I respond that, on the contrary, metaphysical explanations and justifications for determinism instead rely on the empirical fact that the balls fell to the floor ninety-nine times. — Kenosha Kid
One's presumption of causal determinism - just as with one's presumption of physicalism - will be fully metaphysical, rather than empirical. — javra
How do empirical observations of balls and such determine that our intentions - which always intend, and are driven by, some goal - are in fact not teleological (and this without the use of metaphysical considerations and conclusions)? — javra
Not at all. In fact, we are biased the other way. — Kenosha Kid
The above answers this also. — Kenosha Kid
Really, we're innately biased (as machines, no less) to be causally deterministic? Then how is it that most people hold onto the bias of being endowed with some form and degree of free will? — javra
It doesn't answer why one set of innate biases ought to be accepted on face value while another form of communal bias ought not. — javra
None of these beliefs can be obtained as brute facts via "pattern-recognition" - and will all require metaphysical interpretation to determine what is and what is not the case — javra
these historically foundational metaphysical beliefs might, or might not, be fully accordant to reality. — javra
That we have what you're calling 'metaphysical' assumptions does not mean that we have some task of establishing them which must preceed their use. It may be that they're hard-wired, it may be that they're learnt unreflectively in early childhood, it may be that they are asymptotic with regards to phenomenal experience... — Isaac
I don't follow how a metaphysical belief as you describe them could be in accordance or not with reality. Accordance with reality has to be measurable (otherwise what form would the discordance take?) as such any discordance would be a scientific consideration. Any purely metaphysical position is, by definition, such that it has no affect whatsoever on reality. If it did we could at least theoretically detect that effect and so model it scientifically. — Isaac
Of course, which in turn signifies that they might be wrong. Or not. — javra
why then all the debates about whether, for one example, physicalism or idealism is true? — javra
if this is to you nonsensical to ask, why then uphold any such or related position as true? — javra
I'm not following; in what sense does this signify that they might be wrong or not? — Isaac
but I can't see a way in which any could be more true without their having some consequence, which puts them (at least theoretically) within the remit of scientific investigation. — Isaac
Simply try to imagine the universe without a temporal perspective. — Metaphysician Undercover
Why? We're talking about "physical existence" (PE), not perspective or products of imagination. — tim wood
What do you mean "without a temporal perspective"? Do you mean try to imagine the world without myself being a temporal entity? Or try to imagine a world without time? Why would I need to do either of those impossible tasks in order to imagine a physical world without humans in it? — Janus
But that is in fact exactly not what you said. For I think the fourth time:He says what I already have; that the common characteristic of all scientific theories is that they are falsifiable. — Janus
Please deal with what you wrote and not with what you did not write - and apparently what someone else did not write either. How is science fallible?all science is fallible, — Janus
But "physical existence" very clearly is a product of the imagination. What it means to be "physical", and what it means to "exist" are products of the human imagination, created from within the human perspective. To speak of "PE" outside the human perspective is complete nonsense. — Metaphysician Undercover
I mean imagine the universe without a "now", which provides a temporal perspective, as described above. — Metaphysician Undercover
Sticks do not bend in water, Santa Clause is not real, and we do live in a world that can be physicalist, idealist, or other but not all at the same time and in the same respect. — javra
Are there such things as upheld beliefs that have no psychological impact on the being that upholds them? — javra
The pattern-recognition you reference has nothing to do with whether physicalism, idealism, or some other ontological system is true - or else with what types of causality (efficient, teleological, formal, material as just some examples) are true - or else with the nature of time (e.g., presentist, eternalist, or what not) - or else with what laws of thought (law of identity, of noncontradiction, of excluded middle) are true - or else with the nature of self as that which is conscious of (e.g., it being a machine or not). — javra
That we have historically established a set of metaphysical beliefs X which have been used to engage in the modern empirical sciences we have; which, in turn, have empirically evidenced themselves to be fruitful in innumerable (but by no means all) ways; does not negate the fact that today's empirical sciences are necessarily founded on metaphysical beliefs X - this in the plural. — javra
Is this some Kantian-like point you're making? That the ding-an-sicht-selbst is "unknowable"? Or are you just plain denying reality? And if it's the Kantian point, then you do not understand Kant, because he did not deny knowledge qua, but that the knowledge of had to be qualified as to its ground. — tim wood
This is nonsense. According to Special Relativity Theory, physical (spatio-temporal) existence has no general "now", so forget about a "now" being required for physical existence; it is is not even possible! — Janus
Are you being purposely obtuse? There is nothing inconsistent in what I have said. I'll explain just one more time: all science is fallible or fallibilistic because all scientific theories are falsifiable. If you think there's an inconsistency there then identify it and explain why you think it is an inconsistency. — Janus
is not an explanation. It is a sign that you understand neither your topic nor your language, and like any good eighth grader are parroting.I'll explain just one more time: all science is fallible or fallibilistic because all scientific theories are falsifiable. — Janus
No, I'm not Kantian, though Kant's perspective is not so different, and consistent with mine. I'm simply describing reality. And since Kant's perspective is similar, it seems like you are the one denying reality. Look at what you're saying, knowledge has to be qualified as to its ground. Well it's ground according to Kant, is phenomena, — Metaphysician Undercover
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