Why would we need to be agnostic when intentionality is something neurocognition studies? We have reason to make a definite distinction between brains and universes, purposes and laws. — apokrisis
Given that it is probability states that evolve deterministically, then I would say that makes it literally part of the equation. — apokrisis
And classical determinism is an emergent feature of reality at best. — apokrisis
So you are taking an approach to the laws of nature that seems really dated. — apokrisis
The idea that transcendent laws could some how reach down, God-like, to regulate the motions of particles was always pretty hokey. An immanent view of nature's laws is going to be more useful if we want to make sense of what is really going on. — apokrisis
Sounds good. But I'm not getting much sense of how you mean to proceed from here. — apokrisis
Talk of "laws" is definitely nonsense if we are to understand that as meaning anything like the kind of law-bound behaviour of reasoning social creatures like us. — apokrisis
But the irony, as I say, is that our human concept of law is all about reification. We create these abstract constructs like truth, justice and good, then try to live by them. A lot of hot air is spent on debating their "reality". — apokrisis
The problem is that they don't work very well - at least to explain "everything". — apokrisis
So first up, science just is modelling and hence abstractions are how it goes about its business. That won't change — apokrisis
Second, physicalism can now be better understood in terms of information and entropy rather than mind and matter. — apokrisis
And that semiotic view even explains why science - as an informational process - should be a business of abstractions ... so as to be able to regulate the world insofar as it is a concrete and entropic realm of being. — apokrisis
This means that in the case of sense knowledge, the form is still encompassed with the concrete characters which make it particular; and that, in the case of intellectual knowledge, the form is disengaged from all such characters. To understand is to free form completely from matter.
Moreover, if the proper knowledge of the senses is of accidents, through forms that are individualized, the proper knowledge of intellect is of essences, through forms that are universalized.
But it differs from sense knowledge so far forth as it consists in the apprehension of things, not in their individuality, but in their universality.
the intellectual stage, wherein agent intellect operates upon the phantasmal datum, divesting the form of every character that marks and indentifies it as a particular something.
Abstraction, which is the proper task of active intellect, is essentially a liberating function in which the essence of the sensible object, potentially understandable as it lies beneath its accidents, is liberated from the elements that individualize it and is thus made actually understandable.
Broadly I take a view on causality that is Aristotelian and Peircean. — apokrisis
Which then cashes out in the kind of current physicalism which sees information and entropy as bridging the old mind-matter divide. — apokrisis
Talk of an "informational realm" is pretty general. — apokrisis
You can inquire about the location of an event, or the momentum of an event, but not get a complete answer on both in just a single act of measurement. — apokrisis
your proposal strikes me as having a particular problem. It seems to have to presume a classical Newtonian backdrop notion of time - a spatialised dimension. And modern physics would be working towards an emergent and thermal notion of time as a better model. So any logical propagator would have to unfold in that kind of time, not a Newtonian one. — apokrisis
But the bare physical world - the world that does not have this kind of anticipatory intentional modelling of its tomorrow - has only its tendencies, not its plans. So it is "intentional" in an importantly different way. — apokrisis
All this is a great advance on the old notion of transcendent laws floating somewhere above everything they regulate in some kind of eternal and perfect fashion. — apokrisis
Yes, the full physical description needs to recognise final and formal cause. — apokrisis
So everything can be brought back to the notion of constraints. — apokrisis
As I see it, knowing and willing are objective relations; their intentional objects are not subjective, but objective (and shared, public). — gurugeorge
So the laws cause matter to behave the way that it does, by informing it? I assume that they exist as information then. — Metaphysician Undercover
How could matter interpret the information which the laws provide, in order to act according to the laws, if it is not aware of that information — Metaphysician Undercover
Don't you think that information is useless without something to interpret it? Do you know of any cases where information does anything without something interpreting it? — Metaphysician Undercover
Well that' a really bad analogy then. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why would you even think that matter exhibiting orderly dynamics is a case of matter obeying laws, when this has nothing in common with what we know as "obeying laws"? — Metaphysician Undercover
I am not talking about an information realm, but about physical and intentional theaters of operation and their relation. — Dfpolis
Matter is completely conceptual, it is the concept which human beings have developed to account for the temporal continuity of existence. — Metaphysician Undercover
In modern physics the concept of matter has been replaced by the concept of energy as the means of accounting for temporal continuity. — Metaphysician Undercover
I follow Aquinas on a number of issues, but depart from him on a few points where he has a Neoplatonic, rather an an Aristotelian, position — Dfpolis
The distinction of primary and secondary qualities seems to start with Locke -- long after Descartes..
