Vagueness is suspicious: it tends to be both unconvincing and incorrigible. Unconvincing, because of the lack of clarity needed to analyze and evaluate it. Incorrigible because one can twist the vague meanings on the fly in order to counter objections. — Relativist
Some people explain the Universe as a universe based on matter. But there also exists something which we call value or meaning. A Universe consisting only of matter leaves no room for value or meaning in civilizations and cultures. Matter alone has no value. We can say that the Universe is constructed with matter, but we must also say that matter works for some purpose. — Nishijima-Roshi, Three Philosophies and One Reality
So you're just making the modest claim that the argument convinces you of god's existence. You are not claiming that it constitutes undeniable proof that no rational person could deny. — Relativist
Nevertheless, I did explain why it might be false: the possibility that there was an initial state of affairs that was physical (no gods). So there are at least 2 logically valid explanations for the existence of the universe: (A) God ; or (B) a physical initial state. — Relativist
You haven't proven (B) false, so you should acknowledge that it is possibly true, and that this implies God possibly does not exist. Do you acknowledge this? — Relativist
This runs into a problem when science tells us matter is shaped by a thermodynamic purpose. The Big Bang could happen as it was a grand carving out of the very Heat Sink it was throwing itself headlong into. The Universe expands so it can cool, and cools so it can expand. — apokrisis
perhaps instead penalised by coming back in the next life to try over from the level of a bug or mushroom. — apokrisis
Can't a sorry old pragmatist like me not have values and meaning without all the claptrap? — apokrisis
What, about the passage you quoted, suggests either? — Wayfarer
Matter alone has no value. — Nishijima-Roshi, Three Philosophies and One Reality
In logic, the corollary of that is that value alone has no matter. And that is absolutist talk, matey! — apokrisis
When you call something good, or beautiful, or divine, or whatever, the question becomes, well what is the shape of that? What does that look like in practice? — apokrisis
The objective sciences deal with quantitative measurement, whereas values are qualitative judgements. — Wayfarer
I sought to elaborate on that, in respect of the claim that life and mind can be completely understood in thermodynamic terms. — Wayfarer
it can be supported with reference to sources, hence the mention of Nishijima, who was no ‘idealist absolutist — Wayfarer
So what is this something else other than matter which exists in this Universe? — Nishijima-Roshi, Three Philosophies and One Reality
We can call that something spirit, but if we do we should remember that in Buddhism, the word spirit is a figurative expression for value or meaning. We do not say that spirit exists in reality; we use the concept only figuratively. — Nishijima-Roshi, Three Philosophies and One Reality
But you appear to want to defend some version of ontic idealism. — apokrisis
Remember that I never set out to convince you physicalism is true. My objectives were to help you understand it, and to provide my justification for believing it.I don’t take issue with physicalism because you hold it, but because I believe it’s a mistaken philosophical view. — Wayfarer
Your reasons seem to boil down to fact that it's inconsistent with your other beliefs. It's perfectly reasonable to interpret new information in terms of one's background beliefs, and it's justified to to reject a proposal on that basis. But this rejection is subjective: epistemically contingent on your particular background beliefs (subsumed in your overall noetic structure).I believe I’ve given you many grounds on which I and others believe physicalism to be a mistaken philosophical view, but that you don’t recognize the arguments.
The term "physicalism" is used largely for historical reasons. These are discussed in the SEP article on physicalism. Personally, I make sense of it by considering proper subsets of the sorts of things commonly treated as existing: spiritual/supernatural objects (e.g. angels), abstract objects, and physical objects. Physicalists deny the existence of the first two. — Relativist
The argument is that the reference to "spiritual/supernatural objects" is a category error. That by declaring the 'spiritual or supernatural' to consist of 'objects' you are making it an empty set. — Wayfarer
You're either being disingenuous or you didn't make an effort to understand what I said. I precisely defined the way "state of affairs" is used in the ontology, distinguishing it from the common use of the term: 1) as a term that applies to everything that exists, from the foundational to the most complex; 2) that it consists of a particular, with its properties and relationsAlthough you charge me with vagueness, I can’t help noticing that physicalism itself is equally vague, if not more so. When it defines “physical” as “whatever physics will someday describe,” or as a “state of affairs” (which in practice means “whatever happens to be the case”), how is that not vague? — Wayfarer
You don't need to put it in scientific terms, but you need to be as "determinate" as you expected me to be. So far, you've made no specific claims (other than the implication that you believe your mind exists), just vague allusions. I haven't noticed any specific claims about what exists. If I've overlooked it, remind me. If you can't do this is straightforward terms, then understand why this is problematic.Of course it sounds vague when what you want is something very specific, determinable by scientific enquiry, an 'atomic fact'. Questions of this kind are always elusive, that's why the positivists wanted to declare them all meaningless as a matter of principle. They're difficult in a way different to technical and scientific questions. — Wayfarer
The only thing being "transformed" is the mind of the person, not the external world.
