• ernestm
    1k
    Despite an immense amount of detail and data in the physical sciences, and a spattering of psychology sociology, etc, I am not aware of any more complete model of the of the reality we experience than the one proposed Anaximander did in 600BCE.

    Put in modern terms, Anaximander proposed that out of the boundless, chaos and order emerged to fight with each other, binding geometric areas of the boundless into different combinations of the primal elements, as a product of their conflict.

    Their battle created the four primal elements, earth, water, air, and fire, from which all mass, energy, time, and mind are formed. Small amounts of the other primal elements, added to each of main primal elements, creates the variety of material, temporal, and spiritual forces that we experience. Following then is a summary of the metaphysical model which Anaximander proposed, the study of which has historically be known as alchemy. From the perspective of modern science, however, it is only a model, commonly known as 'the philosopher's stone,' by which predictions of the future may be made.

    • Matter is mostly comprised of the heavy primal earth element, with differing amounts of primal water and primal air to make the different chemical elements and compounds. Small amounts of primal fire, mixed with primal earth, causes matter to change states.
    • Movement in the space-time continuum is mostly comprised of the water element, which we observe as time. But in the boundless, time is simply another dimension like those of space.
    • Forces, both physical and spiritual, are mostly comprised of the fire element, which exists in the boundaries between the primal earth, water, and air elements, in residual from the battle between order and chaos. The physical forces, containing different small amounts of primal water and earth, are gravity, electromagnetism, and the weak and strong nuclear forces. Of particular note here also are spiritual forces, made by binding primal fire with primal air. Equivalent to the physical forces noted above, spiritual forces such as 'fate' enable the higher-order spiritual entities, such as Titans, impose the forces of nature on the will of men, Gods, and elementals. Fate is the highest-order spiritual force. Lower-order spiritual forces, such as love and hate, are under the control of Gods.
    • The mind is mostly comprised of the air element. There are minds with souls, collectively known as the human race; elemental minds which in concert control natural forces (such as hurricanes, floods, earthquakes, and the habits of animals) that are not free, and have no soul, but which are mostly untamed by the force of order; minds of Gods, wherein emotions and powers battle with other conceptually, resulting in the forces of love and war that we experience; and there are the distant and almost totally impenetrable minds of bygone Titans, who created the world of Gods and men.

    The irony, it seems to me, is that no scientist has yet to propose as a complete a model for the reality we experience as stated here, in modern terms, by Amaximander's alchemical model.

    The difficulty is that its cosmogony can only be examined hermeneutically. While there is an immense amount of detail and data in the post-information era, wisdom has been in short supply, and wisdom is a prerequisite for hermeneutic investigation.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    If "complete" means "incorrect," okay.
  • ernestm
    1k
    If "complete" means "incorrect," okay.Terrapin Station

    As I say, its only a model. It can't be correct or incorrect. Your statement shows little understanding for the philosophy of science. One uses models to form a theory, then tests the theory with a hypothesis. The hypothesis is either correct or incorrect.

    Let's assume the hypothesis is correctly drawn from the model, which is defined by the field of science called logic.
    • If the hypothesis is correct, then the theory is substantiated, making the model more useful.
    • If the hypothesis is incorrect, then the theory is unproven, making the model less useful.
    The model itself is neither correct nor incorrect. It is only a model. Note, also, a theory can never be proven, only substantiated.

    It has been a long-standing naive confusion in the modern world, so you are not to be blamed for misunderstanding that, only for not accepting it now you've been told.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    chaos and order emerged to fight with each other,ernestm

    "Chaos and order emerged to fight with each other" is an empirical statement, isn't it?
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    Also, if "model" is just "anything we make up," where it's not supposed to have any correspondence to anything else (which makes it curious as a "model" per conventional usage of that term), then what in the world would make any model more "complete" than another? The idea of completeness would be incoherent in that case.
  • ernestm
    1k
    Chaos and order emerged to fight with each other" is an empirical statement, isn't it?Terrapin Station

    No, that is Anaximander's first proposition, or assertion, in his model of how the universe that we experience derives, or fits within, the boundless, called the 'Apeiron.' He also believed that, in addition to the known universe, there are an infinite number of unknown universes, now called 'possible worlds.' But he did not argue that point, it was only a belief.

    He did argue that Apeiron is primally ordered, but paradoxes in the primal order then created Heraclitean chaos. That is, he disagreed with Heraclitus, who said chaos was primary. There is a directly equivalent debate in Far Eastern philosophy, known as the conflict between yin and yang. Neoconfucianists assert that the passive, ordered nature of yin is primary; whereas, Taoists assert that the active, chaotic nature of yang is primary instead.

    But Anaximander is not just describing primal forces. He presents a building-block model. Therefore, it was argued, to create a model, chaos must be secondary to order, otherwise no model is possible at all. By contrast, Heraclitus, like Taoists, can only say that chaos makes all prediction indeterminate.