— Dfpolis
I think it may have started with Galileo, but I can't remember where I encountered that information, so I may be incorrect. — Janus
There is no knowing without a subject knowing, no willing without a subject willing. So, our experiences as subjects are essential data in understanding the reality of knowing and willing. — Dfpolis
[subjective experiences] are tokens of types of experiences such as knowing and willing. — Dfpolis
DFpolis actually mentions that ‘substance’ in the philosophical lexicon, is the translation of the Greek ‘ouisia’. And that word is nearer in meaning to ‘being’. I think there is an ineluctable tendency to reify substance, which Descartes’ dualism always falls victim to....
... if you translated res cogitans and extensa as ‘thinking being and extended substance’, it would be less misleading. And then, my point about ‘being’ is that it is never ‘an object of cognition’, as we’re never outside of or apart from it. — Wayfarer
--Janus... I was simply pointing out that it is logically consistent to think of being as substance, in which case a monist would be one who thinks there is only one kind of being (although there are obviously many kinds of beings). Heidegger speaks to this need to distinguish between being and beings with his ontological distinction (although it is not clear that he thought that being is univocal as, for example, Deleuze avowedly did).
-- JanusMy question with regard to Descartes was based on taking res (thing) as possibly convertible with "being" with "thinking" and extended" as modifiers. Personally, I don't see being as a prior substrate that can be modified. — Dfpolis
OK, so you don't see 'being' as a suitable synonym for 'substance'. I don't either unless being is thought of as synonymous with becoming or process. So I agree that being is not a "prior substrate" and would say that the very notion of a prior substrate, or passive substance, is really incoherent.
So if you combine the ‘insight from non-dualism’ with ‘the reality of intelligible objects’, you come to an understanding that the physical domain is subsidiary to or derivative from the ‘realm of form’ [which is the exact inverse of modern materialism].
I think the view that the physical domain is separate from the "realm of form" is incoherent — Janus
The rational intellect is what grasps, sees or understands that ‘domain of form’ — Wayfarer
Intellect is a cognitive faculty essentially different from sense and of a supra-organic order; that is, it is not exerted by, or intrinsically dependent on, a bodily organ, as sensation is. This proposition is proved by psychological analysis and study of the chief functions of intellect. These are conception, judgment, reasoning, reflection, and self-consciousness. All these activities involve elements essentially different from sensuous consciousness. In conception the mind forms universal ideas. These are different in kind from sensations and sensuous images. These latter are concrete and individual, truly representative of only one object, whilst the universal idea will apply with equal truth to any object of the class. The universal idea possesses a fixity and invariableness of nature, whilst the sensuous image changes from moment to moment. Thus the concept or universal idea of "gold", or "triangle", will with equal justice stand for any specimen, but the image represents truly only one individual.
I did not say it interpreted the laws. It simply acts in a uniform, orderly fashion and that uniform mode of action is the foundation in reality for our concept <laws of nature>. — Dfpolis
You are confused. The point I was pushing was how physics is no longer based on that kind of material atomism. It agrees that it is form that gives persistent shape or individuation to raw potential. — apokrisis
And energy in turn has become entropy and even information. — apokrisis
I think that you are not quite grasping the concept of "matter". — Metaphysician Undercover
When change occurs, there is always an underlying substratum which remains the same, and this is called matter. This allows us to say that a changing object maintains its identity as the same object despite undergoing change. It is essential to the concept of "change". — Metaphysician Undercover
Without this concept, change becomes unintelligible because at each moment of change there is something new. — Metaphysician Undercover
What I was saying is that the concept most often used today, to account for temporal continuity, is energy rather than matter. This is expressed as the law of conservation of energy. — Metaphysician Undercover
I'll repeat. A constraints-based view of substance says limits on instability create stability. So in every moment, something could accidentally change. And very often in life, things do. But to the degree there is a global order or law in place, such accidental changes are suitably restricted. Things can't change enough to matter. — apokrisis
This is a perfectly intelligible ontology. Tell me one thing wrong with it. And it fits the facts as science knows them. Unlike your story. — apokrisis
You are still a century out of date. Energy is now countable as quantum information. Degrees of freedom are the conserved quantity. Cosmology measures the entropy of event horizons. Things have moved on. — apokrisis
My point was that this is completely different from dfpolis' position that laws are inherent within matter, so no such "accidental change" is possible. Yet both of you claim to have a metaphysics which represents modern physics. Is modern physics that confused that it supports contradictory metaphysics? — Metaphysician Undercover
Unlike my story which avoids those contradictory facts of modern science altogether. — Metaphysician Undercover
How would you quantify one degree of freedom, to ensure that it is maintained, in continuity from one moment to the next? — Metaphysician Undercover
A constraints-based view of substance says limits on instability create stability. So in every moment, something could accidentally change. And very often in life, things do. But to the degree there is a global order or law in place, such accidental changes are suitably restricted. Things can't change enough to matter.
