that there is one perceiver, or mind; God, or the Absolute. — philosophy
I suspect that Berkeley and Hegel were looking at the same thing from different perspectives. Berkeley was discussing how a human perceives the world from inside the system (subjective). Hegel was trying to imagine the world from outside the system, from God's point of view (objective).
So, actually, there are two "perceivers" (perspectives), the relative creature and the absolute Creator. We get confused when we don't make clear which point of view we are talking about. — Gnomon
Quine’s belief that we should defer all questions about 'what exists' to natural science is really an expression of what he calls, and has come to be known as, naturalism. He describes naturalism as, “abandonment of the goal of a first philosophy. It sees natural science as an inquiry into reality, fallible and corrigible but not answerable to any supra-scientific tribunal, and not in need of any justification beyond observation and the hypothetico-deductive method. — Theories and Things, p82
The view I am coming around to is that 'nothing exists without a perspective'. Even if we are to picture the early Earth before life began, and even if we have a scientifically-informed picture of what that would be like, there is still an implicit organising perspective that the mind brings to bear in establishing that picture. We are imagining a world in which there were no humans; and it is empirically true that there was such a world, up until very recent times, in a geological sense. But there's still a sense of scale and perspective in such reckonings, which we overlook or neglect (which I think correspond with Kant's 'primary intuitions of space and time'). We instinctively say that in such a world, there can be no viewpoint or perspective, because there was no being to attribute such a thing to; but this is treating 'perspective' as the attribute of some being, in other words, externalising it, or reifying it as an objective reality, which it is not. It is part of the fabric of thought and cognition, something which we can't think or conceive without, but it's not an objective reality, as it is logically and ontologically prior to the ability to conceive of objective reality - including the apparently objective reality of a world with no beings in it! — Wayfarer
The view I am coming around to is that 'nothing exists without a perspective'. — Wayfarer
First you say "nothing exists without a perspective" and then you say that "it's not an objective reality". To put the two together would be "perspective is not an objective reality" which is essentially a Berkleyean position. Is that a correct interpretation then? — schopenhauer1
We experience time as passing, so how long of a period of time would a point in time be, a Planck length? a nanosecond? a second? a minute? an hour? a year?, a few billion years? It doesn't even make sense to talk about a particular point in time without the human perspective, because the point in time is a product of the human perspective — Metaphysician Undercover
Same for distance, which, as Einstein pointed out, is actually the same thing (i.e. spacetime.) — Wayfarer
What I'm rejecting is the tendency to 'absolutize' the objective - to declare as per the Quine quote, that we should defer all questions about what exists to science and naturalism. It limits philosophical enquiry to what can be objectively validated, whereas philosophy points to what underlies objectivity, the 'conditions for objectivity', if you like. — Wayfarer
The concept of "the expansion of the universe", which is a consequence of the Einsteinian perspective, gives us a sort of movement which is incompatible with "movement" within the theoretical framework, distances which are not distances — Metaphysician Undercover
what a non-self perspective of the universe (or existence) would be. — schopenhauer1
The view I am coming around to is that 'nothing exists without a perspective'. — Wayfarer
Quine’s belief that we should defer all questions about 'what exists' to natural science is really an expression of what he calls, and has come to be known as, naturalism. He describes naturalism as, “abandonment of the goal of a first philosophy. It sees natural science as an inquiry into reality, fallible and corrigible but not answerable to any supra-scientific tribunal, and not in need of any justification beyond observation and the hypothetico-deductive method. — Theories and Things, p82
So here you have the notion that the object of scientific enquiry, viz, the natural world, is real 'in its own right' and without reference to any cognitive act on the part of the observing subject. And in my view, this is leading further and further into tremendously sophisticated and mathematically-elaborated confusion, as 'the natural world' has no intrinsic or mind-independent reality. But understanding that is not a scientific matter, and if it's not a scientific matter, then, for most people, it's simply incomprehensible. — Wayfarer
Einstein didn’t predict the expansion of the universe, or rather this theory made no such prediction. I think it was Hubble and Le Maître that discovered the expanding universe some years after Einstein published his general theory. — Wayfarer
According to quantum field theory (QFT) which underlies modern particle physics, empty space is defined by the vacuum state which is a collection of quantum fields. All these quantum fields exhibit fluctuations in their ground state (lowest energy density) arising from the zero-point energy present everywhere in space. These zero-point fluctuations should act as a contribution to the cosmological constant Λ, but when calculations are performed these fluctuations give rise to an enormous vacuum energy.[7] The discrepancy between theorized vacuum energy from QFT and observed vacuum energy from cosmology is a source of major contention, with the values predicted exceeding observation by some 120 orders of magnitude, a discrepancy that has been called "the worst theoretical prediction in the history of physics!".[8] This issue is called the cosmological constant problem and it is one of the greatest unsolved mysteries in science with many physicists believing that "the vacuum holds the key to a full understanding of nature".[9] — Wikipedia
The article from which the Quine quote is taken goes on to say 'Instead of starting with sense data and reconstructing a world of trees and persons, Quine assumes that ordinary objects exist.' This is the crucial point for naturalism: starting with the reality of ordinary objects along with 'abandoning first philosophy'. This is paradigmatic for current analytical philosophy. — Wayfarer
On the other hand, Quine's naturalistic epistemology involves a conception of objects as posits that we introduce in our theories about the world. — Janus
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