Why is there a someone? — Joshs
"Find" doesn't make sense in the world you posit. Meaning must rather be created. But the meaning we can create isn't proportional to, and doesn't fit, what the desires of the heart demand. — Thorongil
The more interesting and pressing question is whether the phantasmagoria of experience exhausts the category of the real. In other words, the more important question is not what objects are, but why they are. If this question has no answer, nihilism results. If this question has an answer, but we can't know it, skepticism results. If this question has an answer, and we can know it, then something like theism results. — Thorongil
If this question has an answer, and we can know it, then something like theism results. — Thorongil
Do you mean your personal experience?The more interesting and pressing question is whether the phantasmagoria of experience exhausts the category of the real. In other words, the more important question is not what objects are, but why they are. — Thorongil
Strawman. I neither said nor suggested any such thing. In fact, if you read the OP, I said exactly the reverse of what you impute of me here. — Thorongil
I don't think either of the questions make sense to me. On the one hand, "what are they ultimately composed of" makes no sense because I don't see what import (if any) this has. What does it even mean for an object to be "ultimately" material, or "ultimately" idea? :s This is a fictive excrescence on the real metaphysical issue of seeing how things hang together in the most general sense."... the "why" question deals with the reason for there being objects of experience at all as opposed to the question of what they are ultimately composed of." — Thorongil
No. Theism relies on faith. If this question has an answer, and we can't know it, then something like theism results. If this question has an answer, and we can know it, then something like science results.It has been a recent contention of mine that the data of experience are the same in all metaphysical systems, whether idealistic or materialistic, to name the two major poles. Both try to give answers to the question of what objects of experience are, but neither doubts that such objects are. In light of this, it seems to me that much less rides on the answer being what the idealist or the materialist says than is often supposed. (That said, I have always leaned toward idealism and still do, primarily due to the coherency and stability of what it affirms; the matter of the materialist changes every century, which casts doubt on what exactly is being affirmed.)
The more interesting and pressing question is whether the phantasmagoria of experience exhausts the category of the real. In other words, the more important question is not what objects are, but why they are. If this question has no answer, nihilism results. If this question has an answer, but we can't know it, skepticism results. If this question has an answer, and we can know it, then something like theism results. — Thorongil
The bigger question would be why does it appear as an experience of an external world if there isn't one?I have come to the conclusion that the phenomenal is reality, and the purpose of philosophy/science is to explain why what appears is as it appears. So no hidden 'reality', rather the reality we experience is all there is, and the question is why it is the way it appears. — Cavacava
If there is a causal relationship between the mind and the external world then there is no need to make distinctions between mind and body, or mental vs. physical. — Harry Hindu
How could the why not be up to us? Are you in personal contact with God or aliens? What sort of BS have they been feeding you? — Marchesk
I think Thorongil meant to "the more important question is not what objects are, but why they exist." We are not responsible for the reason of a thing's existence (excluding the obvious man-made stuff). — Michael
Oh well, why ask why? What reason do we have to suppose things have a reason for existing? We can explain the mechanics for how they came to exist (to a point), but not give a reason in terms of purpose. — Marchesk
It has been a recent contention of mine that the data of experience are the same in all metaphysical systems, whether idealistic or materialistic — Thorongil
I was caricaturing the idealist position you prefer for rhetorical effect, you'll see it has no influence whatsoever on my line of argument, which you've ignored in favour of the easier target. — Pseudonym
How do you avoid the infinite regress? — Pseudonym
On the one hand, "what are they ultimately composed of" makes no sense because I don't see what import (if any) this has. — Agustino
you presuppose that there exists something outside of this "everything" that can be pointed to as an answer to the why question — Agustino
The more interesting and pressing question is whether the phantasmagoria of experience exhausts the category of the real. — Thorongil
In other words, the more important question is not what objects are, but why they are.
If this question has no answer, nihilism results. If this question has an answer, but we can't know it, skepticism results.
If this question has an answer, and we can know it, ...
then something like theism results.
I think Thorongil meant "the more important question is not what objects are, but why they exist." We are not responsible for the reason of a thing's existence (excluding the obvious man-made stuff).
[...]
— Michael
I didn't mean "reason" in these sense of "purpose". I meant it in the sense of "cause"/"explanation". — Michael
Theism relies on faith — Harry Hindu
It seems to me that the dichotomy is false and idealists and materialists are arguing over nothing. — Harry Hindu
So, how else does the question make sense in the absence of that presupposition?I presuppose no such thing. The question could be meaningless, in which case there is no such thing. — Thorongil
Fair enough, I did get that impression from part of your post.My dear friend, this was effectively the point I was making. — Thorongil
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