— Relativist
There, again, is your belief that the world is a certain way, that it has a determinate existence external to your cognition of it. But this is just what has been called into question by both cognitive science and quantum physics. — Wayfarer
We're only involved in producing the contents of our minds. And we have employed our minds to get an understanding of what exists outside of it. Are you suggesting this is futile? I don't think you are, but it's consistent with your vague claims. If you agree it's not futile, then what IS your point?we do not see the phenomenon 'in itself', as it is, independently of our observation of it. We're involved in producing the outcome. — Wayfarer
Of course it requires a perspectival shift, but you need to explain this alternate perspective! Vague allusions doesn't do it. Vague reference to phenomenonlogy doesn't do it whe you also haven't acknowledged the actual existence of anything external to yourself. I expect you do, but if so- explain how we can know this despite the phenomenology. This is why it's vague.The fact that you will invariably interpret this as being a causal sequence where consciousness is one thing, the effect another, is the same issue as treating the spiritual or supernatural as 'an object'. As I said, requires perspectival shift to see why. — Wayfarer
No, you did not provide a reason. You merely suggested there's an alternative perspective that makes different distinctions. You would need to outline this perspective, the distinctions it makes, and explain how it's superior (not just different).[b)You've provided no reason to think this is a false distinction[/b]
— Relativist
I just have! I'm trying to convey a difficult point about the nature and limitations of objective thought, but everything I'm saying is interpolated into an idiom within which only what is considered objective is admissable. — Wayfarer
State of affairs (so defined) is the most fundamental concept in the ontology. — Relativist
Your definition of "state of affairs", as stated in your reply to me, does not support your claim that it is the most fundamental concept in ontology. — Metaphysician Undercover
You don't understand what a state of affairs is in Armstrong's ontology. I'm not interested in taking the time to explain it with you, but you can get a sense of it in the Wikipedia Article on Armstrong.Your definition can be broken down in analysis into two distinct aspects, objects and their relations. These are two very different concepts, and since "state of affairs" is made up of these two, they are each more fundamental than "state of affairs". — Metaphysician Undercover
Your first principle, absolute potential, the symmetry which is the foundation for symmetry-breaking, is nothing but an ideal. — Metaphysician Undercover
This implies that time is another fundamental concept in ontology. You have provided no argument to demonstrate that "state of affairs" is more fundamental than "time". — Metaphysician Undercover
I hadn't discussed "state of affairs" ontology with you, so had not used the term that way. — Relativist
By "state" or "state of affairs", I am referring to the the totality of existence at a point of time.
...
There are various ideas about what it means to exist. My position is that existence entails objects which have intrinsic properties and that has relations to all other objects (at least indirectly). — Relativist
A brute fact initial state would have properties that accounted for its potential to develop into subsequent states of affairs. IOW: it initiates (=causes) the subsequent causal chain that you misinterpret. — Relativist
The absolute potential is the potential for the emergence of a hylomorphic order in a co-arising fashion. — apokrisis
Time can get going as changes can be made that are also constructing a collective history. — apokrisis
Yes I did, and this is not the definition used by Armstrong. That's why I said:You definitely discussed "state of affairs" ontology with me, in your reference to an initial state of affairs. You even defined it for me:
By "state" or "state of affairs", I am referring to the the totality of existence at a point of time — Metaphysician Undercover
I hadn't discussed "state of affairs" ontology with you, so had not used the term that way. — Relativist
So where does value come from in this telling? Is it on the side of the epistemic relation between an organism and its world, or is it something more - an ontological level break between the realm of matter and the realm of ideas? — apokrisis
We talk as if value and meaning are separate from material being and yet share the same Universe, but that separateness is then just a figure of speech? — apokrisis
Aristotle's cosmological argument. With the cosmological argument he denies the concept of "prime matter", as physically impossible. — Metaphysician Undercover
No, the premise that Aristotle denies "prime matter" as physically impossible is incorrect. In fact, the doctrine of prime matter is fundamental to Aristotle's cosmology and his understanding of how change occurs in the world. The claim that Aristotle rejected it might be a misunderstanding or a conflation with later arguments.
