So, anyway - Metaphysical questions cannot be addressed with yes or no answers. They’re not issues of right or wrong, what matters is usefulness. — T Clark
I don’t think metaphysics should include a discussion of the existence of a particular God or the substance of particular religions. At least as it’s often considered, the existence of God is a matter of fact – he does or he does not. — T Clark
On the face this seems false, just considered in a historical way. So I guess I'd ask -- Why do you want metaphysics to be one way, and not another way? — Moliere
It seems to me that "Metaphysics" is a name for a category of philosophy which includes such and such. The division I had introduced to me in class was between Metaphysics-Epistemology-Axiology, and those were the broad categories which philosophy fell within. — Moliere
One point is that the specifically Aristotelian nature of 'metaphysics' ought not to be forgotten. The term was coined (as is well known) by a later editor of Aristotle's corpus, who applied it to the body of A's texts that were 'after physics'. I say that because often 'metaphysics' is interpreted to mean 'general spiritual philosophy' whereas in the formal sense, it has quite a definite lexicon and set of concerns. — Wayfarer
But then, the one reference given in the OP is not Aristotelian at all, but Taoist. And I think the quote you're probably referring to - it's not actually stated - is 'the Tao that can be spoken of is not the eternal Tao'. I suppose that is a metaphysical claim in the second sense of being 'generally spiritual', but not in the Aristotelian sense, which was most concerned with 'saying', as precisely as possible. — Wayfarer
But one useful consequence of thinking of metaphysics in the context of Aristotle and formal Western metaphysics generally, is that it can then be discussed in terms of the Western philosophical tradition. — Wayfarer
I recognize I have to play by the rules of the game set up by the people I want to play with. — T Clark
Why play if the rules are faulty? — Noble Dust
Ever since I took my first philosophy course - The Mind-Body Identity Problem - more than 40 years ago, I have not been able to put myself in the state of mind which allows me to discuss things in the manner Western philosophy requires. — T Clark
I very much want there to be a place to go to discuss the underpinnings of reason. Where we can agree on the rules, or at least argue about the rules, before we start the substantive discussion. — T Clark
The closest thing we have to that place I can think of is what we call metaphysics. If that's not what metaphysics is, then what is it - seems to me it's just a junk drawer where we throw unrelated stuff we can't figure out how to resolve.
Sounds to me like epistemology. But it doesn't matter what we call it, I'd say. What's more important is the question you're asking. — Moliere
I don't think that's too far off. I tend to think of metaphysics as being about being, or being about ontology -- questions about what exists, if it exists, and if there is some characterization about what exists what that characterization is. — Moliere
The actual question at hand is more important than what category it might fall into. — Moliere
I just want more order. — T Clark
For me it's not. The existence of procedural, foundational concepts that set the terms of all discussions is central to my idea of what philosophy is. I want to be able to talk about it. It's not fair!! Oops, where did that come from? — T Clark
I would say that you can set the terms of the discussion yourself. Other philosophers may disagree with you, and I can offer you what I tend to think about as a starting point, but in order to proceed all you need do is say "this is what I mean" -- and we can go from there to talk about the underpinnings of reason, or whether there are matters of fact vs. matters of preference, or if there is an objective reality.
