Too much attention payed to the nature of words, not enough to the nature of the world. — fdrake
There was an Arabian philosopher who suggested that there are relative existence to solve this problem. Basically he suggested that in comparison to God, we do not exist but in comparison to non existent things, we exist. He argued for that before descartes and the arguments are similar except that he believed that the knowledge of God can cause us to exist as it is out of time and our knowledge is in time and therefore of different nature. — Wittgenstein
An affirmation concerning the lower (order) is a negation concerning the higher, and so too a negation concerning the lower (order) is an affirmation concerning the higher. (Periphyseon, I.444a)
According to this mode, the affirmation of man is the negation of angel and vice versa (affirmatio enim hominis negatio est angeli, negatio vero hominis affirmatio est angeli, I.444b).
... those things contemplated by the intellect alone (ea solummodo quae solo comprehenduntur intellectu) may be considered to be [real], whereas things caught up in generation and corruption, viz. matter, place and time, do not truly exist [are not real]. The assumption is that things graspable by intellect alone belong to a realm above the material, corporeal world and hence are timeless.
The world is full of obscurantists. — Magnus Anderson
What really lies beyond the constraints of my mind?
Could it be the sea... or fate, mooning back at me?
It was ibn Arabi and l am actually surprised on the similarities between john and ibn arabi. Ibn arabi would go on and establish man as a microcosm, standing between God and creation. It was sufism and philosophy put together. He was condemned by literalist.Avicenna? John Scotus Eriugena had a similar idea
I have a problem with that. Most abrahamic religion believe that God can see but since God is unlike any other creation as a creator, he is above comprehension. He sees without eyes and hears without ears. He exists but unlike creation, he is above space and time. Do they really understand the words see, hear and exist ( as used in the their expression) ?Metaphysics makes perfect sense within a domain of discourse. That is why for instance Thomism makes perfect sense for Christians.
On a graph of urgency against feasibility, where do you plot the bard's question (or that of the nature of the world beyond the physics), relative to broken leg diagnosis and war trials conduct? — bongo fury
Too much attention payed to the nature of words, not enough to the nature of the world.
The confusion caused by language in philosophy was addressed by positivists. You stated that we should deal with problems rather than terms in which they are discussed. Like here below
Too much attention payed to the nature of words, not enough to the nature of the world. — Wittgenstein
First, a small irony - "Is discussing metaphysics meaningful ?" is a metaphysical question.
His answer was no.It is like Godels incompleteness theorem, it belongs to the logical system but at the same time comments on the nature of such systems and the limitations.Is metaphysics possible ?
I am far from being an engineer but l think we all benefit from discussing philosophical problems and it certainly opens our mind.This question does not take into consideration the benefits derived from discussing metaphysical problems and l should have specified that, ironically l didn't. We usually argue for a certain theory when discussing a metaphysical problem and pretty much like a scientific theory, we try our best to improve it by giving relevant examples. Sometimes there is a fault with the topic we are discussing and if all approaches are equally right regarding the world, won't that be a contradiction as there is a single reality out there ?Rather than answer your specific examples, I'll make three comments. First - discussing metaphysics and epistemology has had a great influence on me intellectually. I'm an engineer. My job is to understand things and how I know what I know. Discussions here on the forum, including reading I've done at other members suggestion, have been enjoyable and eye-opening.
Second - most issues typically considered part of metaphysics are not matters of fact and aren't true or false, they are matters of viewpoint, approach, usefulness. Examples - free will vs. determinism; the existence of objective reality; the meaning of "truth."
It can be more than just defining terms in some cases like l have mentioned above, people may never even agree on the terms to begin with and there are countless other problems too.Third - A lot of the issues you decry could be addressed if people would define their terms at the beginning of the discussion, preferably in the OP.
His answer was no.It is like Godels incompleteness theorem, it belongs to the logical system but at the same time comments on the nature of such systems and the limitations. — Wittgenstein
This question does not take into consideration the benefits derived from discussing metaphysical problems and l should have specified that, — Wittgenstein
Second of all, if all approaches have their own merit, why do we adopt a certain position when tackling metaphysical problems and does that mean 1000 years of philosophy was simply based on misunderstanding. — Wittgenstein
I agree with you on this point but that raises some problems as l have mentioned above.The most common approach in tackling metaphysical theories is to adopt a scientific strategy, especially in english philosophy lately and try to pinpoint each terms, have them defined and that causes problems precisely because metaphysical objects are either falsely constructed or they do not need to have an objective reality attached to them. — Wittgenstein
It can be more than just defining terms in some cases like l have mentioned above, people may never even agree on the terms to begin with and there are countless other problems too. — Wittgenstein
Kant asked a very similar question.
Is metaphysics possible ?
His answer was no. — Wittgenstein
Let's not split hairs over this. It wasn't a simple no, he reasoned it out.In the present philosophical literature, there are countless references linking whether metaphysics is possible with Kant. It Kant be a mistake.It wasn’t just plain ol’ no, because that wasn’t the question he actually asked.
No one here challenged its existence and Kant here is just beginning to answer why do we try to engage in metaphysics and how do we raise such questions and you haven't quoted his conclusion.“...Yet, in a certain sense, this kind of knowledge is to be looked upon as given; that is to say, metaphysics actually exists, if not as a science, yet still as a natural disposition of the human mind.....(...) And so we have the question: "How is metaphysics, as a natural disposition, possible?" That is, how, from the nature of universal human reason, do those questions arise which pure reason propounds to itself, and which it is impelled by its own need to answer as best as it can?...”
It could never become one due to limitations of human mind according to kant. You Kant deny that.Metaphysics itself was never in doubt; metaphysics as a science, never was at all. The Critique’s whole raison d’etre was to determine under what conditions it could become one.
It isn't really a problem of domain but the nature of questions, method and many other variables involved when discussing metaphysics.And yes, the discussion of metaphysics is meaningful, if kept within its proper domain.
Metaphysics itself was never in doubt; metaphysics as a science, never was at all. — Mww
If l am not mistaken, l think you are suggesting that discussions of metaphysics are language games. A lot of people would disagree with that stance and the scientific attitude usually adopted when discussing metaphysics explains that people do take certain answers as facts, for instance those people who believe that their soul exists besides their body and they believe in mind-body duality.Maybe that would be true if metaphysical questions had true or false answers. They don't. Metaphysics is a matter of agreement, consensus. It's the rules we agree to play by.
It can serve as the ground for physics or psychology for example but can metaphysics provide answers that can be verified logically since their verification by empirical means are not possible. However l think physics can stand on it's own and other fields too without the need of metaphysics, as its role is not essential but helpful.I think it is meaningful because it is the grounds upon which entire foundations are built. For instance determinists believe in causality and thats why we do not have
Casaulity as in how the brain is structured or the external influence from the world ? l believe that we have free will and l also believe in casuality. I don't think our mind works in a linear manner, it can handle and link both our choice with the chains of events that impress upon our mind.For instance determinists believe in causality and thats why we do not have free will. If you refute causality you effectively refute determinism.
The discussion of time for instance is always confusing because the concept of eternity can mean two different things, it can either mean the non-existence of time or time going on forever without ending. — Wittgenstein
The problem of existence is even in more mess. In my opinion the transition from non existence to existence will never be understood and our understanding will end there. — Wittgenstein
The problem of free will and the soul — Wittgenstein
If l am not mistaken, l think you are suggesting that discussions of metaphysics are language games. — Wittgenstein
Is discussing metaphysics meaningful ?
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.