    Anaximander's point is that order can be observed empirically, and therefore, the Apeiron must be ordered, even though boundless.

    Further, he asserted that there were two main types of the water element: ordered time, also known as chronological time; and unbounded time, also known as Ionic or Eonic time, within which the main eras, or ages of the human race are defined: the golden age, silver age, bronze age, and iron age.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    No, that is Anaximander's first proposition, or assertion, in his model of how the universe that we experience derives, or fits within, the boundless, called the 'Apeiron.'ernestm

    That's not not an empirical claim for that. It's an empirical claim.

    You've got that disease where you can't keep your responses brief, by the way.
  • ernestm
    1k

    no a second time, it is one step above claim, it is the model. The model makes no claims. It is an abstract but ordered construction, like mathematics. One draws theories from the model which can be tested empirically. the model itself makes no claims. It is merely a model.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    no a second time, it is one step above claim,ernestm

    "One step above claim"--what in the world would that refer to?

    Aren't assertions or propositions claims about things?
  • ernestm
    1k
    A model defines relationships between concepts, which enable predictions of events. Like a computer program, a model does not 'claim {subtext ASSERT THAT IT IS TRUE}' anything. It has no consciousness. We conceive ideas from a model about the way the world works, and then test them with hypotheses if we are scientific. But the model doesnt try to say anything is true or not. It's merely an abstraction.
  • ernestm
    1k
    That's actually a segue to the second part of Anaximander's model. Because it encompasses more than the physical world, it does not regard the nature of time and space to define the center of the universe. Geometrically in space and time, the earth is not in its center, but on the edge of one galaxy where the anvil was struck with just the right force, upon matter of just the right nature, to create the spark which ignited life.

    If one considers a map of the universe in terms of entropy, instead, then, we know that organic compounds can reach a far greater degree of ordered construction than any other matter we have been able to find, all the way from the DNA in viruses to the human brain. One human brain has more neural connections in it than stars in our galaxy.

    Thus, from the perspective of entropy, the world we know as the earth, with all the people on it, is actually the center of the known universe. As entropy is a measure of order, versus chaos, it should be the primary measuring stick for the universe, not geometric space, according to Anaximander's model.
  • ernestm
    1k
    Now one may wonder whence Anaximander's thought derived. We do not believe he had much handed down to him from prior philosophers, such as Heraclitus. He had four main texts, all first written about 700 BCE, although Homer had been handed down by word of mouth for quite a long time before:

    Homer's iliad
    Homer's Odyssey
    Hesiod's Theogeny
    Hesiod's Work and Days

    Theologians and moral philosophers may wish to argue with the beliefs laid down by these prior authors as to whether Gods exist or not. Anaximander was really not concerned with which Gods really exist, if at all. There were many competing pantheons at the time. Even across the Greek city states, there were many variations in the Hellenic Pantheon (as Hesiod's Theogeny is now known).

    Anaximander was more concerned with making his model compatible with existing thought on the higher forces. He didn't care whether Love and War were really sentient Gods. He merely stated that such abstractions exist, but are not physical, because, unlike us, their bodies contain no Earth element. there's been alot of confusion on that point in the last three thousand years.

    So for Anaximander, empirical observations were drawn on, for example, the accounts of Aphrodite and Ares facing off during the siege of Troy.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    A model defines relationships between concepts, which enable predictions of events.ernestm

    How would it enable a prediction of an event if it's just any arbitrary thing we're making up?
  • ernestm
    1k

    What you are doing is like confusing mathematics, numeric quantities, and equations. The field of mathematics, which is a domain of science, defines a numerical model, whereby fixed quantities may be added to themselves to make equiproportional geometric sequences, known as numbers. From the numbers you can make more abstract theories of relationships, instantiated by equations. Equations assert something which may be considered to be true or false.

    Mathematics just provides the numerical model. You don't say mathematics is true or false. You don't say the numerical model is true or false. You say the equations drawn from the numerical model are true or false. That's exactly the same for any other model in science.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k


    So now you're going to explain how it would enable a prediction of an event if it's just any arbitrary thing we're making up?

    That's what I asked because it's what I hoped you'd answer.
  • ernestm
    1k
    So now you're going to explain how it would enable a prediction of an even if it's just any arbitrary thing we're making up?Terrapin Station

    If you're asking me, I think Anaximander was right. The Apeiron is primarily ordered, so predictions are possible. But they only appear to be predictions to us because we have limited perception through the water element, otherwise we would simply be able to observe future events without needing a model to predict them.

