Something that is thought of as being necessary is something which is simply thought of as necessarily being. So, the laws of nature might be thought of as necessary if they are either eternal or ordained by God — Janus
Sure, but in the context you seem to be considering- a "theory of everything" which is usually understood to be a theory which would unify the so-called "four fundamental forces"- the question could be asked as to whether those forces are everlasting. — Janus
I mean if we could ever explain everything, then that would entail that what we are explaining would be everlasting, no? Otherwise we would not have explained everything. — Janus
What other method could there be for understanding the universe? We can reason about human behavior and understand it in ways which are not usually thought of as being part of the scientific method, to be sure, but that kind of understanding is not usually thought of as "understanding the universe" but rather " understanding ourselves". — Janus
I would say that metaphysics does not consist in understanding the universe, but in understanding the ways in which we are able to think about things. Only the empirical method can test whether our ways of thinking can plausibly be thought to be accurately modeling the physical universe. But maybe I've misunderstood what you were aiming at? — Janus
The answer is in the same post that you cherry-picked.For example, we say things like, "what do you mean?",
— Harry Hindu
If the meaning were literally in the text marks or sounds, how would it make sense to ask anyone "What do you mean?" The text marks or sounds are what mean something, and supposedly you just perceive the meaning from the text marks or sounds. — Terrapin Station
For me, "meaning" is all causal phenomenon — Harry Hindu
we say things like, "what do you mean?", as if we're trying to get at the user's meaning, not ours. In other words we are trying to get at the cause of the scribbles on the screen - the ideas the person had when typing those words. I want to understand what you mean with your word use, not what I mean. — Harry Hindu
Analyzing our tools, like evaluating the merits of metaphysics vs the empirical method in explaining reality, is fine, but the argument is whether these, or any other methods we can come up with, are capable of producing a model that rigorously replicates the behavior of the universe. — staticphoton
So, we don't know whether we are "capable of producing a model that rigorously replicates the behavior of the universe"; how could we ever know such a thing? It might seem to us that we have a model that does, but how could we know that what seems to us is real in any "absolute sense", or even what that question could mean? — Janus
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