Way too many folks on (& off) this forum don't grok this, and I don't understand why. — 180 Proof
I agree with him. That's what I was referrring to. Many of the arguments in this and other threads are based on the conviction that science delivers just such a view. — Wayfarer
Opposition meaning for this epistemological theory as to how things seem, there is that epistemological theory for how things are. It is by the latter I understand you to mean Kant two inches deep.
Did I....er....grok....you right? — Mww
So, yes, all science is fallible, but it's all we have. — Janus
Sure, the so-called "first person perspective" gives us phenomenology, which is different than science. But what is found by each individual's phenomenological investigations must be parsed through comparisons with the investigations of others in order to have any inter-subjective relevance. — Janus
That said science can develop understandings or theories about how it would be possible for the first person perspective to arise within physical existence. — Janus
In moral philosophy we are always dealing with our moral sensibilities or feelings, so of course the "first person" perspective cannot be totally eliminated in that context, although we might be able to generalize to the inter-subjective commonality of moral intuitions or feelings. So the investigation would be more phenomenological than it would be determinately scientific. — Janus
Eh? Another MUism? What do you mean, MU?There is no such thing as physical existence without a perspective. — Metaphysician Undercover
There is no such thing as physical existence without a perspective. — Metaphysician Undercover
But how? Keep in mind I'm holding you to science itself as it is in itself. If you want to tell me that some scientists make - can make - mistakes, no disagreement, but that's not the question, nor what you wrote. If that's what you meant, then all that we have done is clarify a point. On the other hand, if you hold that science itself is fallible, I ask again, how?empirical science when I say that science is fallible — Janus
My point was not that we wouldn't share commonalities with other beings. My point is that how the world is perceived and understood depends not just on the characteristics of the thing being perceived but also on the characteristics of the perceiver.
— Andrew M
I'd say that how the world is perceived and understood depends entirely on the perceiver/understander. — tim wood
That conviction [re 'the view from nowhere'-] is wrong — Andrew M
I think it's too much of a stretch to say that reality is constructed by the brain; more plausible to say that reality is interpreted by the organism, and in the case of language-users, it is interpreted in common by various cohorts of culturally connected organisms. — Janus
Lorentz transformations tell you about what other observers might see. — jorndoe
Again, biologism - as if by adopting a biological perspective, you can see past the very faculty which enables your perspective. — Wayfarer
What do you mean, MU? — tim wood
How do you know that? — Janus
Even though I know the two lettered squares are the same color, I literally cannot see it like that. — Wayfarer
Scientific knowledge, any kind of human empirical knowledge, is fallible, or fallibilistic, if you prefer, because it is falsifiable. — Janus
I'm not sure I understand you. Suppose Alice sees a bird fly by and land on a branch. She perceived the bird flying and then perceived it landing. The difference in those two cases is with the thing perceived (the bird) not the perceiver (Alice).
So that is an example where how the world is perceived and understood depends at least in part on the thing being perceived. — Andrew M
Why? We're talking about "physical existence" (PE), not perspective or products of imagination.Simply try to imagine the universe without a temporal perspective. — Metaphysician Undercover
What does PE have to do with the "way things are"? And why or how does PE depend on anything other than its own self? What does "now" have to do with PE? And what does PE have to do with the "idea" of PE?The way things are, what we call "physical existence", is completely dependent on one's temporal perspective. Without a temporal perspective there is nothing to indicate when "now" is, or how long of a time period "now" represents. — Metaphysician Undercover
Maybe as to the ideas, and maybe you can explain that, though I don't see it. It seems you simply are confused by your own words.The idea of something physically existing has no meaning without a particular temporal perspective. — Metaphysician Undercover
How is the very nature of causation a topic that is in the purview of the empirical sciences—rather than in that of the philosophical branch termed metaphysics?
To me this is a Hume 101 question. Succinctly explained, a cause is not a percept—and so cannot be empirical (as empiricism is understood in modernity). — javra
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