To me all your claims about what nature has in mind, which was the phrasing you used at the start of this thread, are about what you have in mind, which you ascribe to natural principle because of your belief-system, which is your own choice within a culturally, historically determined set of 'constraints', which was in turn originally set in motion by our 'natures'. — mcdoodle
It's actually a famous line. You know that, don't you? — apokrisis
We know that our vacuum is both quantum and three dimensional. — apokrisis
In my book, absolutes represent limits and so are by definition unreal in being where reality ceases to be the case. And that's why reality always needs two complementary limits to give it somewhere to actually be - the somewhere that is within complementary bounds. — apokrisis
You are employing a dualistic ontology and you don't see that as a problem. — apokrisis
It is always going to be the case that we model the world to the best of our abilities. I haven't claimed absolute knowledge in some thing-in-itself fashion. — apokrisis
Why is employing a dualistic ontology seen as a problem by you? — Metaphysician Undercover
(to apokrisis) You allow that the absolute "energy" has real existence. — Metaphysician Undercover
It's a problem if the dualism is positing non-physical existents. Why? Because there are no non-physical existents. — Terrapin Station
I didn't mean "absolute energy", what I meant is the absolute which is called "energy". According to the principles of special relativity, energy is conceived as a limit to physical existence. Apokrisis had defined absolutes as "limits", which are by definition uneal. But by the way that Apokrisis refers to entropy, and entropification, it is clear that this absolute, energy, is believed to have real existence.Did he explicitly say that? It seems like he'd say there is no such thing as "absolute energy," and I'd agree with him. — Terrapin Station
What is time then? — Metaphysician Undercover
the absolute which is called "energy".
Change and/or motion. Or in other words, it's processes, or changing relations of matter. — Terrapin Station
Whatever that would be. — Terrapin Station
Obviously if we're talking about the relation of A to B, it's not a property of just A or just B. The property in question obtains via how A and B are related to each other. That's what relations are. That doesn't mean that the relational property is something nonphysical that's separate from A and B. It's supervenes on A and B; how they move/change with respect to each other. That's all it is. That doesn't depend on a human mind. Things really move/change with respect to each other.Right, and I don't believe that these things, relationships between individual things, are properties of the things themselves.How could they be? A relationship between A and B is neither a property of A nor B, — Metaphysician Undercover
Please explain to me what exactly is involved in the reasoning of vegetarians and Nazis that make them both "romantic" according to your book. — darthbarracuda
The property in question obtains via how A and B are related to each other. That's what relations are. — Terrapin Station
That doesn't mean that the relational property is something nonphysical that's separate from A and B. — Terrapin Station
It's supervenes on A and B; how they move/change with respect to each other. — Terrapin Station
Obviously it does depend on the human mind, because as relationships, is simply how we describe the world, and descriptions are produced by the human mind. That one thing is moving in relation to another is simply how we describe things. Show me the physical object which is called "one thing moving in relation to another" if you really think that movement is a physical object.That doesn't depend on a human mind. Things really move/change with respect to each other. — Terrapin Station
Correct, and what carries out this act of relating other than a human mind? — Metaphysician Undercover
You know, A and B cannot be related to each other unless something actual relates them.
\If it's not a human mind, it must be something natural which is non-physical.
The relation, since it supervenes on the physical things in question, is physical. — Terrapin Station
Romanticism boils down to the complaint that the modern technological mode of existence is soul-less and impure. It is dirty, messy, disgusting, unclean, ugly and joyless. — apokrisis
Of course early Romanticism had a lot of overlap with the Humanism arising out of the enlightenment. But Humanism was anti-theistic and socially optimistic. It was forward looking and celebrated the modern possibilities for human growth, personal freedom and the triumph of rationality. — apokrisis
Evolutionary theory also plays into it because it showed that humans were animals and so raised questions for both the rationalists and the irrationalists (the sentiment driven romantics) in terms of how animals ought to be treated. — apokrisis
Anyway, the association between vegetarianism and romanticism is well known.... https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Vegetarianism_and_Romanticism — apokrisis
Then there is this other view of back to nature that unites the romantics, Nazis and vegetarians. Purity is the ultimate good. Hence the sentimentality about children, bloodlines, untouched nature, medieval peasantry, animal innocence, etc. — apokrisis
An obssession with purity allows the rationalisation of extreme or absolute positions. That's how the Nazis could justify their concentration camps. That's how vegans can justify their own non-negotiable beliefs. If purity is the good, it is rational to argue imperfection should be eliminated by any means necessary. — apokrisis
But if your view of nature is instead essentially stochastic, then there will always be variety and imperfection. The good is now always about a global dynamical balance that constrains existence in a statistical fashion yet is also creatively sloppy, still fruitfully disorganised and playful at the margins. — apokrisis
If "supervenes" is meant to suggest that the relation follows the physical things — Metaphysician Undercover
Human beings plan the relationships between things, manufacture the things, and put them into those intended relationships.
Then your argument is non sequitur.
The simplest way to put supervenience is that it's the properties of a collection of things interacting as a system. It's an identity relation rather than a "follows/following" relation. — Terrapin Station
I wasn't forwarding anything like a logical argument. I was simply stating a view. — Terrapin Station
The relation, since it supervenes on the physical things in question, is physical. — Terrapin Station
That's there is a whole, or "a system" and that it is physical is an unsupported assumption though. — Metaphysician Undercover
Clearly the empirical evidence indicates that things are not all part of one system. — Metaphysician Undercover
Can't you type shorter replies so that a bunch of stuff doesn't get lost? — Terrapin Station
What would you be positng aside from matter physically situated in the world... — Terrapin Station
Mine's not unsupported, they are different words, therefore there is no indication that they refer to the same thing. Unless there is some indication that the different words are referring to the same thing there is no reason to believe that they refer to the same thing. — Metaphysician Undercover
You asked what the connection could be. I said notions of purity. So your rant aside, I take it you agree about that then. — apokrisis
Please explain to me what exactly is involved in the reasoning of vegetarians and Nazis that make them both "romantic" according to your book. — darthbarracuda
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