Physicalism needn't even be true. If the universe evolves deterministically (which seems likely)
there is no "final cause". — Relativist
You're attacking a poorly constructed strawman. Physicalism does not entail objects being contained in the mind. [in order to make the world "real" and "concrete" the physicalist begins his philosophy with the absurd notion that objects are not contained within subjects. In understanding that all objects are contained within the mind, all the answers fall into place. — TheGreatArcanum
"Solve the unresolved questions..."? At best, solutions can be proposed - they cannot be verified. Proposing a mereology is reasonable metaphysics, but you're mistaken if you think you can determine metaphysical truth. Nothing more than coherence is attainable.to solve the unsolved questions about the nature of existence, one must first ascertain the essence of the set of all sets which do not contain themselves, that is, the set of all contingent things. to do this, one must relate ontology and set theory, or rather, the notion of precedence and set containment or non-containment — TheGreatArcanum
You're attacking a poorly constructed strawman. Physicalism does not entail objects being contained in the mind. — Relativist
"Solve the unresolved questions..."? At best, solutions can be proposed - they cannot be verified. Proposing a mereology is reasonable metaphysics, but you're mistaken if you think you can determine metaphysical truth. Nothing more than coherence is attainable. — Relativist
Determined does not equate to intended.if the universe must end by means of "heat death" and the law of entropy, it necessarily has an end, and if the universe is deterministic, that end was predetermined, so in saying that the universe will die eventually and that it is also deterministic, you are saying that it has a first cause; final causes are deterministic you know...determinism and intentionality are synonyms. — TheGreatArcanum
Determined does not equate to intended.
Although it may be reasonable to assume the past is finite, the future is potentially infinite - so even this heat death is not actually a "final" state. An analysis like this is rooted in obsolete classical physics rather than quantum physics, so what the infinite future may bring is impossible to know. — Relativist
It's not moot, because the fundamental components of the world are particles that do not behave as we'd expect from our experience in the macro world. The world is fundamentally quantum mechanical. Your metaphysics doesn't predict this, and it's not even compatible with it. Therefore your metaphysics is moot.it's not determinate anyways because the chain of causation which supports hard-determinism is broken in the quantum substratum of reality and all things come into being from the micro to the macrocosm...similarly, all causal chains act from the mirco to the macro too...so its a mute point. — TheGreatArcanum
It's not moot, because the fundamental components of the world are particles that do not behave as we'd expect from our experience in the macro world. The world is fundamentally quantum mechanical. Your metaphysics doesn't predict this, and it's not even compatible with it. Therefore your metaphysics is moot. — Relativist
TheGreatArcanum
147
As I said...if you have something to say...say it. — Frank Apisa
in time, young padwan, in time. — TheGreatArcanum
I like sushi
857
↪Frank Apisa
This person has already announced they are a mystic. That is enough for all us to know. Claims of combining logic with mysticism always allow the person to fall back on mystical claims when the logic makes no sense - it’s a vacuous stance and should be treated as such.
There is clearly no regard for the distinction between “fact” and “truth” and childishly interchanging them as and when suits the OP is naive at best and plain arrogant at worst. The later seems to be the case here with the sporadic self-aggrandizing bombast we’ve see up to now (probably another victim of reading Nietzsche?)
Either way, makes for a fascinating insight into the machinations of this particular human mind :) — I like sushi
In terms of “purpose” - external - there is no other function. If the brain didn’t process input from the outside world it would be no different to a rock. — I like sushi
I'm trying to spark your intellects by forcing you to think about the concept of non-existence and how it came to be. did it come to be after the concept of existence came to be, or before? Is it a concept or is it a concrete 'thing'? — TheGreatArcanum
like I said, when we act, our reason for acting (final cause) is determined prior to or at the time of our will to act, its first cause. — TheGreatArcanum
so physicalism cannot be true. In fact, it’s beyond absurd.
intentionality, by definition, is determining the final cause of an action at the time of or before instantiating from potentiality. so anywhere this is occurring, there is intentionality. when I say that the concept of non-existence is born with us, it must be so that the concept of non-existence came into being prior to existence; and since non-existence is not in the absolute sense, it must be nothing but a concept in mind, and therefore mind must precede the existence of matter. — TheGreatArcanum
to solve the unsolved questions about the nature of existence, one must first ascertain the essence of the set of all sets which do not contain themselves, that is, the set of all contingent things. to do this, one must relate ontology and set theory, or rather, the notion of precedence and set containment or non-containment. by doing this, one can establish a set of principles of epistemology and ontology and determine the nature of the set of all sets. — TheGreatArcanum
determinism and intentionality are synonyms. — TheGreatArcanum
And like I said, we act in response to causes that exist prior our intent to act. So our intent to act can't be the first cause. Why do we act? Because we intend to. Why do we intend to act? Because we are responding to changes in the environment.like I said, when we act, our reason for acting (final cause) is determined prior to or at the time of our will to act, its first cause. — TheGreatArcanum
↪Frank Apisa ↪Fooloso4 can you please tell me when the concept of non-existence came into being? — TheGreatArcanum
I think it was Hume who successfully devastated any and all teleological arguments for God. — zerotheology
In addition I would suggest that the OP's version relies on the infinite regress that is always possible with certain problematic concepts. — zerotheology
I would also point out that the only important thing about pointing out that existence is understood before non-existence is that it reflects the truth that belief precedes doubt. — zerotheology
The OP seems to subscribe to an essentialist or Platonic view of concepts that simply does not hold up after Wittgenstein — zerotheology
Lastly I would make the old argument that the attempt to make belief in God reasonable is a form of idolatry that distorts the God one is arguing for in a way that makes that God monstrous at worst and uninteresting at best. Job's friends come to mind. — zerotheology
What is the concept of non-existence? In what sense does this concept come into being? — Fooloso4
Are you asking about this out of curiosity or trying to suggest I know nothing about brain function? The OP is referring to “purpose” not “function” - that is why I replied in the manner I replied. — I like sushi
I explained already. I never said there were no other functions, but I certainly implied that there are no other functions worth mentioning regards to human purpose - the requirements of sustenance, shelter, sociable interaction, and reproduction. — I like sushi
Note: I was being generous in my reply. I don’t generally talk about bodily organs having a “purpose”. Fro me a thing is made for a purpose; such as a knife, hammer or wheel. We could talk about the ‘purpose’ of red blood cells being to transport oxygen and carbon-dioxide, but given we’re looking for clarity of language within philosophical discourse I prefer to say “function”. I have nothing more to say on the matter; take it or leave it. — I like sushi
don't forget that brain processes can be set into motion by the will; so to say that the will is contingent upon brain processes is a contradiction. — TheGreatArcanum
I think that the brain is always active so I don't really agree with this idea of setting brain processes into motion. — Metaphysician Undercover
if you cannot figure it out for yourself using the law of identity and the law of non-contradiction, you won't understand it. — TheGreatArcanum
I'm trying to begin a dialectic ... — TheGreatArcanum
... but few here have the ability to think for themselves, only to repeat the ideas of others. — TheGreatArcanum
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