Correct? — Blue Lux
Have I denied that the intentionality of the laws can be traced to God, or that God wills freely? — Dfpolis
No, I am saying that applying the laws of physics outside their verified range of application was and is unjustified. I am also saying that until well into the 20th century, we had no adequate data on whether human intentions modify the laws of nature. So asserting their invariance when human commitments are involved was unjustified. — Dfpolis
see no real distinction between "participating in" the laws and "perturbing" the otherwise universal laws. I've never said we "overrule" the laws. — Dfpolis
I have already said that both our willed commitments and the laws of nature are intentional. The consequent motions are physical. So, there is no need to confine it to one "part" or another. Again, there are no "parts" -- only a whole that can be conceived in various abstract ways. — Dfpolis
Because doing so would mean that the laws of physics are entirely inapplicable to us. — Dfpolis
Let's be clear, because I think you are confused as to my position.
1. Our intellect and will both belong to the intentional order.
2. "The physical," as I conceive it is not reducible to a material state. It is what we study in the natural sciences. The physical world is both material (specified by state descriptions) and intentional (having a well-defined order I am calling "the laws of nature."
3. When we apply the methods of natural science to the human mind, we can grasp its physicality (its material structure and its operations insofar as we follow the so-called "universal" laws of nature). It cannot grasp (because of the fundamental abstraction) our subjectivity (our awareness and will). Thus it misses the dynamics that allow us to exercise freedom. — Dfpolis
If you merely mean "immaterial," yes the laws of nature are immaterial in the well defined sense of not having material constituents. — Dfpolis
The laws of nature, not being spatio-temporal objects, have no intrinsic location. Instead, they "are" where they operate -- and they operate on and in matter. So they are "in" matter in an operational sense. So, if "by matter"nyou mean the empirical stuff that we can observe and experiment on, then the laws are intrinsic because they are revealed by such observations and experiments.
If you mean by "matter" an abstract principle, coordinate with form, we have had that argument and come to an impasse. — Dfpolis
I am sorry, but no. To actually signify a sign must actualize meaning in a mind. If it does not do this, it is only a potential sign. — Dfpolis
Of course communication can be defective. Your utterance may be malformed. It may not be correctly understood. That has nothing to do with the question of what constitutes a well-formed, operational signs. — Dfpolis
Yes, there are three atoms independently of anyone counting them, but there is no actual number independently of an agent thinking it. — Dfpolis
there would still be three atoms in a water molecule even if there were no intelligent agents in the universe. For that sentence to be true, none of the referents can depend on an agent's thoughts. — Andrew M
consciousness does seem to be contingent on the material, although it is itself immaterial. — Blue Lux
Your own authentic position can only be understood by an assimilation, which loses meaning in the process. — Blue Lux
Consciousness is an objective, transpersonal entity in terms of the they — Blue Lux
meaning is often not communicated at all, and it is precisely in these meaningless structures of 'knowledge' or reference that constitutes the herd constitution of consciousness. — Blue Lux
Maslow's hierarchy came after Nietzsche, and it is precisely the understanding that Nietzsche tries to communicate which sets the tone for an understanding of such a hierarchy at all — Blue Lux
The problem is not necessarily authenticity itself but alienation as well, which is not synonymous with authenticity. — Blue Lux
"There is no "having to be intelligible to others." — Dfpolis
This is not the case... It is that consciousness is often completely unintelligible in terms of the they. And an authentic consciousness would have as its object its being authentic. — Blue Lux
If there really were a single consciousness, everyone would value and devalue the same things — Dfpolis
This is not analytically true. — Blue Lux
If love is a mystical experience by your definition — Blue Lux
I found John of St. Thomas and Henry Veatch very useful. — Dfpolis
Yes, you have denied this, not explicitly but implicitly. — Metaphysician Undercover
As such, these laws are explicitly material — Metaphysician Undercover
since God is understood to be immaterial, as the cause of matter and material existence in general, it is implied that the laws cannot be traced to God. — Metaphysician Undercover
You are saying that it is incorrect to associate invariance with the laws of nature. How are they even "laws" then, if they're subject to change? — Metaphysician Undercover
This is completely different from "participating" in the law, which is to accept the law and act accordingly. — Metaphysician Undercover
It was your suggestion that the human being is a unity of intentional and physical. If these were not stated as distinct parts, then what do you mean by this? — Metaphysician Undercover
I think you and I have completely different notions of "intentionality". I associate intentionality with the will, the intellectual appetite. So "the good", as that which is recognized by the intellect as desirable, is at the root of intentionality. — Metaphysician Undercover
Human beings have physical bodies. They also have intention. To give priority to intention does not necessitate that the laws of physics are not applicable to the human body. It just means that the laws of physics are not applicable to intention. — Metaphysician Undercover
In #2, I see that you use "intentional" in a way completely different than I would. I would say that "intentional" means to act with purpose. — Metaphysician Undercover
