Ludwig V
The problem arises because we think of meaning as something shared between human beings and define "reality" as "neutral", i.e. meaningless. So we need to think differently about this. First, the "neutral" reality is constructed in order to serve certain of our interests, categorized as "scientific". Second and paradoxically, we need to recognize that neutral reality is a construction that serves some of our interests and values. So there is a point of view sense in which it is not value-free. Let's say, it doesn't assign values to its assertions, but does develop its practices in pursuit of certain values - "truth", in a certain sense.Error is possible, but it arises within a shared field of meaning, not from a neutral reality battering a theory. — Joshs
I'm a bit uncertain whether you are saying that they are the inevitable grounds of our ability to comprehend (cf. Kant) or whether they are the fundamental facts about the world that enable us to apply our categories to the world.Likewise, I don't see the categories of understanding as 'imposed', as if 'the world' is one domain, and they another. They are, rather, the inevitable grounds of comprehension. — Wayfarer
Good question. I wish I had a straightforward answer for you. One way of putting the question is whether the world as we understand it is really ordered and rationaI or the order and ratonality we understand it is just a matter of the way we think about it. Another way of the issue is the question whether our understanding is something imposed on the world or whether it is something we recognize in the world. (I'm hinting here that it is, I think, at least possible that some is imposed and some is recognized.)Why externalize and say that intelligibility is somehow "out there", immanent to things, as opposed to being something we do, or that it is simply possible for humans to understand things? — baker
The tricky part of this, I think, is that some understanding seems to be a matter of interpretation of given facts. This kind of understanding has elements of both alternatives.I would want to say something stronger than this: that intelligibility is there to be discovered — that being is the kind of thing that can be understood, and that our knowing is a response to that prior intelligibility, not its source. — Esse Quam Videri
Ludwig V
This is where the tedious point that we are inescapably part of the world plays a part. We participate in the general conditions of existence - specifically order, structure, etc.So when we say the world is intelligible, we’re not describing a fortuitous correspondence between two independently constituted domains (mind here, structured being there). We’re describing a more basic fact: that being and intelligibility are internally related. The fit isn’t something that needs to be explained after the fact; it’s built into what we mean by “world” in the first place. — Wayfarer
Esse Quam Videri
The tricky part of this, I think, is that some understanding seems to be a matter of interpretation of given facts. This kind of understanding has elements of both alternatives. — Ludwig V
Moliere
For example, “reality is still there” and “our stories do not capture it” already look like substantive theses about the relation between mind/language and world. If those aren’t truth-apt claims, what are they? And if they are truth-apt, then it seems metaphysics hasn’t been bypassed so much as relocated. — Esse Quam Videri
Moliere
Not odd to me, I suspect most people are drawn to philosophy to find “better” justifications for what they already believe. It’s hoarding weapons and artillery. — Tom Storm
Moliere
circles had that ratio before any minds existed to notice it. — Wayfarer
Moliere
What does he mean? Is the reasoning any good? That’s the main thing I was looking for. Seems to me after 9 pages, the question may be unanswerable or perhaps, I just can't make sense of it. — Tom Storm
Joshs
I agree that much of understanding is interpretive, but I think this actually sharpens the realist point rather than weakening it. Interpretation is an attempt to make sense of what is given in a way that can succeed or fail — i.e. in a way that is answerable to the facts, to counterexamples, to coherence with other lines of evidence, and to the possibility of correction. The very idea of interpretation makes sense only in light of such constraints. — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
What it means to succeed or fail, to be true or false, correct or incorrect, depends on qualitative systems of criteria. Such criteria define the basis of facts, evidence and intelligibility. If criteria are subject to interpretation along with the facts they orient and constrain, then making sense doesn’t begin only after the world is given, it constructs the conditions and modes of givenness which constrain fact-finding. — Joshs
Lately, I've become interested in these moments of revolutionary experience, when our whole sense of what the world is like gets turned inside out and we are forced to form entirely new concepts to process what is happening...
Joshs
I'd argue that there is still an irreducible asymmetry at the bottom of inquiry. To re-quote Braver:
Lately, I've become interested in these moments of revolutionary experience, when our whole sense of what the world is like gets turned inside out and we are forced to form entirely new concepts to process what is happening...
