You're taking my argument as an argument (and not a good one) supporting the existence of those things. — Coben
where does 'knowing' fit into that? — Wayfarer
you can think of the resonant condition as a time-evolving holographic standing wave pattern within the agent's cognitive vs sensory/motor 'container' boundaries.How does it come about? — Wayfarer
Yes, that's what I meant. That is what I meant I was not doing. It was not a positive argument in favor of their existence, it was an argument critical of a 'ruling out' via deduction [not induction].I intended to treat it as an argument supporting the reasonableness of positing their existence. — Isaac
I really don't know how to make that clearer. Souls or ghosts are immaterial. Immaterial things don't exist. Souls and ghosts don't exist. I encounter this all the time. — Coben
Perhaps 'souls' or other 'things' are on a spectrum within what will be considered physical. — Coben
That quote was part of an argument against ruling out via deduction. So, you took a sentence out of that argument and put and treated it, precisely as I said, as part of another argument. I needed to explain potential areas where the argument was ruling things out it couldn't and also the metaphysical assumptions of that argument.Perhaps 'souls' or other 'things' are on a spectrum within what will be considered physical. — Coben
... so I was just responding to that. It's monumentally unlikely, that's all. I think, in all fairness, if I said "perhaps God will turn out to be a toad called Keith" people would certainly not take such a supposition seriously on a theology forum despite it being technically a possibility. — Isaac
And here you continue, in exactly the same vein, acting like I had said 'There's quantum foam, so ghosts are possible' When in fact it was part of an argument saying that the ontological qualities of 'the physical' have been shifting, so the deduction....the one I was arguing against, are problematic.It is technically a possibility that souls might turn out to be real but such a possibility does not have its chances affected in any meaningful way by the discovery of things like quantum foam. — Isaac
You're taking my argument as an argument (and not a good one) supporting the existence of those things. — Coben
That quote was part of an argument against ruling out via deduction. — Coben
We can't rule anything ontological in or out by deduction. Deduction only deals in tautologies, we need induction from evidence to rule in or out some aspect of ontology. — Isaac
In order to rule out souls, we would need evidence that contradicts their existence. This is deduction. It's an application of the law of non-contradiction. — frank
No, because the concept of 'ruling out/in' by deduction is incoherent in ontology. Even if we had evidence which contradicted their existence we could not rule them out deductively. The evidence might later prove to be wrong. We can only say deductively that "either the evidence is wrong, or souls don't exist", but we can't say which by deduction alone (note deduction hasn't told us anything new here).
To say anything about souls (in or out) we have to say it on the grounds of an assessment of the evidence. Currently there is no evidence for souls, so they are ruled out. It's not certain, but the point I was making is that there is no greater certainty than that in ontology. Anyone claiming we can rule out souls deductively is 'not even wrong', ruling out things deductively is just not an activity of ontology. Same goes for someone saying we can't specifically rule out souls deductively as it implies there's things we can rule out that way, it misunderstands what 'ruling out' is in ontology. — Isaac
I was driving along listening to Never Goodbye from Max Richter's Hostiles. A scene of the sort the Hubble telescope makes came to mind and I realized that this is what ancient people wanted to know about heaven. They thought the sky was a dome, but we know it goes on and on.
Perhaps 'souls' or other 'things' are on a spectrum within what will be considered physical. Most people work with a dualism, either denying that there is one or assuming there is one. And matter is juxtaposed to the non-material. — Coben
A scene of the sort the Hubble telescope makes came to mind and I realized that this is what ancient people wanted to know about heaven. They thought the sky was a dome, but we know it goes on and on. — Punshhh
The danger is too great that a separate existence is as assigned to such “life” analogous to that of a soul. … The avoidance of nouns that are nothing but reifications of processes greatly facilitates the analysis of the phenomena that are characteristic for biology." --Mayr 1982 — frank
I don't recall being taught how much of a shock this was, as it surely must have been. Somehow I think they were in denial lead by the church.Actually there's a really profound point behind this observation. The pre-Copernican cosmology really did believe in the crystal spheres, that heaven was the literal abode of the angels, the changeless eternal realm. All of that came crashing down with the Galilean/Copernican revolution,
I mean if I wanted to study mental phenomena it would be very convenient to put the collection of mental facts and events under one banner, here mind. — TheMadFool
we are trapped within cartesian substance ontology in a very perverse way. the very process (thinking) upon which Descartes premised the certainty of his existence is now rated as less real than the res extensa, the questionable existence of which gave rise to the original cartesian doubt. — Arne
Good point. Naturalism ends up being dependent on dualism to express what it rejects. The Naturalist binds herself to conclusions with no theory leading up to them and then demands that we limit the scope of the question. The fact that this is exactly the modus operandi of the medieval Catholic Church should signal us that this isn't science. — frank
Good point. Naturalism ends up being dependent on dualism to express what it rejects. The Naturalist binds herself to conclusions with no theory leading up to them and then demands that we limit the scope of the question. The fact that this is exactly the modus operandi of the medieval Catholic Church should signal us that this isn't science. — frank
Naturalism ends up being dependent on dualism to express what it rejects. The Naturalist binds herself to conclusions with no theory leading up to them and then demands that we limit the scope of the question. — frank
I was listening to a discussion on Schopenhaur and someone suggested that he would consider the scientific approach as the communicative structure of the Devine. And that struck and I am not even a religious person. But the possibility should be humbling to the naturalist. — Arne
Naturalism ends up being dependent on dualism to express what it rejects. The Naturalist binds herself to conclusions with no theory leading up to them and then demands that we limit the scope of the question.
— frank
No. Just no. Proceed to whatever source of insight you trust and start over. — Isaac
Ah well, if it's 'true' then that's alright. I never thought of checking to see if my propositions were 'true'. Where did you go to get that checked, I'll get mine checked right away? — Isaac
I'm not being a jerk here, Isaac. I'm telling you that you have problems with super basic logic. — frank
elling someone they have problems with something 'super basic' when you know full well they are an intelligent adult just because they draw different conclusions to you is kinda being a jerk though, isn't it? — Isaac
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