Does that make sense? — Moliere
And that, I say, is a major factor in modern Western philosophy. It's a 'don't mention the war' kind of situation. Actually a really useful essay on that is Thomas Nagel's Secular Philosophy and the Religious Temperament (something which I have discovered I have, it turns out.) — Wayfarer
In line with my metaphysics, rules are not faulty. It's just a matter of preference and usefulness. Also - I like it here. I want to play with the people on this forum. I need to make allowances for how things are done here. — T Clark
For a minute, let’s discuss what I want metaphysics to be, but which it probably isn’t. At least not entirely – I want it to be the set of rules, assumptions we agree on to allow discussion, reason, to proceed e.g. there is a knowable external, objective reality; truth represents a correspondence between external reality and some representation of it; it’s turtles all the way down; the Tao that can be spoken is not the eternal Tao — T Clark
So, anyway - Metaphysical questions cannot be addressed with yes or no answers. They’re not issues of right or wrong, what matters is usefulness. — T Clark
...For me it's not. The existence of procedural, foundational concepts that set the terms of all discussions is central to my idea of what philosophy is. I want to be able to talk about it — T Clark
I want a cudgel of metaphysics I can take out and beat my opponents with. (stomps feet, pounds table, face turns red). All you big boys and girls get to say "Kant said this" and "Aristotle wrote that," while all I get to say is "seems to me." — T Clark
So if rules (no rules, no matter what?) are not faulty, then what's the issue? — Noble Dust
When it comes to metaphysics, I would think something more than preference, and perhaps something more precise than usefulness, would be in play. — Noble Dust
the existence of an objective world is a matter of fact too, as is whether there is any correspondence between thoughts and the world; so would be the suggestion that "its turtles all the way down" if this refers to the myth about what holds up the earth. So I can't see how God's existence is different to any of those on your list. — PossibleAaran
Why can't the question whether there is an objective world be answered "yes" or "no"? Why not the question whether there is any correspondence between thoughts and the world? You say in a reply to Moliere that these things are issues of "preference", but I don't see how they are issues of preference in any special sense which doesn't apply equally to any more mundane matter of fact. — PossibleAaran
You can talk about it, can't you? Several people here have mentioned Collingwood. If you want a philosopher you can quote in discussion who shares your perspective, he would likely be your man. He thinks there are these assumptions of any area of discourse, absolute presuppositions, which can't be proven or disproven, but they make the discourse possible, and he thinks of Metaphysics as the task of describing these for different areas of discourse. — PossibleAaran
But at the end of the day if you have unique thoughts sometimes that's a lot better than arguing over interpretation. (though I do love arguments over interpretation) We're just some folks discussing some ideas. — Moliere
I disagree that the existence of objective reality is a matter of fact. To me it's a matter of viewpoint. Sometimes it's useful, sometimes it's misleading. If it's true, then the Tao doesn't exist, which of course it doesn't. That's what I like about Lao Tzu - he acknowledges the unspeakability of reality. The view that there is no such thing as objective reality is not an uncommon one. I've participated in several such discussions here on the forum. — T Clark
Those are matters of fact within a particular metaphysical system. — T Clark
Do you hold that there is no such thing as objective reality or do you hold that there is no fact of the matter whether there is such a thing or not? The two aren't equivalent. — PossibleAaran
Incidentally, a debate about the existence of objective reality is exactly what I would call a metaphysical debate. — PossibleAaran
In which metaphysical system do the facts which you listed belong? — PossibleAaran
Our disagreement is fundamentally this. I hold the modern conception of philosophy on which it is continuous with science and ordinary enquiry. Questions about objective reality and correspondence and such are the same kind of question as questions about protons and Julius Ceasar. They are just more straightforward questions about how things stand. By contrast, you hold that these "metaphysical" questions are completely different: they are questions about how it is useful to think, or about how we want to think about ordinary matters of fact. Is this an accurate portrayal of your side? — PossibleAaran
The idea of an objective reality is usually called Realism. — PossibleAaran
here are some matters of fact:
Protons and neutrons are made up of smaller particles known as quarks — T Clark
How many pins can you stick in the head of a dancing angel? — T Clark
Questionable. As is well-known, the nature of sub-atomic matter is inherently ambiguous - hence the 'wave-particle duality', the observer problem, and the uncertainty principle. All of which is actually germane to the discussion. — Wayfarer
The apocryphal question 'how many angels can dance on the head of a pin' was actually a reference to the medieval debate about whether two incorporeal beings could occupy the same spatio-temporal location. When expressed like that, it doesn't sound quite so silly. — Wayfarer
Buddhism however does preserve a relationship with the domain of the transcendent, which has generally dropped out of secular Western thought. That is what enables it to make sense of metaphysical ideas. Corresponding schemas exist in classical Western philosophy also. But that is a subject for a different post. — Wayfarer
But by analysing questions with this in mind, some clarity can be found. For example, the questions regarding the status of 'objectivity' - the Buddhist analysis would be that there is not an 'ultimately objective reality', because objects and subjects 'co-arise' or are mutually conditioning and dependent. But that doesn't mean that on the level of conventional reality, there are not objective facts; there certainly are, and they can be extremely important to know, even if they have no ultimate meaning or applicability. — Wayfarer
Get involved in philosophical discussions about knowledge, truth, language, consciousness, science, politics, religion, logic and mathematics, art, history, and lots more. No ads, no clutter, and very little agreement — just fascinating conversations.