Aristotle's cosmological argument....
Aristotle's cosmological argument, centered on the existence of a "Prime Mover," is distinct from the concept of prime matter. The argument is primarily developed in his works Physics and Metaphysics and can be summarized as follows:
Observation of motion: Aristotle observed that all things in the world are in motion or change. For Aristotle, "motion" is a broader concept than just change of place; it includes any kind of change, such as a substance's potential becoming actualized.
The need for a mover: Any object that is moved is moved by another. This means that for any change, there must be an external "mover" or cause that actualizes the potential for that change.
The impossibility of an infinite regress: Aristotle argued that an infinite chain of "moved movers" is impossible. He contended that such a series would have no ultimate source of motion, and therefore, no motion would occur at all.
Conclusion: the Unmoved Mover: To avoid an infinite regress, there must be a first, unmoved mover that initiates all motion without being moved itself. This unmoved mover is pure actuality, without any potentiality, and is the ultimate, uncaused source of all change in the universe.
Aristotle's concept of prime matter....
Prime matter is not something Aristotle's argument disproves; it is a core component of his philosophy.
The substratum of change: Aristotle developed his theory of matter and form to explain substantial change—the coming-to-be and passing-away of substances. When, for example, a living thing dies and decays, what is it that persists through this change? Prime matter is the answer. It is the underlying, featureless substratum that remains when one substance changes into another.
Pure potentiality: Prime matter is described as pure potentiality, meaning it has the capacity to take on any substantial form. It is never found alone, separate from form, because all physical objects are a composite of matter and form. An object's form is what gives it its specific nature and properties.
Physical reality: Far from being physically impossible, prime matter is the very thing that makes physical reality intelligible for Aristotle. Without it, change would involve something coming from nothing, which Aristotle rejected based on the work of his predecessor, Parmenides.
Medieval interpretation and clarification....
It is important to distinguish Aristotle's original ideas from how later philosophers, like Thomas Aquinas, adopted and adapted them for theological purposes.
Theology and creation: While Aristotle viewed the universe as eternal and the Prime Mover as simply sustaining an eternal motion, theologians like Aquinas used Aristotle's argument to support the idea of a creating God.
Prime matter and God: In this medieval framework, prime matter was also part of God's creation, unlike in Aristotle's original conception where the universe (and its matter) was eternal. However, even in this later tradition, prime matter is not dismissed as impossible. Instead, its existence as pure potentiality, requiring a form to be actual, highlights its complete dependency on a more fundamental cause—God—for its existence.
If the potential is truly absolute, then there is nothing actual, as anything actual would be a constraint to the possibility. But without something actual, to act as the cause, the emergence of something, anything, is impossible. — Metaphysician Undercover
How could time emerge? Isn't emergence a temporal concept, something which happens over time? It seems self-contradicting to talk about time getting started as changes happen. — Metaphysician Undercover
But this means YOUR reasons to reject it do not falsify MY beliefs. And vice versa: my reasons to reject your position are epistemically contingent upon my background beliefs. The difference is that I recognize this contingency - and that's why I can respect your position. You overlook this contingency, and hence you conflate your subjective basis for rejecting physicalism with an objective falsification. — Relativist
What categories should I have used when explaining how "I made sense" of the meaning of "physical"- after you indicated I'd "left the meaning of 'physical' indeterminate"? I referenced categories of hypothetical objects that many take for granted:
-supernatural/spiritual objects- a common belief about God and angels
-abstract objects - a common belief of platonists — Relativist
I referenced this model when referring to immanent universals, and pointed out that quantum fields fit the model. The ontology hangs together quite consistenly, and if you don't see that - then you were premature in dropping the topic. There's nothing vague about the ontology itself, so any perceived vagueness could be cleared up. No one's compelling you to pursue it further, but recognize the folly of trying to falsify something you don't understand. — Relativist
Naturalism is a metaphysical system that assumes as a first principle that the natural world comprises the totality of reality. — Relativist
Philosophy in general is the most systematic form of self-consciousness. It consists in bringing to consciousness for analysis and evaluation everything that in ordinary life is invisible because it underlies and pervades what we are consciously doing. Language, thought, consciousness itself become the explicit objects of philosophical attention instead of just serving as the medium for our lives. — Thomas Nagel, Secular Philosophy and the Religious Temperament
The Buddhist goal is nibbana (Nirvāṇa), liberation from the cycle of re-birth. — Wayfarer
