 Jake
Jake         
         The problem is that I think the positivist attitude really doesn't take into account the possibility that knowledge, even that gained by way of science, is limited in some fundamental respect. — Wayfarer
 Valentinus
Valentinus         
          Terrapin Station
Terrapin Station         
         Objectivity I say. That you can test them if the assumption is correct or false. — ssu
 Valentinus
Valentinus         
          Wayfarer
Wayfarer         
         No, I'm saying that they can't be answered - well, they can't be answered unequivocally. They're in some sense beyond adjudication, you can't appeal an ultimate authority to judge the different responses.
— Wayfarer
What questions would you say that doesn't describe? — Terrapin Station
It is thus of some importance, then, to understand what absolute presuppositions are (in general), to recognize that they can change and that it is usually a big deal when they do change, and finally to identify in the system under scrutiny what they are and who holds them. — tim wood
 Shawn
Shawn         
          frank
frank         
         I'd compare it to a fish asking what does the water feel like. A fish would never know the answer. — Wallows
 Shawn
Shawn         
         But what's up with a fish who asks what water feels like? — frank
Why is it doing that? — frank
Why does the drive to work it out lead it to accept Fish-Kant? — frank
 Valentinus
Valentinus         
          Shawn
Shawn         
         He never dismissed them as presented. — Valentinus
 Valentinus
Valentinus         
          Shawn
Shawn         
          VagabondSpectre
VagabondSpectre         
          frank
frank         
         The only thing I think we strictly need metaphysics for are to tentatively fill the gaps in our knowledge with pretty and plausible interim truths (because otherwise we use the physical). — VagabondSpectre
 Shawn
Shawn         
          Wayfarer
Wayfarer         
         I'd compare it to a fish asking what does the water feel like. A fish would never know the answer. — Wallows
 VagabondSpectre
VagabondSpectre         
         When do we need these interim truths? When we ponder death? That sort of thing? — frank
 Valentinus
Valentinus         
          Shawn
Shawn         
         I compare that to a set of spectacles, or something we use to frame and focus. And thinking about metaphysics, is directly comparable to 'looking at your spectacles' - rather than through them. — Wayfarer
And in which philosopher is that most obvious? I say it would be Kant. It was Kant who really tried to come to terms with the way in which the very elements that are the foundations of our worldview condition what we see - 'things conforming to thoughts'. That discovery (if you can call it that) is, as he said it was, a 'prolegomena to any future metaphysics'. Which I'm sure is true. — Wayfarer
 VagabondSpectre
VagabondSpectre         
         You mean like a matter of taste? — frank
 Wayfarer
Wayfarer         
         metaphysics comes from nothing, can be proven by nothing, and can be dismissed with nothing. — VagabondSpectre
physics — VagabondSpectre
 frank
frank         
         In a nut shell, metaphysics comes from nothing, can be proven by nothing, and can be dismissed with nothing. — VagabondSpectre
 Shawn
Shawn         
         What I'm saying is that, this is actually a pretty difficult thing to do. It takes a certain kind of mentality to question yourself that way. — Wayfarer
 VagabondSpectre
VagabondSpectre         
         So, you see, this is illustrative of maybe the majority attitude in this day and age (outside the academy or specialised domains of discourse.) Metaphysics is essentially meaningless talk, the only real world is described by: — Wayfarer
But none of those questions are resolvable by physics itself - meaning that they must be 'meta-physical' (over and above, or beyond, physics.) — Wayfarer
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