There are abstract if-then facts. Who says there has to be concrete, objectively-existent objects and "stuff" for them to be about? — Michael Ossipoff
If all Slitheytoves are (or were) brillig, and all Jaberwockeys are (or were) Slitheytoves, then all Jaberwockeys are (or would be) brillig.
That if-then fact about hypotheticals is true, even if there aren't any Slitheyitoves or Jaberwockeys. — Michael Ossipoff
All animals behave rationally. The fact is that you aren't privy to all the reasons some animal does some thing, so it can appear as if some animal is behaving irrationally (even a human) when you don't understand it's motives or reasoning for doing it. Animals are able to distinguish between food, predator, and mate and behave accordingly when encountering these things in their environment.I was hoping it would come to you, but it is the Greek definition of man as the rational animal. And in this case, it is a difference that really makes a difference. — Wayfarer
What it does is kill any chance at understanding the origin of the problem, which is separating the world into relations and non-relations. — Joshs
You have to learn to translate your notion of a thing into a process of change before you can see the fundamental basis of experienced reality as already 'affective' — Joshs
Qualitaitive has to do with what a thing means intrinsically. — Joshs
Notice that the kind of thinking that defines objects and their attributes is an atomistic one, starting from the parts and then to the whole, but there is another kind of thinking that begins always from the whole and the parts emerge from it. — Joshs
For instance, if you extend a thing in time, you are not producing a qualitative transformation, just a quantitative one. — Joshs
Now, although I agree with him,Derrida may be a bit too out there for most. But let me ask you this. Would you agree that there is already an overarching ontology of sorts in place uniting at least the physical sciences, and that this is a different ontology from what one would have found in the thinking of the West 800 years ago? Would you also agree that the metaphysical presuppositions guiding current natural scientific models will change eventually? Could you entertain the possiblity that something like Derrida's differance , that is, an ontology that places qualitative otherness squarely at the heart of entities, may be on the horizon? — Joshs
I wanted to build a tiny consciousness into the things of the world — Joshs
"Doyou really think rationality characterizes our species?" — Michael Ossipoff
It seems simply obvious to me - rationality, language
— Wayfarer
, story-telling
, meaning-seeking
, technology and science
Anyway, humans are not only animals, or not simply animals, but animals who have either attained or been thrust into the ability to wonder about the meaning of existence.
The results are pre-figured by the premises, so the only real qualitative meaning is in the premises. — Joshs
.What about inorganic process? IF these are not purpose-driven processes, then I assume you are arguing that beings with purposes emerge out of processes without purposes
., Is this a gradual development?
.Also, If purpose is an evolutionary adaptation, is it formed in the way that Dawkins and Dennett believe, by a blind watchmaker? In other words, selective processes act on dumb matter to create organisms like humans who have the illusion of purpose, a mere intentional 'stance' that at its core is nothing but good old fashioned efficient causation?
.Are alleged purposeful humans just meme generators?
.I'm not saying this hypothesis is wrong, but it is unsatisfying to some who think that it doesn’t do justice to the richness of the structure of phenomenal experience.
.For me the larger problem with this account is that I think there is a more satisfying account available for the explanation of the origin of purpose and intention
., which comes out of an alternative to Dawkins'
idea of evolutionary adaptation Stephen Rose is a biologist who is among those who argue that adaptation is not simply gene-driven, but argue for a kind of neo-Lamarkianism.
.The organism alters its internal and external environment through its functioning and in this way shapes its own adaptive transformation. Rather than viewing purpose as emergent out of non-purpose, this account views adaptation as involving purposiveness via the self-reflexive , self-organizing tendencies of all living things. Piaget was one of the first to model biological change in this way.
"There are abstract if-then facts. Who says there has to be concrete, objectively-existent objects and "stuff" for them to be about?" — Michael Ossipoff
So what are the if-then facts about? About "hypothetical" objects rather than about "objectively-existent" objects? — litewave
If so, what is the difference between "hypothetical" and "objectively-existent"?
"If all Slitheytoves are (or were) brillig, and all Jaberwockeys are (or were) Slitheytoves, then all Jaberwockeys are (or would be) brillig.
"That if-then fact about hypotheticals is true, even if there aren't any Slitheyitoves or Jaberwockeys". — Michael Ossipoff
Unless the objects you have named "Slitheytoves", "brillig" etc. are inconsistently defined they exist. They exist in the most general sense of "exist", which means "be consistent". — litewave
Physical reality and metaphysical reality can be explained by a system of inter-referring abstract if-then facts about hypotheticals. The hypothetical premises and conclusions of the if-then facts are about hypothetical objects. — Michael Ossipoff
You're the last person here with whom I expected to disagsre about Eliminative Ontic Structural Subjective Idealism vs Materialism, because I thought we agreed on that matter, in conversations around the time when I first joined this forum. — Michael Ossipoff
Here's a third option. Take a look at the development of theories of affect/emotion in relation to cognition and you will find that the progress in understanding the subject-object relation is intimately tied to that of the thought-feeling binary. — Joshs
"Physical reality and metaphysical reality can be explained by a system of inter-referring abstract if-then facts about hypotheticals. The hypothetical premises and conclusions of the if-then facts are about hypothetical objects." — Michael Ossipoff
But the objects (hypothetical or whatever) are not relations, at least not all of them. That's why I'm saying that in addition to relations there must also be "stuff" (non-relation) that stands in those relations. — litewave
We share the liberal metaphysical view that all possibilities constitute reality, which goes far beyond not only materialism but also religions.
But since I've been in this forum I have always claimed that these possibilities include not only relations but also objects that are not relations.
We share the liberal metaphysical view that all possibilities constitute reality, which goes far beyond not only materialism but also religions.
Sure, but those objects needn't be claimed to exist, other than in the sense of not being contradictorily or inconsistently defined. — Michael Ossipoff
I don't require more than non-contradiction for existence. (But it is not as simple as it may seem, because since there can be no inconsistency in reality, every existing object must be defined consistently with all other objects.) — litewave
Sure, within a particular logical system, I don't think we disagree on anything. — Michael Ossipoff
One hard question that someone asked me was, "And why is your life-experience possibility-story self-consistent? What keeps it self-consistent?"
I'd been a bit troubled about that too. But I think that can be answered by saying that a person's life-experience possibility-story consists of a system of abstract if-then facts, and there's no such thing as mutually inconsistent or contradictory facts. — Michael Ossipoff
As far as the history of psychological theory, where have you seen accounts integrating the affective and the cognitive before 10 years ago, outside of a few fringe writers? — Joshs
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