Scientific materialism develops out of political and economic tendencies, and not the other way around. Politics is extremely important, because politics is the arena of the will. Remember, that for the mass of unenlightened human beings, it is the will that governs reason, and not the other way around. As such, you cannot expect politics to grow out of some badly thought reasons, but rather badly thought reasons will grow out of politics, and people will hold onto them, even if they are shown to be wrong. The problem of the age is one of will, not one of reason. — Agustino
But what is the driving force behind the emergence of the conception of modernity? I'm also interested in the history of ideas, but the history of ideas isn't shaped merely by ideas, but also by man. Afterall, it is man who decides what ideas are dominant in what historical period - it is man's liking which makes one idea popular, and another not so popular. So it's not just the merits of an idea that account for its ascendancy.Interesting observation, but not really the point that I'm making. I'm interested in the history of ideas, and about when scientific materialism became influential or even dominant in Western culture. It is an identifiable, historical issue. Of course there is a whole tapestry of causes, and there are all kinds of political, cultural and social factors to take into account, but I'm interested in a specific aspect of the emergence of the modern world, to do with the emerging conception of modernity. — Wayfarer
Well, that mathematical objects (concepts such as triangle, circle, etc.) are non-physical objects is beyond question. The phrase that they exist "in" a realm beyond space and time though, that is gibberish. The meaning of the word "in" is problematic. We risk equivocating. When we say things exist "in" the room, we refer to one objects being present at a specific location of space, inside another object with its own location. But what does it mean to exist "in" the world? After all, the world does not have a location of its own. Here the word "in" means something more like existing alongside the world, and the word can only be applied to creatures such as human beings, who have consciousness, and exist alongside a world.Platonism proposes a philosophy of mathematics ...that mathematics is about a realm of non-physical objects such as numbers and sets, abstracta that exist in a mysterious realm of forms beyond space and time.
I suspect it's both, but that many of those who insist on the accuracy of these models apply them beyond their scope. — tim wood
Do you really not know what "beyond their scope" means - or what I meant by it? If you mean to represent that ancient philosophies are or should be the correct tools for science and research and advancing knowledge, then you are espousing a terminally Procrustean view.What do you mean by "beyond their scope". — Metaphysician Undercover
Mm, its much easier to wax nostalgic for 'lost knowledge' than it is to actually engage in argument. A favorite strategy of facists everywhere. — StreetlightX
Do you really not know what "beyond their scope" means - or what I meant by it? If you mean to represent that ancient philosophies are or should be the correct tools for science and research and advancing knowledge, then you are espousing a terminally Procrustean view. — tim wood
Those philosophers and scientists who dismiss metaphysics, often casually and without much argument, have to demonstrate how they can do this without doing metaphysics themselves. I predict that they will not be able to do this. Even the logical positivists had metaphysical assumptions.
https://www.firstthings.com/article/2018/08/aristotle-returns — Tim Crane
Most merit has a shelf-life. Merit in itself by itself has only historical interest. Usually, if an old idea has current merit, it is carried over and embedded in modern theory - maybe always instead of usually.It doesn't matter when an idea was put forth. What matters is whether the idea has merit. You're arguing that ancient philosophical ideas should be dismissed because they're old. That's a fallacy. — Marchesk
Despite not existing in the world, the transcendentals interact with the world all the time. — Agustino
What is useless and sometimes annoying is when dinosaurs come and claim that their way of seeing the world is the only way and the correct way, as if everything stopped when and at the same point that their intellectual growth stopped. Inquiry with such people of arrested achievement and understanding is frustrating - often useless - because they're simply not open to any idea not already incorporated into what they have already decided is the way it is. This isn't philosophy at any level, rather it is a sign of mild mental illness and obsession. — tim wood
I'll play devil's advocate. What modern problem of any kind does the four-causes approach either solve or give valuable insight into. And how does Nicomachean Ethics resolve any problem in ethics that you can think of?Some aspects of the traditional philosophy had to be abandoned for sure, but there are elements of Aristotle - like virtue ethics, like the model of four-fold causation - that seem as real now as then. — Wayfarer
Do you really not know what "beyond their scope" means - or what I meant by it? If you mean to represent that ancient philosophies are or should be the correct tools for science and research and advancing knowledge, then you are espousing a terminally Procrustean view.
Or do you imagine that Aristotle is the last word on all matters that we have a record of him expressing a view on? — tim wood
Knowing either can be a sign of erudition, but when did Richard Feynman ever resolve his problems in physics by referring to efficient, material, formal, or final causes? When do ethical models of war concern themselves with balance with respect to extremes? What anthropologist or biologist worries about telos or hylomorphism? Who that matters except for historians of thought cares about substance?. — tim wood
Perhaps it's useful to recall that when these were created, they represented in many but not all cases the best answers at the time to sets of questions. Our understanding of the world has evolved. We don't ask the same questions today. And the old answers such as they were, won't do. — tim wood
Despite not existing in the world, the transcendentals interact with the world all the time. — Agustino
That's more or less all I'm on about. For some reason, it seems vastly controversial. — Wayfarer
The phrase that they exist "in" a realm beyond space and time though, that is gibberish. — Agustino
Knowing either can be a sign of erudition, but when did Richard Feynman ever resolve his problems in physics by referring to efficient, material, formal, or final causes? — tim wood
Desire? Selects? Maybe my memory is off, but I think Feynman described the "quantum event" as taking all possible paths, all but the shortest cancelling each other out. If you've got space for "desire" or something "selecting" please make clear how that can be: where it is, how it is, how it works.that reality really is guided by a global optimising desire....
Somehow a quantum event knows every possibility and selects the shortest path accordingly. — apokrisis
Feynman described the "quantum event" as taking all possible paths, all but the shortest cancelling each other out. — tim wood
So things want to take all paths, and in doing that, find it is not possible? — apokrisis
...the light takes all the paths. — tim wood
The wonder in both cases arises out of a relative degree of ignorance. This isn't to say that QED isn't strange, but that aspects of it are accessible and make sense. — tim wood
As to holism, I find this:
"the theory that parts of a whole are in intimate interconnection, such that they cannot exist independently of the whole, or cannot be understood without reference to the whole, which is thus regarded as greater than the sum of its parts."
If you accept this, then can you explain to me what "cannot exist independently of the whole," and "is thus regarded as greater than the sum of its parts" mean? — tim wood
And from the engine. I can remove parts and put them over there. They exist independently over there, yes? — tim wood
The idea of transcendentals 'interacting with the world" necessarily carries a commitment to "another realm" apart from the world, though. — Janus
What modern problem of any kind does the four-causes approach either solve or give valuable insight into. — tim wood
What anthropologist or biologist worries about telos or hylomorphism? — tim wood
Desire? Selects? Maybe my memory is off, but I think Feynman described the "quantum event" as taking all possible paths, all but the shortest cancelling each other out. If you've got space for "desire" or something "selecting" please make clear how that can be: where it is, how it is, how it works — tim wood
Yes, variational approaches in physics have this interesting property that the path taken appears to be explained by the final state, rather than the other way around. — SophistiCat
There are deeper and more interesting ways to make sense of such alternate explanatory frameworks. — SophistiCat
If you think mine is not good, then tell me why. — Πετροκότσυφας
you're willing to ignore any difference between "ancient" doctrines, as if they were one and the same. — Πετροκότσυφας
Do they agree with each other? Not really important. Do they agree with Gerson's Plato or Plato himself? — Πετροκότσυφας
I also know that McDowell or Deleuze have nothing to do with, for example, Rosenberg. The critique of the former can't resemble the critique of the latter. — Πετροκότσυφας
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