The big questions of metaphysics were always predicated on the assumption that the universe was designed;... — charleton
Do you agree with the following?
“…[E]xcept for the problem of ‘What am I’ there are no other metaphysical problems, since in one way or another, they all lead back to it”
Gabriel Marcel, Homo Viator — Mitchell
Aristotle et al weren't per se defenders of ID, right? — Akanthinos
I don’t that is correct, either. it might imply a metaphysic but it is defined in distinction to metaphysics. — Wayfarer
And instead are answered by.....? — Wayfarer
Here are some questions not answerable by science - Why is there something rather than nothing? How do I know I exist? What is the right way for us to treat each other? — T Clark
Per se, there was nothing else. God was assumed. They did not need "ID" per se. — charleton
the notion that God DID NOT create the universe only became thinkable with the advent of modernity. Indeed it’s one of its defining ideas. — Wayfarer
Epistemology is generally included in metaphysics. The scientific method is a method, a set of procedures, to gain knowledge. It isn't knowledge itself. It is a process. It's metaphysics. As with all, almost all, metaphysics, it isn't true or false. It's something we have agreed on as one of the rules. Or maybe disagreed about. — T Clark
Here are some questions not answerable by science - Why is there something rather than nothing? How do I know I exist? What is the right way for us to treat each other? Can you name a metaphysical question that is answerable by science? — T Clark
you should explain how this mechanistic thinking also gave rise to the idea that the scientists and thinkers of the time were revealing eternal truths about the world — Πετροκότσυφας
Why something and not nothing is of course a dead-end causal inquiry. — apokrisis
Because abstract facts are inevitable. — Michael Ossipoff
There might be even more mundane and immediate questions, that science cannot answer, even though everyone thinks it can.
Do animals possess qualia?
How are qualia created?
I think these might be philosophical questions. — tom
.Abstract facts are only inevitable from the "point of view" of existence. You will object that if there were nothing, then there would also be the abstract fact that there is nothing; but there would not; because this is a contradiction. It only seems to you that there would be such an abstract fact 'there is nothing' because you are looking at it 'from the outside', so to speak.
.There is no obtaining of the fact that there could be nothing. If there were nothing there would be no facts to obtain. — Janus
.You are still confusing yourself by applying as universal your limited human perspective. It may indeed be impossible that there could be nothing, but that has nothing to do with "abstract if-then" facts which only find their province in human thought unless there be other beings capable of abstract thought
.…or unless God exists. It is only on the assumption that God (an infinite mind) exists that the idea of universal if-then facts becomes relevant, otherwise it is an anthropomorphic projection onto the cosmos.
You're expressing your belief that we, as a product of a concretely, fundamentally, objectively existent physical world, are the creators of all the abstract facts. What amazing powers you attribute to us. — Michael Ossipoff
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