This is why, in Buddhist iconography, in the graphic illustration of the 'wheel of life and death', the Buddha is depicted as outside all of the 'six realms', but in some representations, also inside each of them. — Wayfarer
Also I would call attention to this phrase 'epistemic relation of self and world.' One point I noticed in Buddhist Studies, is the expression 'self-and-world' is frequently encountered in the Pali Buddhist texts as a kind of single unit of meaning ('self-and-world') This is understood as 'co-arising' or 'co-dependent', actually, one of the sources of the ideas in The Embodied Mind, as Franscisco Varela absorbed this from Buddhism. That is due, as noted above, to the phenomenological aspect of Buddhism, which never looses sight the relationship between experience and being — Wayfarer
All the empirical evidence is for states that were preceded in time by another state, so this pattern would not apply to a hypothetical initial state.All empirical evidence indicates that any, and every, "physical state of affairs" is posterior in time, to the potential for that state. — Metaphysician Undercover
But do you really expect to die a man and come back as a monkey, frog or amoeba? — apokrisis
But then once you start breaking out this "self" as some kind of ontological essence or substantial being – a spirit stuff – then you have crossed a line and now need to provide a new justification for what you have started claiming. — apokrisis
Both world and self are products of a modelling relation embodied in the structure of an organism. — apokrisis
The world is inseparable from the subject, but from a subject which is nothing but a project of the world, and the subject is inseparable from the world, but from a world which the subject itself projects — Maurice Merleau Ponty
Yes, I do believe that death is not the end of life. It certainly is for the individual that I am. But the causes that gave rise to this life will give rise to another (something which gives me no joy). — Wayfarer
It is true that in traditional Buddhist lore, the animal realm was one of the six domains in which beings take birth, but there is nothing like that kind of belief. — Wayfarer
Hence Nishijma saying that there is no such thing! — Wayfarer
So in what sense is that now any different from what the biologist would say? — apokrisis
Are you confessing finally to just being an epistemic idealist? And modern Buddhism is only that too? If so, great. Just be brave enough to come out and say it. And then be consistent in that position in your posting. — apokrisis
Biology is not an existential discipline. It isn’t concerned with existence as lived. I could know all there is to know about you, biologically, and yet still not understand you as a person. — Wayfarer
We’ve discussed Stevenson’s interviews with children with past life recall many times on this forum, it is universally scorned, but I think it is meaningful data. — Wayfarer
So I do argue that the common concept of ‘mind independence’ i.e. that the bedrock of reality comprises mind-independent objects, is oxymoronic, as objects can only be known cognitively (in line with Kant’s ‘Copernican Revolution in philosophy, that things conform to thoughts, not vice versa. ) That is why there are references to all those sources in that OP, and I dispute that it is either equivocal or vague. But that is really all I have time for now. — Wayfarer
But these days AI can take the labour out of refuting your theological nonsense. — apokrisis
Exactly, potentiality is without constraint. But events demonstrate that constraints can emerge in conjunction with their degrees of freedom – the actualising step that creates now a sea of concrete possibilities.
Once you have the thing of a fluctuation – an action that also has some direction – then everything starts to get going.
No action, no direction. No direction, no action. But actions in a direction? A whole flood of them. Complexity can start evolving. — apokrisis
Time would evolve as cosmology tells us. It develops complex structure through the growth of topological order. As the Big Bang expands and cools, it undergoes a rapid sequence of thermal changes. — apokrisis
In the beginning, all the fluctuations are stuck at the speed of light. They experience maximum time dilation and length contraction – or rather, this relativistic dichotomy can't even apply yet.
Then you get the Higgs mechanism breaking this relativistic symmetry. Now suddenly it is meaningful to talk about objects at rest. Particles that move slower than c. Mass that lags behind the radiation setting the pace. A new topological phase where time has gained a whole new complex structure.
Time changes character quite radically. And it passes through other topological stages too with inflation, or when it is a quark-gluon plasma that may have Higgs mass and yet is still effectively relativistic.
So what is time when you step right back from the physics? It is a duration. A beat that lasts the distance of a cycle. A Planck-scale rotation in its Planck-scale expanse. The fundamental unit of ħ or the quantum unit of action. The spinning on the Poincare invariant spot that defines the gauge fundamental particle. The first moment defined in terms of the symmetry breaking of rotation from translation and thus the birth of concrete dimensionality itself. — apokrisis
All the empirical evidence is for states that were preceded in time by another state, so this pattern would not apply to a hypothetical initial state — Relativist
I suggest it's because of deterministic* laws of nature that cause the prior state to become the next state. — Relativist
Do you agree? If not, then give me your theory. — Relativist
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