That premise would be that where there is order, there is intention. — Metaphysician Undercover
he proposition you made in the op, which I objected to, was that the laws of nature inhere within matter. So now you have contradictory positions — Metaphysician Undercover
in #3 you claim that we can understand the human mind's "material structure" by following the "laws of nature". — Metaphysician Undercover
So how could we understand the material through the laws of nature, when the laws of nature are an aspect of the intentional? — Metaphysician Undercover
Second, we cannot follow the laws of nature in the application of natural science even if we wanted to, because the closest thing we have is the laws of physics, but these are distinct. — Metaphysician Undercover
What I would like to know is how you conceive of the laws of nature operating "in" matter without reducing the laws to being matter itself. — Metaphysician Undercover
how are these non-spatial laws, which are inherent within matter, anything other than matter itself? — Metaphysician Undercover
Second, how could these laws act? — Metaphysician Undercover
But meaning is often vague and indefinite, so the sign does not need to be formal or instrumental. — Metaphysician Undercover
This is the case with many emotions. Something triggers an emotion, that thing is a sign because it actualizes meaning. — Metaphysician Undercover
there is nothing specific which the sign "represents". — Metaphysician Undercover
Why have you recommended this work over those of modern semioticians (e.g., Saussure, Peirce, vonUexkull, Morris, Sebeok, Lotman, Eco, Deely, etc. )? — Galuchat
If we can be aware of realities essentially independent of matter, then awareness need not be contingent on matter. — Dfpolis
This need not be so. I try to communicate by getting others to stand beside me and see what I see. If I succeed, they see what I see, but from their own perspective, and as relevant to their own experience. So they may actually see more than i see -- increasing, rather than diminishing, meaning — Dfpolis
Again, I don't know what this could mean. Yes, sometimes, even often, we fail to communicate but when you say "these meaningless structures of 'knowledge' or reference ... constitutes the herd constitution of consciousness," I'm at a loss. There is no awareness, no consciousness, without some object of awareness. If we communicate nothing, there is nothing to be aware of. — Dfpolis
I've read Maslow's paper. He does not mention Nietzsche. I've never read Nietzsche, but I had no problem understanding Maslow. So, it hardly seems necessary to know Nietzsche to understand Maslow — Dfpolis
It seems to me that to be authentic is to act in conformity with your self-understanding -- not twisting yourself to conform to the expectations of others. If so, then doesn't "having to be intelligible to others" cut across the core of authenticity? — Dfpolis
I have no idea why you would say this. Consciousness is not a thing, not an entity, but a power that intelligent beings have. It is also ultimately personal -- it is what makes me the knowing subject in subject-object relations. If it were transpersonal, I would be directly aware of what others experienced. I am not. — Dfpolis
I mean if there were a single consciousness, there would be a single mind. We would all know and see things the same way, and so value the same things. — Dfpolis
can you prove that there are still there atoms in a water molecule regardless of an intelligent agent? — Blue Lux
I don't think your realistic interpretation of three is necessary to make the sentence true. The referents in the sentence are the molecule and its atoms, which, if counted, will number three. — Dfpolis
You are confusing being material with the laws being dependent on matter for their expression. For example, the form of a vase is immaterial (not made of matter), but it is inseparable from the matter of the vase. I have made it quite clear that the laws are immaterial -- it is a category error to ask what they are made of. — Dfpolis
It is not that we have different notions, it is that I am showing the intentionality of the laws by looking at their intrinsic character rather than their Source. — Dfpolis
Not so fast. If decide to walk to the store, each step is a physical process closely described by the laws of physics. It is also a product of my intention to arrive at the store by walking. So, there is no either-or here. It is a both-and situation. An adequate account has to incorporate both the physical and the intentional realities at work here. — Dfpolis
There is more than one way to skin a cat. I offered less contentious arguments, viz. my logical propagator argument and that based on Brentano's analysis of intentionality. — Dfpolis
In 3, I said we can study the physical structure of the mind (the brain), by applying the method of natural science. I did not say we were studying the mind's "matter." Let me say it yet again: "Physical" does not mean "material." Describing material states is only a small part of physics. A much greater part is studying the laws of nature, which are intentional. — Dfpolis
In the same way that a vase's form inheres in the vase without being the matter of the vase. — Dfpolis
Do you have an example of a sign that is neither formal nor instrumental? — Dfpolis
Then, it is not a "sign" in the standard sense of the term. As you say " to be a sign, all that is required is to actualize meaning." Of course, you can equivocate on "meaning." I am taking a meaning to be informative -- to represent something, — Dfpolis
Matter is an abstraction. The material is an abstraction. Ergo realities independent of matter is an abstraction. — Blue Lux
Communicating has nothing to do with getting others to see what you see, for that assimilation of theirs is going to label what you see as an abstraction, which will only reconfigure their own experience. No meaning is exchanged. And it can not be proven that there is actually an increasing meaning... Such an increasing would have to be objective... Transpersonal and devoid of meaningful meaning. — Blue Lux
