This OP suggests that if we buy into the premise that life arose out of nothing, we must also accept that because there was no intent, life should also drift out of existence just as easily. — MikeL
How did the designing intelligence arise? and was it intelligently designed? — praxis
As we, and all life forms, are evolving we are learning and also trying out new things. When I learn to dance or a new Tai Chi form, or singing, or playing piano, I am actually experiment and training my whole body, all of my cellular intelligence, to do new things. This is the process of evolution. It is neither chaotic nor determined. It is exactly as we are experiencing it, a process of creative evolution. — Rich
What if many random patterns were somehow generated and some of them happened to be self-reproducing? — t0m
If the patterns are subject to wear and tear, then eventually would we not have only those that are self-reproducing? — t0m
A lot of us feel the same way and talk about it quite a bit. Certainly saying there was a beginning does not negate the possibility of a creator for that beginning.For me the strangest or most mysterious aspect is the very beginning. — t0m
How did the designing intelligence arise? and was it intelligently designed? — praxis
Nice point. This is where I'm coming from. How is a creator an explanation? How is a creator not just one more part of the creation, ultimately? — t0m
The solution is that something is a brute fact since non-existence is impossible. — Agustino
The problem is that the pattern of life has no reason to cling to the pattern of the environmental landscape in order to survive. It should randomly drift out of life, just as it drifted in. According to the theory of life, in the 3 billions plus years since life began, this hasn't occurred even once. Why shouldn't life have evolved and de-evolved at least several times by now? — MikeL
I think that infinite regress pre-supposes increasing complexity. It may not be the case. In which case regress would not be infinite and we can close our loop. — MikeL
That death is inevitable, and unconquerable, eternal, and the ultimate reality is quitter talk. — Wosret
The 'seeker types' (of which I regard myself as one) are not especially interested in scientific accounts of the Universe...What they might be seeking in philosophy is more along the lines of principles to live by. — Wayfarer
But the underlying assumption of science is that the Universe simply is, it has no inherent meaning, direction or purpose. — Wayfarer
Evolutionary theory is one of the especially-contested subjects in this matter, perhaps because it ultimately does bear upon humankind's account of itself, and is strongly ideological for that reason. — Wayfarer
Well, that would be if we only consider dialogues like Euthyphro where no positive conceptions are left standing. However, in other dialogues, like Republic, it is shown more clearly that dialectic is a technique of logical critique that is meant to create the right hierarchy of ideas in the soul, and thus bring the soul in harmony with itself.Socrates' method of dialectic consisted in showing what something (Justice, the Good, or whatever) cannot, contrary to what his interlocutors might think it is, be. This is done by revealing inconsistencies that negate the proposed definitions. It is really a logical practice of negation. — Janus
So much more than this, I would say it's a logical practice of seeing into the nature of things, which involves negation of appearances as much as it involves the affirmation of reality.It is really a logical practice of negation. — Janus
Yes, but just as obvious is that matter cannot be "totalized" or considered in its totality, for there is no actual infinite. Spinoza's philosophy is a philosophical attempt at totalization.it is obvious that matter in its totality, considered without limitation, can have no figure, and that figure applies only to finite and determinate bodies. — Janus
Yes, this is certain. At the same time, there can be no infinite bodies, as per above.figure applies only to finite and determinate bodies — Janus
See here's the difference for me. Figure is indeed nothing but determination, however determination is not negation. If we take particular examples, when we say "the table is white", then we don't really mean that all colors apart from white are negated. We rather affirm the being of white. "Not white" cannot exist. You could say that determination implies negation, but negation never has being. If I say "the table is not white", then I don't really mean there is such a thing as "not white" that I see. I never see "not white" - rather I see another color, so my saying that it's "not white" really means that I expected it to be white, but alas it was a different color.So since figure is nothing but determination and determination is negation — Janus
This leads Hegel later on to conceive of self-consciousness not as longing for any external object, but rather as longing for its own self-certainty, where what is external becomes merely a means of self-affirmation. This desire is conceived as a nothingness - a void - that seeks to make itself actual or objectified in the external world. This conception of goodness as a mode of desire/thought is the sign of modernity par excellence.It is clear that we neither strive for, nor will, neither want, nor desire anything because we judge it to be good; on the contrary, we judge something to be good because we strive for it, will it, want it, and desire it. — Spinoza
Which ones, for instance? The one that is said to only be able to account for 4% of what must be 'out there'? Or the one which posits infinite multiverses beyond any hope of detection? Or the one that posits infinite parallel worlds? Were any of them the ones you had in mind? (Incidentally, the word 'cosmos' originally meant 'ordered whole'. I think the fact that this definition is now contested, actually mitigates against your claim.) — Wayfarer
It does happen — MikeL
Do you have a purpose in your comments, Rich, or are you just trying to stir everyone one up? What's going on with you? — MikeL
Just underscoring that "It just happened" is no better or worse than "God did it" — Rich
In my view, "it just happened" is the only "ultimate" explanation, — t0m
You're right. It's not an explanation. It reveals the quest for or the question about the "ultimate ground" to be a fool's errand or a pseudo-question. — t0m
Exploring for observations of others that reveal patterns in nature. — Rich
While it is true that in our practical life we often accept a given framework as given, it is not true that the philosophical argument for necessary contingency is "lazy common sense." Indeed, it's a fairly abstract thought. It may even be offensive or terrible to those think they can explain this brute fact. — t0m
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