So yes, the criteria are subject to interpretation, but even here reality will have its say regarding the adequacy of such interpretations, taking the form of recalcitrance in the face of denial. — Esse Quam Videri
Esse Quam Videri
So, yes, I'm engaging in metaphysics by making the claim -- but I'm not committed to the intelligibility of Being in making that statement. — Moliere
The other argument I have in mind is noting what kind of thing "reality" is -- basically that it is no thing at all. — Moliere
Moliere
How would you describe your intention in making such statements if not to affirm an insight into the nature of Being? — Esse Quam Videri
In denying my claim that Being is intelligible are you not implicitly committed to the notion that I have gotten it wrong? And does this not imply a standard that both your claim and mine are answerable to, and can fall-short of? And what is this standard? Is it merely personal whimsy, or communal sanction? Mustn't it be something that outstrips and constrains both of those? Otherwise, we would be forced to say that truth is exhausted by the caprice of the individual or the community.
Esse Quam Videri
Braver is taking his cue from Kierkegaard and Levinas. For them, recalcitrance is not a brute, uninterpreted Given pushing back from outside all conceptuality; revolutionary experience isn’t contact with a naked world. Is this the direction you want to go in? — Joshs
Moliere
I believe that we can acknowledge that reality always outstrips our current framework without surrendering to the unintelligibility of that excess. — Esse Quam Videri
Gnomon
That sounds like proving a negative. I suppose a theist is more likely to point to (demonstrate) the absence of physical evidence for mental phenomena in matter --- other than animated matter, which raises the question of how Life & Mind emerged from physical/material evolution. Of course there are philosophical theories*1 on the topic, for whatever that's worth. Like Deacon's conjecture, my own thesis is based on scientific evidence, but also on philosophical interpretation.All the theist has to demonstrate in this instance is that intentionality can’t be explained by physicalism or naturalism (not materialism per say).
And remember that the famous atheist philosopher Thomas Nagel presents arguments similar to Hart. — Tom Storm
hypericin
Give it a try. What vocabulary can you come up with to talk about the objective pole that doesn’t already imply a contribution from the subjective pole? — Joshs
If you remove all of the idealizations that minds impose on the world of appearances, there is not much to say about the nature of what is mind-independent. — Joshs
Joshs
Where I would part ways is with the inference from the recalcitrance of reality to the irrational excess of Being. I believe that we can acknowledge that reality always outstrips our current framework without surrendering to the unintelligibility of that excess. — Esse Quam Videri
Tom Storm
So what I mean to say is that in terms of a basic analysis his argument checks out and makes sense -- which part doesn't make sense to you? — Moliere
Moliere
I have no real idea what the argument means or how it works. — Tom Storm
Tom Storm
That sounds like proving a negative. I suppose a theist is more likely to point to (demonstrate) the absence of physical evidence for mental phenomena in matter — Gnomon
Moliere
What would it mean for a physical processes to produce meaning? I’m not even sure we know what meaning is. — Tom Storm
I feel like this piece of reasoning, while interesting, is excluding a multiplicity of other relevant matters I know nothing about so I don’t feel it’s a self-contained argument one can make use of. But that may just be me. — Tom Storm
Esse Quam Videri
Here I want to note I agree. — Moliere
It could be, in some larger sense, intelligible for all that. I just don't believe it to be so because of the diversity of thought is presently unable to be universalized in the manner of the philosophers without smudging out differences. And then it seems to me that differences in thought about the world (which are true) are what points to a reality greater than the mind: something beyond the intelligible. — Moliere
Tom Storm
Or, at least, it's always appeared to me to be something like a mystery. To a point that I wonder if "conceptual confusion" is a possible answer, but that doesn't seem so to me. In a straightforward way we talk about the world, our talk about the world is about the world, and this aboutness -- insofar that language is real and not an illusory set of squeaks and squawks we don't really understand as much as feel like we understand -- is as real as the rest around us insofar that we are non-dualistic naturalists. — Moliere
Moliere
Wayfarer
Esse Quam Videri
Ok, so if Braver, Kierkegaard and Levinas dont work for you, maybe the left Sellarsians of the Pittsburgh school are more compatible. — Joshs
Over against any cognition, there is an unknown but knowable reality; but over against all possible cognition, there is only the self-contradictory. In short, cognizability (in its widest possible sense) and being are not merely metaphysically the same, but are synonymous terms. — C.S. Peirce
Moliere
No physical instance is mathematically exact. But that doesn’t mean circularity is an invention. — Wayfarer
Moliere
For me, the diversity (and fallibility) of thought is a reflection of our finite situatedness rather than a reflection of the unintelligibility of being. I find it very difficult to make sense of possibility of rational inquiry under the assumption that reality is fundamentally incomprehensible, whereas I feel that it's much easier to make sense of the diversity of thought in terms of the situatedness and limitations of the knower. — Esse Quam Videri
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