I have a feeling this is going to end up being neo-Kantian, but I'm happier with it than the last book I read on this topic, which was an evolutionary angle on the emergence of consciousness.
Any other thoughts? — frank
I don't know about "Neo-Kantian", but I now know something about "Aboutness". :joke:I have a feeling this is going to end up being neo-Kantian, but I'm happier with it than the last book I read on this topic, which was an evolutionary angle on the emergence of consciousness. — frank
or just metaphysical relation or metaphysical transcendence is a very significant part of trying to understand much of philosophy. What is understanding? How does communication carry any meaning? How can we possibly understand someone else's or even an animal's feelings?metaphysical causality — Gnomon
or just metaphysical relation or metaphysical transcendence is a very significant part of trying to understand much of philosophy. — magritte
Sure! Give me a couple of days. — frank
despite the obvious and unquestioned role played by functions, purposes, meanings, and values in the organization of our bodies and minds, and in the changes taking place in the world around us, our scientific theories still have to officially deny them anything but a sort of heuristic legitimacy. This has contributed to many tortured theoretical tricks and contorted rhetorical maneuvers in order either to obscure this deep inconsistency or else to claim that it must forever remain beyond the reach of science. We will explore some of the awkward responses to this dilemma in the chapters that follow.
More serious, however, is the way this has divided the natural sciences from the human sciences, and both from the humanities. In the process, it has also alienated the world of scientific knowledge from the world of human experience and values. If the most fundamental features of human experience are considered somehow illusory and irrelevant to the physical goings-on of the world, then we, along with our aspirations and values, are effectively rendered unreal as well. No wonder the all-pervasive success of the sciences in the last century has been paralleled by a rebirth of fundamentalist faith and a deep distrust of the secular determination of human values. — Terrence Deacon
No. Intention as the cause of goal-oriented human behavior was defined long before the anti-religious hyper-materialism emerged to disentangle Science from Catholic Hegemony. :smile:But arent those years of hyper-materialism also how we arrived at the concepts of say, intention, in the first place? — frank
He's saying that predicaments like the Hard Problem result from years of fighting the Church, basically, or fighting superstition that impeded science. — frank
Note -- Daniel Dennett was talking about "aboutness" when he coined the concept of "intentional stance" — Gnomon
Yes. He was like those who deny the existence of immaterial Minds, even as they use their abstract reasoning to produce imaginary reasons why there is no such thing as Consciousness or Soul. But he made a good point about "aboutness". :smile:Specifically so he could dispose of the inconvenient truth of intentionality. He fails. See two current threads on Dennett. — Wayfarer
Where Chalmers seeks to just plop these unexplained aspects of consciousness into science as something fundamental, Deacon wants to explore it from the angle of absence. — frank
After all his astute reasoning on "Consciousness", he concluded that it is an "introspective illusion". But even "illusions" are mental states, and "introspection" has no visual organ.but it does not come to terms with what intentionality is. — Wayfarer
Could one of you, or anybody, explain why zero was a "troublesome" concept to integrate into science? Was the issue forced by the success of math in making predictions? — frank
As my father was a public official away from our homeland in the Bugia [Algeria] customshouse established for the Pisan merchants.... there he wanted me to be in the study of mathematics and to be taught for some days. There from a marvelous instruction in the art of the nine Indian figures, the introduction and knowledge of the art pleased me so much above all else, and I learnt from them, whoever was learned in it, from nearby Egypt, Syria, Greece, Sicily and Provence, and their various methods... Therefore strictly embracing the Indian method, .... The nine Indian figures are: 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1 -- With these nine figures, and with the sign 0 which the Arabs call zephir any number whatsoever is written... — Leonardo Fibonacci
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