. So there’s the real and there’s the negativity that negates it; and both makeup the totality of what exists. Hence Hegel’s triad of negativity, reality, and totality.

    I am going to be honest, I don't think you know what 'The Absolute' means (based off of the fact that you can't explain it at all); and I therefore don't think you have good reasons to believe it exists. No offense meant.
  • Arcane Sandwich
    452
    I am going to be honest, I don't think you know what 'The Absolute' means (based off of the fact that you can't explain it at all); and I therefore don't think you have good reasons to believe it exists. No offense meant.Bob Ross

    None taken. Does one have to know or understand something to believe in it? If one does not have good reasons to believe that X exist, does that mean that one should stop believing in X, whatever X might be?
  • Janus
    16.6k
    Then he’s already shot himself in the foot, insofar as the uncondition-ed is beyond human reason, and the uncondition-al is itself a rather suspicious conception.Mww

    An unconditional good would be a good that was good in itself—a good that relied on no other conditions to establish its goodness. Perhaps it could also be referred to as an unconditioned good. I don't believe there is anything either unconditional or unconditioned—the very ideas seem incoherent—or at least I can make no sense of them beyond being able to say what I said in the first two sentences.

    Better he propose a claim that there is that which is conditioned by good alone, which makes good a quality under which the conceptual object of the claim is subsumed, rather than the condition of that conceptual object’s possibility. Thereby, he is justified in claiming that in which resides good as its sole quality, serves as the singular necessary condition for that which follows from it.Mww

    I am not sure I'm grasping what you want to say here. If something could be conditioned by the good alone, would that not entail that the good could not be conditioned by any further thing? Would that not lead us directly back to the idea of an unconditional, unconditioned good?

    That there is that in which resides good as a sole quality is a claim restricted to mere opinion, yes, but the justification for that which follows from it, in the form of pure speculative metaphysics, can be logically demonstrated as a prescriptive practice, which is not mere opinion.Mww

    While that which is claimed to be good in itself is mere opinion, it can still be the case that whatever follows from it, iff logically consistent hence irrational to deny, that the ground for the claim is the subsequent affirmative justifications given from it.Mww

    So the premise that there could be a pure, unconditioned good is a claim restricted to opinion, but if that opinion be granted the logical entailments that follow from it are not? If that is what you meanI would say that is true of any premise, however unsound.

    But, as in any speculative domain, it’s off to the rodeo, and the commoners get lost in the minutia paving the way.Mww

    So, it would seem!



    .
  • Bob Ross
    1.9k


    Yes. Why would one be justified in holding belief in X if they recognize that they have no good reasons to believe X?
  • Arcane Sandwich
    452
    Yes. Why would one be justified in holding belief in X if they recognize that they have no good reasons to believe X?Bob Ross

    They wouldn't (they wouldn't be justified). But some people would still believe it. A lot of people believe in God, and they have no good reason for it. I'm an atheist myself, but I'm not going to tell folks that they should stop believing in God just because they can't rationally explain their beliefs to me.
  • Bob Ross
    1.9k


    Most Theists would not say that they lack good reasons to believe. What you are describing here is something that is irrational: you are saying that one is justified in believing X when they know they are unjustified in believing X.
  • Arcane Sandwich
    452
    Most Theists would not say that they lack good reasons to believe. What you are describing here is something that is irrational: you are saying that one is justified in believing X when they know they are unjustified in believing X.Bob Ross

    Sure. Some philosophers embrace irrationality. Kierkegaard, for example. He didn't claim to have rational knowledge of God. He seemed to have an irrational belief in God. Irrationalism also permeates the work of other (pre)existentialists, such as Nietzsche. There's even some degree of irrationality in Augustine. The irrational belief in God was even a slogan for Tertullian: credo quia absurdum, "I believe because it is absurd".
  • Mww
    4.9k


    There you are!!! I thought I’d let my mouth get away from me, there, I didn’t hear back. Done went and pissed you off somehow.

    If something could be conditioned by the good alone, would that not entail that the good could not be conditioned by any further thing?Janus

    No, that statement only says the something cannot be conditioned by any further thing, which makes that something good in itself, not good for the attainment of something else.

    Thing is, it is said there is only one thing that can be good in itself, for the attainment of no other end, except to duty according to law. Hence the limit of this good to a moral disposition alone. Got nothing to do with good things, of good feelings or good anything. Except a good will.

    Not a popular doctrine, I must say. But a doctrine nonetheless.
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