Nietzsche -> Freud -> Adler -> Maslow — Blue Lux
The de facto configuration of being intelligible by others is the source of in authenticity, namely of the they. — Blue Lux
The transpersonal label is what establishes the point of reference known as objectivity, which is metaphorically the source of all inauthenticity. — Blue Lux
The single consciousness is the consciousness of objectivity, which does not define consciousness as a whole but is consciousness in a very real degree. — Blue Lux
There is no creation of existence. Existence preceeds essence. — Blue Lux
I don't think your realistic interpretation of three is necessary to make the sentence true. The referents in the sentence are the molecule and its atoms, which, if counted, will number three. — Dfpolis
It seems to me that you could say the same thing about the particulars. That is, the referent of the sentence is the world which, if observed in a specific way, would present as a water molecule and its atoms. — Andrew M
But the form is separable from the matter, that's how we know things through abstraction, the form of the vase is brought into the mind. — Metaphysician Undercover
If the form of a vase were inseparable from the matter of a vase, you could not say that the form is immaterial because it would be of necessity united with matter, impossible to be otherwise, and therefore material. — Metaphysician Undercover
The existence of order does not necessitate the conclusion of intentionality, the existence of purpose does. — Metaphysician Undercover
How about the activity of the earth orbiting the sun, or of things moving from gravity? These are orderly activities, described by laws, but unless we can determine a purpose for these activities we cannot conclude that there is intentionality. — Metaphysician Undercover
But you want to change this definition such that order is the essence of intention — Metaphysician Undercover
Therefore the existence of the means, i.e. order, does not necessarily indicate intentionality. — Metaphysician Undercover
So you go on and on talking about forms, the immaterial, and intentionality, as if you think that these are real and you believe in them, when in reality you think that these are just the illusions of deluded minds. — Metaphysician Undercover
If the form inheres in the vase, as the matter of the vase does, and is inseparable from the matter of the vase, then how is it anything other than the matter of the vase? I — Metaphysician Undercover
I told you, a work of music, or art. It must be a sign because it has meaning, as is evident from the emotions which it arouses. — Metaphysician Undercover
Defining a word such that many things which are normally referred to by that word are excluded by your definition, in order to support an ontological position, is not good metaphysics. That part of reality excluded by your definition is also excluded from your ontology. — Metaphysician Undercover
So, realities independent of matter are realities that can act without depending on any material object. — Dfpolis
If it ever ceased to be in the vase, it would cease to be the form of the vase. — Dfpolis
Something immaterial can be completely inseparable from matter... — Dfpolis
If it can exist apart from matter, it is called "spiritual." — Dfpolis
When a process is ordered, in the sense I an using the term, it acts in a determinate way. If it acts in a determinate way, it will have a determinate end at any point in time. To have a determinate end is to have a purpose. — Dfpolis
I disagree. We can determine their intentionality by applying Brentano's analysis or my logical propagator approach.
Also, the human failure to discern purposes is not an argument that there are no purposes — Dfpolis
Not at all. Order is one sign of intentionality. Purpose is another. The ordering of means to ends is also a sign, Aboutness is a forth. Being a logical propagator is another. Being a product of intellect or will are still others. — Dfpolis
Because neither the matter nor the form are the actual being we call a "vase." Each is an aspect of the vase that we can separate in our minds, but not in reality. — Dfpolis
So, whatever its unobserved state, that state is fully determined with respect to the kinds of atoms we will find. Since information is the reduction of possibility, and there is no possibility that we will find any other atoms, we can say it's atomic structure is fully informed.
So, we know there is some reality, prior to our observation, that is determinately H2O. Further, that reality is doing things. For example, it is contributing to the gravitational field. — Dfpolis
Now, what about the "threeness" of the molecule? It is also a determinate potential, but it is not doing anything that the physicality of the molecule is not doing. It has no operations of its own. — Dfpolis
Freud and Nietzsche are absolutely entwined! As well as Jung!
If you know Nietzsche well... It is all in Freud! Totem and Taboo. The interpretation of dreams. And many more. — Blue Lux
I disagree with everything you said to me...
What should I do now? Is it even worth replying? — Blue Lux
How a creation ex nihilo is possible and prove i — Blue Lux
Contrary to determinists who give time-sequenced causality priority over volition, will is the prime analogue and causality derivative. Association plays a role, but, as Hume noted, association does not warrant necessity. The idea of causal connection over time derives from our experience as agents. — Dfpolis
The obvious criticism I can see is that your claim is making an unsubstantiated comparison. Just because there are two similar mechanisms that doesn’t mean they have the same metaphysical origin but are perhaps similar but convergent and parallel phenomenon. — schopenhauer1
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.