This is a perfectly intelligible ontology. Tell me one thing wrong with it.
Dfpolis was taking a position on Hyle. I disagreed with that, making the argument that he was treating the material principle as already having formal organisation in having an inherent and active intentionality. So in terms of "prime matter", his starting point had already crossed the line and ceased to be prime. — apokrisis
However, that is also a reasonable view if we are talking about the actual world where it is only in our conceptions that we are wanting to insist on some absolutely dualistic separation. So it is also the case that any notion of prime matter is simply a state of being that is the least tellic, the least organised, the least shaped and directed. — apokrisis
And as we have discussed multiple times, I would then go beyond that qualification to say that both matter and form would have to co-arise from something even more extreme - a state of "actual" vagueness. — apokrisis
You were already lost at step one - the idea that prime matter reduces to a notion of undirected flux, making matter already an active thing, just a chaotically unformed kind of active thing. — apokrisis
And I am completely opposed to your characterisation of prime matter as some kind of passive substratrum that awaits a shaping intentional hand to magic it into a world of objects. This is just the materialism of atomism. And Aristotle was a good deal beyond that. — apokrisis
Physics does that by counting the microstates of a bounded system. So what is conserved is all the possible configurations of some collection of parts. A block of spacetime can contain some maximum number of different arrangements. — apokrisis
So that is how the model achieves conservation. And now the ontology works the other way round. It is the closure by being bounded - constrained - that underwrites the energy conservation. In general relativity, for example, energy is no longer conserved as a necessity. This is because the spatiotemporal boundaries are no longer globally fixed. They have a plastic geometry. — apokrisis
And remember I asked you a direct question:
A constraints-based view of substance says limits on instability create stability. So in every moment, something could accidentally change. And very often in life, things do. But to the degree there is a global order or law in place, such accidental changes are suitably restricted. Things can't change enough to matter.
This is a perfectly intelligible ontology. Tell me one thing wrong with it.
...I'm sure you were just about to give an answer. — apokrisis
As I said, I can't remember where I encountered that item of information, but a google search yielded this:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Primary/secondary_quality_distinction — Janus
I think that tastes, odors, colors, and so on are no more than mere names
that we are not aware of their being anything other than various arrangements of the size, figure, and motions of the parts of these objects — Janus
Subjective experiences are "tokens of types of experiences such as knowing and willing" only in the case of knowing and willing about one's subjective experiences. (I had a dream, wish I didn't feel anxious, etc.) — gurugeorge
Armstrong (a physicalist and realist regarding universals) — Relativist
Hume's constant conjunction makes the success of science surprising — Relativist
it doesn't appear to be consistent with your thesis of intentionality, and that seems a flaw for your position. — Relativist
I think we are misunderstanding each other. — Dfpolis
The fact that in day to day life, these are not separate or separable doesn't invalidate the notion of their being separate domains or 'magisteria'. So - where is the incoherence here? — Wayfarer
But prime matter, according to the concept cannot have any form, and that's why it's impossible in reality. — Metaphysician Undercover
Your constraint is your refusal to recognize that matter is purely conceptual, in the mind only. You want it to be an active thing within the reality which you model, when in reality it is just a symbol in the model. — Metaphysician Undercover
I already answered that question. It is completely contradictory to dfpolis' position in which laws are inherent within matter. And, both of you claim to represent the principles of modern physics. So, modern physics allows both, that "something could accidentally change", and that accidental change is impossible because the laws of nature are inherent within matter. That's what's wrong with it, it is a representation of deep inconsistencies within the discipline of physics. — Metaphysician Undercover
The fact that it has been identified as a difference indicates that it has made a difference. — Metaphysician Undercover
(the objective object, e.g. what we're looking at), but also about ourselves as experiencing the physical object (the subjective object, e.g. ourselves as able to see, know, direct our attention, etc.).
The Fundamental Abstraction of natural science, then, focuses on the objective object (the thing seen and known) to the exclusion of the subjective object (us seeing and knowing). — Dfpolis
What could those "separate domains or magisteria" be beyond being conceptual distinctions, abstractions? — Janus
Physics has nothing to say about the logical order and universals belong to the logical order. — Dfpolis
The concept of Biosemiotics requires making a distinction between two categories, the material or physical world and the symbolic or semantic world. — Howard Pattee
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