    Anaximander deduces a theory, that anything which disturbs the order must be transient. Therefore, he hypothesizes, wars are limited in effectiveness, and he points to the Iliad as substantiation.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k


    What I was asking you was to explain the notion that models have nothing to do with what the actual world is like, yet they somehow enable predictions about the actual world. How would that work?
  • ernestm
    1k
    Maybe models do have something to do with what the actual world is like, and maybe they don't. They are only models.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    Maybe models do have something to do with what the actual world is like, and maybe they don't. They are only models.ernestm

    So now we don't know whether they do or not?
  • ernestm
    1k
    What you are trying to do is like arguing whether photons really exist. Maybe they do, maybe they don't. Sometimes models representing light as particles create theories that are empirically substantiated, and sometimes they don't. Sometimes we loosely say light behaves like a wave instead. The point is, we dont need to know whether light is a particle or wave in order to use the models. We just need to know when the two models or light are useful, and when not.

    My contention here is that Anaximander's model is useful, in fact, it is far more productive of theory than the piecemeal scatterings of bits in the social sciences, even now.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k
    What you are trying to do is like arguing whether photons really exist.ernestm

    I thought I was asking you a question.
  • I like sushi
    4.9k


    My contention here is that Anaximander's model is useful, in fact, it is far more productive of theory than the piecemeal scatterings of bits in the social sciences, even now.

    The social sciences are not exactly ‘scientific’ and would have more in relation with Anaximander than the hard scientific methodology of physics. Modern science, as we know it, is barely a century or two old.
  • ernestm
    1k
    Apologies. The way you ask your questions frame the responses as arguments in this case.
  • ernestm
    1k
    It seems to me there has been no attempt to systemize them as Lavoisier for the periodic table, or Eichler's taxonomy of species. You are right it's new, they were still filling in slots in the periodic table when I was born. But since then, especially with computerization, everything seems to be pretty filled up now.
  • Terrapin Station
    13.8k


    No problem. I was literally, straightforwardly asking the question I asked.
  • Mephist
    352
    ernestmernestm

    I think the main problem with Anaximander's theory, if you want to see it as a modern scientific theory, is that it's not falsifiable (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Falsifiability). That means that you should be able to conceive an experiment whose result could be NOT in agreement with your theory.
    However, it is true that some modern models of the universe have the same problem.
  • ernestm
    1k
    Well as a classification system, its the same as Eichler's taxonomy of species. If you think it's wrong, you change the classification. So you are right there. It's interesting as a thought experiment, still, because there are projections that can be made from it, just like for the Darwinian theory of evolution from Eichler's Taxonomy.
  • Mephist
    352
    Could you explain what you mean by "projections"? Maybe an example?
  • ernestm
    1k


    Well so far I only stated one, which was Anaximander's first theory: because the universe is primarily ordered, chaos is transient. Therefore chaotic powers, such as war, are ultimately ineffective. And he substantiated the theory with the 7-year Trojan war, after which the victorious King of Kings was murdered by his own wife while in the bathtub. As was written down, about 100 years earlier, as Homer's Iliad.

    Agamemnon's death may seem inconsequential to the Trojan war he started, but, again, according to the ancient Greeks, the act of starting war summoned the three Moirai, the Fates. Even the King of Kings could not escape the vengeance of the Moirai, even by winning a war to prove himself right. And even the Gods could not stop his fate, the Moirai being more powerful than the Gods. In Hesiod's cosmogony, the Moirai are the force by which Titans control both Gods and the human race.

    Anaximander observes that war is transient, and therefore ineffective compared to the primarily ordered universe. Fate is the power which ensures that war ultimately does not reward its instigators. He looks to the one historical text he has, the Iliad. And its main protagonist, Agamemnon, was victorious in the war he started, but the account ends with him being murdered by his own wife.

    The power of Anaximander's theory is echoed by Xenophon, recording the futility of Cyrus' expedition to conquer Persia; and then by Alexander the Great, whose empire broke apart almost straight away upon his death. So the idea of Anaximander also became the main subject of the tragic playwrights, such as Euripides, Sophocles, and Aeschylus during the height of Athenian culture 300 years after Anaximander. That's because there had been three major failed conquests, by the time they started enactment of the stories for the illiterate, over a long weekend every year.

    If it's true, the Bush family will never be in the White House again. That would be my projection. But as you observe, that is open for debate.
  • Mephist
    352
    If there will be a third world war with nuclear weapons that destroys completely humanity and civilization, would it be a prove that Anaximander's theory is false?
  • ernestm
    1k
    I don't know if Anaximander expressed an opinion on the end of the world.

    He thought the world was the center of the universe. From an entropic view, science so far finds that he is still right about that.

    He had an opinion on the beginning of the world, that chaos emerged from paradox, battling with the order of the Apeiron, to create the Universe we experience. The four alchemical elements of earth, water, air and fire are simply products of that battle.

    But he did also say chaos is impermanent, so the universe must also end. In which case, there would be no physical matter any more. Time would end. Titans, Gods, elementals, and humans would cease to exist. All that would remain would be boundless energy, with no physical or spiritual power acting on it.
bold
italic
underline
strike
code
quote
ulist
image
url
mention
reveal
youtube
tweet
Add a Comment

Welcome to The Philosophy Forum!

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.